rws@expo.lcs.mit.EDU (Bob Scheifler) (01/31/91)
The following information is provided "as is", without warranty. No attempt has been made to verify the information, or check credentials. No endorsement of these services is implied. If you would like to be added to this list of speakers, please end information to rws@expo.lcs.mit.edu. From: westhawk!thp@relay.eu.net Name : Tim Panton. Email : thp@westhawk.uucp or ... uunet!ukc!cam-cl!westhawk!thp Address: Westhawk Ltd, 26 Rydal Grove, Helsby, Cheshire, WA6 0ET. UK. Phone : +44 9282 2574 I can talk on : Basic X stuff, Xt programming, HCI issues. From: mitch@osf.org I have taught courses on Xt and Motif. Mitch Trachtenberg 5 Holyoke Street Boston, MA 02116 (617)267-7960 home (617)621-8895 work mitch@osf.org From: harden@ics.com Integrated Computer Solutions, Inc. 163 Harvard Street Cambridge, MA 02139 E-mail: info@ics.com Voice: 617/547-0510 Fax: 617/547-0758 Integrated Computer Solutions, Inc. provides X training, support, and consulting. ICS holds monthly programming courses with lab covering Xt (Athena), Xlib, OSF/Motif, widget writing, as well as seminars on strategic issues. Our training concentration is on client-side programming, with an emphasis on programming at the toolkit level. ICS offers comprehensive tech. support and consulting, via telephone, e-mail, and on-site visits. We also provide strategic information and advice. From: ixi!clive@relay.eu.net We (IXI Limited) do formal X training. We have two standard courses: the Strategic Overview (XSO) and the Programmers' Workshop (XPW). The XSO is a one day seminar for senior executives, development managers, marketing and sales staff, and others who want to know how their business will be affected by the growing popularity of X. It does not go into technical details, and is updated frequently to keep up with the market situation. The XPW is a four day hands-on course for C programmers, teaching use of Xlib and Xt, covering everything that a total X novice needs to become a competent X programmer. Both courses are given regularly at our Cambridge training centre and at customer sites (this includes other European countries and North America). Courses can be tailored to individual customer requirements. In addition, we provide "one-off" training courses on specific subjects, and can provide speakers and consultants for projects of any size, from half a day upwards. IXI Limited Telephone: UK: Cambridge (0223) 462 131 62-74 Burleigh Street USA: (617) 621 7108 Cambridge Other: +44 223 462 131 CB1 1OJ Fax: UK: Cambridge (0223) 462 132 United Kingdom USA: 011 44 223 462 132 Other: +44 223 462 132 Email: clive@ixi.co.uk From: jas@hpfcra.fc.hp.com Name: Jeff Stevenson Email: jas%hpfcra@hplabs.hp.com Phone: 303-229-2107 Postal: Jeff Stevenson; MS 73 Hewlett-Packard Company 3404 E. Harmony Rd. Fort Collins, CO 80525-9599 Topics: PEX architecture; X/PEX interactions; PHIGS/PHIGS PLUS API on PEX; PEX History and Personal View of Future (as appropriate) And, of course, all requests are subject to HP management approval and allocation of time. From: ora!adrian@uunet.uu.net I will be available for training and consulting during summer 1990. The main topics of training will be X concepts, writing applications using widgets (Motif or OPEN LOOK), writing widgets, and Xlib. Dan Heller may also be available, and can cover the above topics as well as the Xview toolkit. Adrian Nye (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.) 6188 McPherson Ave. #404 St. Louis, MO 63112 UUCP: uunet!ora!adrian ARPA: adrian@ora.uu.net (314) 862-6647 From: jeremy@eik.ii.uib.no Here is how to get in touch with me: ==================================== Dr. Jeremy Cook Department of Informatics // Institutt for Informatikk Bergen High Technology Centre // H{\o}yteknologisenteret i Bergen Thorm{\o}hlensgate 55 // that {\o} is an oh with a line through it N-5008 Bergen Norway telephone: +47 5 54 41 74 (work) fax: +47 5 54 41 99 email: jeremy@eik.ii.uib.no This is what I can/do offer: ============================ Hands-on courses (2ish days) at the clients own site to get folk started with X11 (and the Motif widget set). Prefer to provide such courses in Norway/Scandinavia/Europe in that order. I can give references if necessary. -- Jeremy Cook (jeremy@eik.ii.uib.no) From: grinstei@hawk.ulowell.edu The Graphics Research Laboratory can provide generic as well as custom courses and does contract work as well. Courses (1-5 days depending on depth needed): Overviews on X, Intrinsics, Motif, C and C++. Details on above (how to program using). Internals on above (how to develop and extend). Contracts: Applications using X, Intrinsics, Motif (in ADA, Fortran, C or C++). Developing new widget libraries. Developing interactive tools. Contact: Dr. Georges Grinstein Director - Graphics Research Laboratory grinstein@ulowell.edu University of Lowell (508)-934-3627 Lowell, MA 01854 From: lperson@carbon.lcs.mit.edu Name: L. W. person email:lperson%carbon.prime.com@RELAY.CS.NET or UUCP: !decvax!cvbnet!carbon!lperson Address: 75 page Road, #4 , Bedford, MA, o1730 Tel (617)-275-4675 Synopsis: Give training seminars here and Pacific Rim on software portability and reliability through X window and other applications. From: glennw%crevasse.wv.tek.com@relay.cs.net I would be willing to present my ICCCM talk, for a fee. ICCCM Tutorial synopsis: This tutorial covers the Inter-Client Communication Conventions recently adopted by the X Consortium as a part of the core X standard. The conventions are examined from a client developer's perspective. Attendees will learn the responsibilities of a portable, cooperative X client, how window and session managers might respond to client actions, and how to properly design and code a cooperating X client. Conventions covered include selections, communication of multilingual text, resource names, manipulating windows, icons, and popups, handling input focus, input devices, and colormaps, and starting and stopping windows, clients, and sessions. The R4 ICCC changes in the Xlib and X toolkit intrinsics programmatic interfaces are described. A simple ICCCM-compliant Xlib client is presented as an example. Glenn Widener Tektronix, Inc. (UPS) 2660 SW Parkway (US Mail) PO Box 1000 m/s 61-850 Wilsonville, OR, 97070 Home: (503)648-9533 Work: (503)685-2494 Fax: (503)682-1500 From: brian%padouk.ima.isc.com@ima.ima.isc.com Brian R. Holt Email: brian@ima.isc.com Post: 29 Trowbridge Street Newton Centre, MA 02159 Phone: 617-661-7474 x206 (day) 617-332-3073 (eve) Fax: 617-661-2070 Programming with OSF/Motif, 1/2 day or 1 day tutorials. From: lpgc@eng.sun.com Laurence Cable, Member Technical Staff, Intrinsics based toolkits group, Sun Microsystems, 2550 Garcia Ave, Mountain View, CA 94043 tel 415-336-5766 lpgc@sun.com synopsis: general X architecture Intrinsics based toolkits UIMS OpenLook Applications development standards From: toddb%tekcrl.labs.tek.com@relay.cs.net Todd Brunhoff toddb@tekcrl.labs.tek.com 17885 N.W. Dogwood Ct. Beaverton, OR 97006 X protocol and architecture Design of X applications, including Xlib, motif and intrinsics Video and X Unix internals From: hania@med.stanford.edu Hania Gajewska, hania@med.stanford.edu 52 Skylonda Drive, Woodside, CA 94062 (415) 851-2386 I can talk about Xtk and a variety of widget sets (DEC, Motif, Athena). Also, ICCCM. From: smikes@pjspot.att.com (Tibor S Mikes) I speak about or teach the following: Introduction To The X Window System Xlib Programming Xt Programming Introduction To Motif Motif Programming Introduction To OpenLook OpenLook Programming With Xt+ The X Platform For Business Systems Open Systems Architecture and X Integration of Multi-architecture Applications Using The X Platform Building HyperText Applications With X CASE Technology Using The X Platform Steven Mikes (201) 271-0261 Home (201) 560-8635 FAX (609) 985-7650 Bluestone Consulting, Inc. (201) 615-4718 Bell Labs (subject to change) e-mail: {att!}pjspot!smikes From: jody@shell.com (Jody Winston) Jody Winston xprt Consulting 731 Voyager Houston, TX 77062 jody@shell.uucp ..!{sun,psuvax1,bcm,rice,decwrl,cs.utexas.edu}!shell!jody (Voice: 713 663-2993 or 713 480-7330) We do training on: Porting the server (X11R4) to custom hardware Widget (Motif and Athena) Writing X Application development using Motif and Athena widgets From: nazgul@alphalpha.com (Kee Hinckley) Kee Hinckley Email: nazgul@alphalpha.com USPS: Alphalpha Software, Inc. 148 Scituate St. Arlington, MA 02174 Phone: +1 617/646-7703 Fax: +1 617/646-7703 (plus 3 after first ring if your fax doesn't send beeps) Programing with OSF/Motif, 1/2 day or 1 day tutorial. From: Jan Newmarch <jan@cancol.oz.au> At the University we give a semester course on Xlib and Motif, and I also give a three-day version of the course externally. +----------------------+---+ | Jan Newmarch |:-)| ACSnet: jan@cancol.oz | Info. Sciences & Eng.|___| ARPA: jan%cancol.oz.au@uunet.uu.net | Univ Canberra | UUCP: {uunet,ukc}!munnari!cancol.oz.au!jan | P.O. Box 1 | CSNET: jan%cancol.oz@australia | Belconnen A.C.T. 2616 | JANET: jan%au.oz.cancol@EAN-RELAY | AUSTRALIA | Telephone: (Aust) (6) 252422 +--------------------------+ From: carroll@osf.org The Open Software Foundation is currently offering a 5 day programming course for OSF/Motif at customer sites only. The course uses a case approach! 60% of the class time is spent working on laboratory exercises. During the course the students are required to contruct two applications piece by piece. Starting with putting a single widget on the screen, each lab adds additional information the student needs to know to construct the next step in the application. The students will end up with a fairly sophisicated graphics application and another that is text-based. Included with the 350 page student guide is the 5 OSF/Motif manuals published by Prentise Hall are given to each student. For more information please contact Jane Carroll - 617-621-8780 or carroll@osf.org From: jonp@sdata.no (Jon Petter Bjerke ) At Skrivervik Data A/S in Oslo, Norway, Jo Are Rosland and myself, Jon Petter Bjerke, are giving two courses on X on a regular basis: 1) Two-day introduction to the X user environment (based on "plain MIT X") 2) Five-day X programming course/workshop, dealing with Xlib, Xt, OSF/MOTIF and XView. The course is mostly based on Doug Young's book. Hands-on training is provided using Sun workstations and NCD X terminals. Telephone +47 2 15 63 93 Fax +47 2 22 03 26 email: joare@sdata.no, jonp@sdata.no mail: P.O.Box 123 Refstad, N-0513 OSLO 5 From: jtk@cs.purdue.edu (Tim Korb) I teach a two-day course covering the fundamentals of the X Toolkits. Students learn how the toolkits are organized and how they can be used to rapidly develop X-based user interfaces. Although several toolkits are mentioned and briefly compared, including Motif and XView, the course concentrates on the X Intrinsics and the Athena Widget set. Topics include: some background on X; terminology from object-oriented programming; the resource manager and user preferences; the X Intrinsics; using widgets; the Athena Widget set; building widgets; and other available widgets and toolkits. This course is offered on-site as well as at public tutorials. John T. Korb, jtk@cs.purdue.edu Department of Computer Science Purdue University West Lafayette, IN 47907 317-494-6184 From: wrd@cs.purdue.edu Professor Wayne R. Dyksen Department of Computer Science Purdue University West Lafayette, Indiana 47907 317-494-6182 wrd@cs.purdue.edu I teach a two-day, in-depth course covering the fundamental concepts, terminology, and capabilities underlying the X Window System. In particular, I give a complete tour of the C interface, Xlib. Students gain an understanding of the many important issues faced when designing and writing X applications. The course is well organized with a proven track record; it includes lectures notes consisting of over 500 slides. A detailed syllabus of the course is given below. The course is offered both privately, at your site, or publicly. "Introduction to the X Window System" Wayne R. Dyksen Course Syllabus --------------- Overview (philosphy, design goals, history, capabilities); X Concepts (architecture, using X, client/server communication, resources, properties); Windows (hierarchy, configuration, attributes, visual and depth, class, shaped windows); Graphics Contexts (graphics pipeline, pixel selection, clipping, patterning, pixel output, graphics exposure events, GC defaults); Graphics (drawing and filling curves, drawing text, regions, images, cursors); Color (color concepts, visuals, virtual colormaps, colorcells); Events (event types, selecting events, processing events, controlling event delivery, event compression, exposure event strategies); The Keyboard and Pointer (keycodes, keysyms, logical modifiers, keymaps, button mapping, keyboard and pointer preferences); Window Management (window manager tasks, grabbing, reparenting, substructure redirection, save sets, hints); User Preferences (determining preferences, the resource manager, using the resource manager); Inter-Client Communication (selections, cut buffers, window management, session management, resources). From: mhess@eng.sun.com Name: Marty Hess Email: mhess@eng.sun.com Address: Sun Microsystems, Inc. A1-43 2550 Garcia Avenue Mountain View, CA 94043-1100 X topic(s) that I talk about: PEX Claudette Hayle Information Systems Group, Ltd. 885 Third Ave. 29th Floor New York, NY 10022 (212) 303-5512 FAX: (212) 230-3299 Provides training on Advanced Technologies that includes Motif, OPEN LOOK, and the X Window System. Name: Oliver Jones Email: oj@saber.com or oj%saber@harvard.harvard.edu Address: 185 Alewife Brook Parkway, 3rd floor Cambridge, MA 02138 Phone: (617) 876-7636 Fax: (617) 547-9011 Talk topics: Introduction to X, Xlib, X graphics, X events, debugging Track record: tutorials at USENIX, SIGgraph, X Conferences Availability: subject to my workload (we work hard at Saber) Printed tutorial materials: On request; please contact me. Name: Stan Hanks Email: stanh@bcm.tmc.edu Address: Director, Information Technology Planning and Development Baylor College of Medicine, Mail Stop: IR-3 One Baylor Plaza Houston TX 77030 Phone: (713) 798-4649 Fax: (713) 798-3729 My consulting group, Technology Transfer Associates, Inc., offers a range of seminars intended to make you management understand the pros and cons of open systems computing, a set of courses intended to help the technical profession do their jobs, and (of course) consulting services in a range of areas. All consultants and speakers are either faculty or research staff at institutions you would recognize, and many of them you might recognize by name. We use Sun SPARCstations, Solbourne file and compute servers, and a variety of X terminals for presentations in our facilities. For on-site, we can negotiate. Materials, including copies of the slides, manuals, workbooks, and other publications are furnished. X-specific Seminars offered: X Windows Overview X-specific Courses offered: Using the X Window System Programming X Windows Applications Using the Xt Toolkit Writing Your Own Widgets for X Windows Distributed Graphics Programming Using PEX and DORE Name: Berry Kercheval Email: berry@lll-crg.llnl.gov Address: 982 Bonnie Clare Lane Concord CA 94518 USA Phone: (415) 827-9035 I have done 1 day tutorials on "Introduction to X Concepts" for the UKUUG and the EXUG. Willing to travel (obviously). Name: Learning Tree International Address: 8000 Towers Crescent Dr. Vienna, VA 22182 and 6053 West Century Blvd. PO Box 45028 Los Angeles, CA 90045-0028 Phone: (703) 893-3555 (213) 417-8888 Course: X Window System Programming: A Hands-On C Workshop Name: Keith Edwards Email: keith@cc.gatech.edu Address: Software Engineering Research Center Georgia Tech Atlanta, GA 30332-0280 Phone: (404) 894-6266 I have a comprehensive class I teach on programming at the Xlib and Xt Intrinsics layers. I can also talk about workstation video and audio, unix internals, and network programming.