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[[!meta title="2nd FLOSS4P2P Workshop" ]]
# In Short
I can't quite remember how I found out about it, but I ended up attending the
2nd FLOSS (Free/Libre and Open Source Software) for Peer to Peer workshop, and
I am very glad that I made the effort.
Things of particular note:
* [Cozy](http://cozy.io/)
* [remoteStorage](https://remotestorage.io/)
# Detailed Account
The variety of people in the room made it a very interesting event, I have
found out about projects I had not heard of, and found out more about some
projects which I already knew about.
The first item on the agenda was a "participatory dynamic with open questions
for debate" aka pose controversial/unspecific questions to the room, and have
people just stand around and talk. While this did get people talking, the
questions were not specific enough to be useful and any division in the room
was mostly due to interpretation of the question.
Interesting Links:
* <http://hexayurt.com/>
* <https://github.com/Decentralized-Sharing-Working-Group>
* <https://fair.coop/>
* <http://cozy.io/>
* <http://webid.info/>
## 2nd Day
The second day started off with some very interested lightning talks. There
were also some more in depth talks after lunch, and the day finished off with
some several tutorials (run in parallel).
More Interesting Links
* <https://github.com/fedwiki>
* <http://remotestorage.io/>
* <https://github.com/remotestorage/starter-kit>
* <https://www.w3.org/community/rww/>
* <https://github.com/read-write-web/wiki/wiki>
* <http://fed.wiki.org/>
* <http://ipfs.io/>
* <http://www.superglue.it/>
* <https://www.trustroots.org/>
# Conclusion
In particular, Cozy caught my eye. I am usually critical of projects that
appear to duplicate the functionality of others, and in this case, Cozy is very
outwardly similar to ownCloud (which I currently use). However, internally Cozy
looks to be built on better technologies (CouchDB and NodeJS rather than PHP
and *SQL). There would probably be more key differences, if I understood the
architecture of both projects better.
I was also very interested in the remotestorage protocol. This might fit in
well with a web application I have been developing for the University of
Southampton.
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