Sharkfest Europe 2016 Retrospective

Finally, the annual Wireshark developer and user conference happened in Europe for the first time in October 2016 at the Hotel Papendal in Arnhem, the Netherlands. It was something many people kept asking for, and with a lot of work and effort, Janice and her team made it happen.

The first ever Sharkfest EU started with a keynote including all available core developers on stage with Gerald Combs, but only after the initial speech of Janice Spampinato (a.k.a. “Mama Sharkfest”):

Sharkfest EU 2016 Opening

US Sharks and EU Sharks

There’s a couple of things I associate with Sharkfest, so I was curious how the European Sharkfest would compare to the US Sharkfest earlier this year. So, Sharkfest for me means

  • it feels almost like a family get-together, seeing a lot of familiar faces or finally meeting people I only know from online communication so far (okay, the last point should be different in a real family 🙂 )
  • everybody learns something new, no matter how experienced
  • having a lot of interesting conversations, not only about network packets and packet analysis
  • presenters, developers and attendees mingling and sharing ideas without the typical “I stay within my group I came to the conference with for the whole time” behavior
  • “time flies” – at the end of Sharkfest it feels like it only just started moments ago

Talks: Decisions, Decisions

Sharkfest EU was smaller than Sharkfest US, with a duration of only two days instead of three, two tracks of talks instead of three, and and a lower maximum number of attendees. The latter, by the way, were more than I expected because even though the limit was set to 150 we had more than 200 in the end because so many people wanted to come. There could have been even more, but at some point registration was closed for real before it got too big.

So, less sessions reduces the usual problem of “which one do I want to see more?”, but same as Sharkfest US, it was often hard to chose. There were some speakers that never spoke at Sharkfest before, and they brought topics that were also new. For example I wanted to see Kary Rogers Case Study talk which I had missed at Sharkfest US already, but then decided to go to Martin’s talk about his work on the Snort Dissector instead (sorry again, Kary!). Good thing was that Kary’s talk was filmed in the big room, so I can watch it later 🙂

Same when I wanted to see my buddy Eddi doing his SMB talk – I was in the “Developer Den” at the time, talking to the core developers about the PCAPng file format and other topics. There’s just so much to do at Sharkfest – never a boring minute.

Landi, Christian, Hansang and Eddi discussion some packets

Landi, Christian, Hansang and Eddi discussing some packets

Final Words

So for me, looking at my own bullet point list up there, there’s only one possible verdict: yup, this was a true Sharkfest. Everyone who missed it this time should make plans to join the next one, either Sharkfest US at Carnegie Mellon or the next European Sharkfest (unless your idea of a cool conference is totally different from mine) 🙂

Discussions — 3 Responses

  • Kary November 16, 2016 on 5:49 am

    It did indeed feel like Sharkfest. Hats off to Janice, Laura’n’team, and Gerald for a great event as usual.

    I don’t blame you for seeing Martin’s session, I would have too if I could be in two places at once! See you next time.

    Reply
  • Omeoga Ojoemelam June 23, 2017 on 4:56 pm

    How can I block WireShark updates. We are deploying Wireshark to our clients, they reported of having constant update pop ups.

    Reply
    • Jasper Omeoga Ojoemelam June 23, 2017 on 5:09 pm

      You can turn of update checks in the advanced preferences:

      Update Settings

      Instead of turning them off completely you might want to considered changing the update interval instead, from 86000 seconds (24 hours) to something like a couple of weeks. Updates for Wireshark are important, so if you can, keep them active and just reduce the frequency.

      Reply

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