ONE Summit Japan

Call For Proposals (CFP)

Overview

At ONE Summit, attendees will explore how open source ecosystems are enabling this shift, bringing together the latest technical innovation with the operational, business, and community strategies needed to turn possibility into production. Through in-depth discussions, real-world use cases, and collaborative planning, leaders will examine how open networking can power the next generation of cloud-native, intelligent, and edge-enabled infrastructure.

Please be aware that the Linux Foundation will now be utilizing Sessionize for CFP submissions. Sessionize is a cloud-based event content management software designed to be intuitive and user-friendly. If you need guidance, please review how to submit your session for an event to see step-by-step instructions and helpful screenshots.

dates to remember

  • CFP Closes: August 24 (Monday) at 23:59 JST (UTC+9) / 7:59 PDT (UTC -7)
  • CFP Notifications: September 23 (Wednesday)
  • Schedule Announcement: September 28 (Monday)
  • Event Dates: December 10-11 (Thursday – Friday)

suggested topics

Open & AI Native Networking & Edge

This theme focuses on AI and open networking as a single, unified roadmap rather than separate technology domains. It covers AI-driven automation, disaggregated network architectures, and using open source to build networks that are intelligent from the ground up, including agentic AI, autonomous operations, and physical AI infrastructure.

  • Example Topics:
    • Physical AI & AI Infrastructure
    • Agentic AI & Intent-Based Networking
    • AIOps
    • Multi-Agent Orchestration & Telecom Agents
    • Autonomous Network Operations
    • Cloud-Native & Autonomous Agentic Networks 
    • Real-World Deployments & Use Cases
AI Implications on Networks and Network Implications on Enterprise, Government & Verticals

This theme covers how AI is changing network requirements, and how networks in turn affect enterprises, governments, and industries. Topics include governance, regulation, security, open source sustainability, and infrastructure needs across different verticals.

  • Example Topics:
    • Security & Trust in AI-Driven Networks 
    • Open Source Governance, Maintainers & Velocity
    • Regulations, Policy & Global Collaboration
    • APIs, Tokens & Inference for Verticals
    • Data Center Networking for AI Workloads
    • Government & Critical Infrastructure 
    • Network Implications on Enterprise & Industry AI
    • SmartNICs and DPUs
    • Optical Switching in the Core
    • Ultra-High-Speed Ethernet
    • Decentralized Multi-Cloud Interconnects
    • Quantum-safe Networking
Edge AI & Data at the Edge

This theme covers AI inference, model deployment, and data processing at the network edge. Topics span industrial, manufacturing, automotive, and smart city use cases where computing needs to happen close to the source.

  • Example Topics:
    • Edge AI in Industrial & Manufacturing Settings
    • AI Inference & Model Deployment at the Edge 
    • Data Processing & Management at the Edge
    • Smart Cities & Automotive Edge Use Cases 
    • Open Source Edge Platforms & Frameworks
    • Vertical Industry Deployments across Edge, IIOT, OT/IT environments
Network Evolution: Open Source and the Path Forward

This theme covers the technical work happening across the network stack, from open RAN deployments today to next-generation wireless, satellite, and 6G infrastructure. Topics include software, silicon, spectrum, and standards efforts needed to build open, AI-native networks.

  • Example Topics:
    • AI-RAN: Software, Sensing & Silicon Innovation 
    • AI-Native 6G Architecture & Next-G Open Source Foundations 
    • Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN) & Satellite Communications 
    • Integrated Sensing & Communication (ISAC) 
    • GPU-Accelerated PHY & Spectrum Management
    • Intelligent Network Control (xApps, rApps, dApps) 
    • Open-Source SD-WAN and SASE architectures
    • Network Observability and Streaming Telemetry

submission types

  • Session Presentation
  • Panel Discussion 
  • Lightning Talk

important notes

  • All speakers are required to adhere to our Code of Conduct. We also highly recommend that speakers take our online Inclusive Speaker Orientation Course.
  • Panel submissions must include the names of all participants in the initial submission to be considered. In addition, The Linux Foundation does not accept submissions with all-male panels in an effort to increase speaker diversity.
  • Reviewers must be able to confidently assess a speaker’s subject-matter expertise from the proposal. Submissions that rely heavily on AI generated or templated content often lack the specificity needed to evaluate technical depth and may be harder to advance. Please ensure your proposal clearly reflects your own experience and understanding of the topic you intend to present.
  • Complimentary Passes For Speakers – One complimentary pass for the event will be provided for the accepted speaker(s) per submission.
  • Avoid sales or marketing pitches and discussing unlicensed or potentially closed-source technologies when preparing your proposal; these talks are almost always rejected due to the fact that they take away from the integrity of our events, and are rarely well-received by conference attendees.
  • All accepted speakers are required to submit their slides prior to the event.

preparing to submit your proposal

While it is not our intention to provide you with strict instructions on how to prepare your proposal, we hope you will take a moment to review the following guidelines that we have put together to help you prepare the best submission possible. To get started, here are three things that you should consider before submitting your proposal:

  1. What are you hoping to get from your presentation?
  2. What do you expect the audience to gain from your presentation?
  3. How will your presentation help better the ecosystem?

There are plenty of ways to give a presentation about projects and technologies without focusing on company-specific efforts. Remember the things to consider that we mentioned above when writing your proposal and think of ways to make it interesting for attendees while still letting you share your experiences, educate the community about an issue, or generate interest in a project.

First Time Submitting? Don’t Feel Intimidated

Linux Foundation events are an excellent way to get to know the community and share your ideas and the work that you are doing and we strongly encourage first-time speakers to submit talks for our events. In the instance that you aren’t sure about your abstract, reach out to us and we will be more than happy to work with you on your proposal.

How to submit

First time using Sessionize?

Sessionize is a cloud-based event content management software designed to be intuitive and user-friendly. If you need guidance, please review how to submit your session for an event to see step-by-step instructions and helpful screenshots.

Submitting on behalf of somebody else?

While speakers ordinarily submit their sessions themselves, it’s also common for them to have someone else do it in their name. Submitters can choose to submit as someone else and must fill out the necessary speaker fields, but the session submission process is otherwise identical to when the session is submitted by the speaker themselves.

code of conduct

The Linux Foundation is dedicated to providing a harassment-free experience for participants at all of our events. We encourage all submitters to review our complete Code of Conduct.

CFP Questions

If you have any questions regarding the CFP process, please contact us at [email protected].