From neugens.limasoftware at gmail.com Sun Oct 13 11:42:31 2019 From: neugens.limasoftware at gmail.com (Mario Torre) Date: Sun, 13 Oct 2019 13:42:31 +0200 Subject: FOSDEM 2020 Free Java Dev Room Call For Participation Message-ID: We are pleased to announce the Call for Participation in the FOSDEM 2020 Free Java DevRoom! This year FOSDEM Free Java DevRoom will be on Saturday the 1st of February 2020 in Bruxelles, Belgium, with the usual events and meetings surrounding the main show on Friday, Saturday and Sunday on that weekend; please, refer to the FOSDEM website for the schedule of the whole event: https://fosdem.org/ The Free Java DevRoom has become unique in that it has attracted hackers from very different Free Software Java projects, giving the opportunity to bring together companies of various sizes, different project communities, mainstream core Java developers, alternative Java language implementations and runtimes, and everything that forms the Free Java Universe, everybody participating to share their knowledge in an atmosphere of cooperation and friendly competition. The Java Community is healthier than ever, and this is in part thanks to all of you who contributed over the years, so come and share your experiences at the Java Dev Room at FOSDEM! As always, check out our wiki for more details on the conference (please, allow some days for content to be update or added): https://wiki.debian.org/Java/DevJam/2020/Fosdem And join the Free Java DevoRoom mailing list [java-devroom at lists.fosdem.org]: https://lists.fosdem.org/listinfo/java-devroom *** IMPORTANT *** FOSDEM organisers have expressed the desire to record and stream everything, and like every year we will do our best to record the sessions by default. We will use the same format as last year, so please submit one (or more) 25 minute talk proposal(s) by the 1st of December 2019, 23.59 CET on the mailing list, we may extend this deadline as we did in the past, but please do not count on it, this year schedule is really tight! A template for submitting a talk can be found at: http://wiki.debian.org/Java/DevJam/2020/Fosdem/CallForParticipation or you can use last year template which is essentially the same: http://wiki.debian.org/Java/DevJam/2019/Fosdem/CallForParticipation Tracks will be announced shortly after the submission deadline on the mailing list. Please join us! --The Free Java DevRoom Committee -- pgp key: http://subkeys.pgp.net/ PGP Key ID: 80F240CF Fingerprint: BA39 9666 94EC 8B73 27FA FC7C 4086 63E3 80F2 40CF Java Champion - Blog: http://neugens.wordpress.com - Twitter: @neugens Proud GNU Classpath developer: http://www.classpath.org/ OpenJDK: http://openjdk.java.net/projects/caciocavallo/ Please, support open standards: http://endsoftpatents.org/ From steve at widgetfx.org Tue Oct 29 15:08:52 2019 From: steve at widgetfx.org (Stephen Chin) Date: Tue, 29 Oct 2019 08:08:52 -0700 Subject: Java War Room - Talk Proposal Message-ID: * Title * The Java War Room - Planning 50 Years of Java * Abstract (at least two paragraphs) * The Java language will be celebrating its 25th anniversary this year.  It has also kept the crown of most popular language for the past 5 consecutive years.  Billions of devices run Java globally ranging from Blu-Ray players to mobile phones to Java cards. But it is too early to celebrate victory! The unwashed masses are conspiring to destroy well typed Java code with unmaintainable scripts built using prototype clones. They are assaulting the core fundamentals of our object orientation by disrupting parametric polymorphism. If we let them launch deadly preprocessor directives no code will be safe from this polymorphic invasion! This presentation will delve into well researched statistics on industry usage of programming languages, emerging trends and their impact on language suitability, and effects of cloud computing on language adoption.  War humor aside, the goal is to frame strategic discussions about how Java remains the most widely used language at its 50th anniversary. * Recording me on audio and/or video * acceptable under a CC-BY-2.0 [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/] license (DEFAULT) * Brief Bio * Stephen Chin is Senior Director of Developer Relations at JFrog and author of The Definitive Guide to Modern Client Development, Raspberry Pi with Java, and Pro JavaFX Platform. He has keynoted numerous Java conferences around the world including Devoxx, JNation, JavaOne, Joker, and Open Source India. Stephen is an avid motorcyclist who has done evangelism tours in Europe, Japan, and Brazil, interviewing hackers in their natural habitat. When he is not traveling, he enjoys teaching kids how to do embedded and robot programming together with his teenage daughter. * Microblog URL * http://twitter.com/steveonjava * Blog URL * http://steveonjava.com/ Cheers, --Steve -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: