Speakers
- Matt Stine
- Brian Sletten
- Ken Sipe
- Nathaniel Schutta
- Mark Richards
- Pratik Patel
- Matthew McCullough
- Neal Ford
- Tim Berglund
- Peter Bell
- Craig Walls
- Venkat Subramaniam
- Jeff Brown
- Hans Dockter
- Oleg Zhurakousky
- Billy Williams
- Johnny Wey
- Chris Wensel
- Jim Webber
- James Ward
- Kai Wähner
- Vaughn Vernon
- John Steven
- Bruce Snyder
- John Smart
- Stuart Sierra
- Alan Shalloway
- Roshan Sequeira
- Brian Sam-Bodden
- Terry Ryan
- Johanna Rothman
- Ian Robinson
- Paul Rayner
- Nilanjan Raychaudhuri
- Matt Raible
- Eric Pugh
- Prasanna Pendse
- Andy Painter
- Peter Niederwieser
- Andrew Lombardi
- Howard Lewis Ship
- Tiffany Lentz
- Scott Leberknight
- Kenneth Kousen
- Kirk Knoernschild
- Paul King
- Frank Kim
- Heath Kesler
- Heinz Kabutz
- Christopher Judd
- Leonid Igolnik
- Jez Humble
- Daniel Hinojosa
- Erik Hatcher
- James Harmon
- Stuart Halloway
- Arun Gupta
- Jerry Gulla
- Jeff Genender
- Raju Gandhi
- Szczepan Faber
- Ben Ellingson
- Todd Ellermann
- Johan Edstrom
- Hamlet D`Arcy
- Esther Derby
- Jeremy Deane
- Luke Daley
- Adrian Cole
- Cliff Click
- Andrey Breslav
- Charles Bradley
- David Bock
- Ola Bini
- Emad Benjamin
- Scott Bain
- Alex Antonov
- Andres Almiray
- Dan Allen
Raju Gandhi
Java/Ruby Developer/Language Geek
Raju Gandhi is a Java/Ruby developer and a programming language geek. He has been writing software for the better part of a decade in several industries including education, finance, construction and the manufacturing sector. Raju has a graduate degree in Industrial Engineering from Ohio University. In his spare time you will find Raju reading, or watching movies, or playing with yet another programming language. He is affectionately known as looselytyped on Twitter.
Presentations
EAI: Lucid dialogues within the enterprise
The enterprise today consists of tens, if not hundreds of applications, all designed to meet the needs of the business. These applications rarely live in a silo, and often there is a need to establish a communication protocol between these applications.
There are various approaches to integration, and in this talk we will discuss the pros and cons of each. We will then focus on one particular approach, and solution - Spring Integration brought to us by the folks at Spring Source. We will talk about both inter and intra application integration, and look at some of the ways we can leverage Spring Integration within the enterprise
Web Application Design from a Developer's perspective
Poorly designed web applications fail to serve both the business and the users, leading to a unnecessary costs, and frustrated customers. By keeping the user in mind, and following a few simple guidelines, you can make huge leaps in the way your users interact with your applications.
In this session, we will focus on the enterprise - where the user-base is known and fairly consistent, but typically where user interface and interaction are not the top most priorities. We will discuss some rules for good design, look at a few simple design elements that can make your web apps shine, and your users rejoice.
jRuby Workshop
The last decade has seen an explosion in the number of languages targeting the Java runtime. Amongst these, one of the (arguably) strong contenders is JRuby - a 100% Java port of the Ruby language. Ruby aims to make programmers "happy", and with JRuby you can find happiness without having to leave your favorite runtime! JRuby also provides deep integration with Java, allowing you to leverage existing Java libraries while writing code that is succinct, elegant and beautiful.
In this hands-on workshop we will talk about JRuby the language, explore it's syntax and constructs like classes and modules. We will discuss advanced topics like meta-programming and domain specific languages, see how we can write Java applications without writing Java code, and some potential gotchas.
Feel a sense of elation? Already rubbing your hands in glee? Well look no further than this workshop - with lot's of examples and practice code (read: bring a laptop) to work with, you will certainly walk away feeling a sense of euphoria.
Get things DONE!
Find yourself overwhelmed with hundreds of to-dos? Is your hard-drive littered with dozens of killer ideas that you started with enthusiasm and then just fizzled away? Do you feel like you are moving as fast as can but only getting to the wrong place quicker? Well perhaps this session will help.
There are various techniques and strategies available to us today that aim to help with exactly this conundrum - from Getting Things Done (TM) to Personal Kanban. Unfortunately it is often easy to be extremely productive using these systems, but not very effective. After all, it's not about getting things done, but getting the RIGHT things done. In this talk we will discuss not only how to get things done, but also attempt to figure out what it is you actually need to be doing.
In this session, I will attempt to show you how you can leverage various strategies to be more effective, knock to-dos out and have fun while doing it. If time permits we will close with an overview of the tools that are available to you, and how you can use these to become a to-do list ninja :)
Learning to Learn
In this session we will look to see how we can refactor our learning - what tools, and methodologies can we use to help us learn quicker and better - how we can create a store that gives us quick access to information when we really need it.
We all work in an industry in which not only do the tools that we use change ever few years, but one in which we have to shift the very paradigms these tools are built on! Even the most trivial of projects entails tens of different toolkits, frameworks, and languages coming together, and somehow we need to know how to leverage each one. How does one keep up? Despite all our years in schools, and our in-born nature to learn, we often are never taught how to learn. How can we learn faster, and retain even more?
In this session we will take a look at various tools and techniques available to us and see how we can make our learning effective.
