JAX

Keynotes

Java everywhere - The Vision becomes true, again

 Dennis Leung Oracle

17.04.2012 | 09:00-09:45 Uhr
Since its inception, Java has expanded relentlessly in bringing the power of secure, connected computing to the activities of everyday life. Java is the force behind applications and devices important to every aspect of both our professional and personal worlds—from desktops to mobile phones and handheld devices, to entertainment and navigation systems, to mission-critical enterprise software. This keynote shares the vision for strengthened investment and innovation in Java and describes how Java will continue to grow as the most powerful, scalable, secure, and open platform for the global developer community.

Harnessing the Transformative Power of Big Data

 Chris Blessington EMC

17.04.2012 | 14:15-15:00 Uhr
Big Data, and its ability to transform business and society, has quickly emerged as one of the most important macro trends sweeping IT. But as technology professionals begin to fully understand how new storage and analytics innovations will enable them to extract maximum value from massive, rapidly growing data sets, we have only scratched the surface of what Big Data really can mean for the way that enterprises approach their businesses. The value of Big Data means much more than just a healthier bottom line for manufacturers, retailers, banks, research institutes and a wide range of other industries -- it holds the potential to usher in a new era of collaboration, discovery and achievement.

Volle Breitseite

 Dierk König Canoo Engineering AG

17.04.2012 | 20:15-21:00 Uhr
Zum Ausklang des Tages und zum Einläuten des Ballrooms stellen Canoo-Ingenieure ihre Lieblingstechnologien vor: von Mobile bis Enterprise. Jede bekommt ein kurzes Blitzlicht. Die Menge der Blitzlichter soll die Reichhaltigkeit der Java-Plattform hervorheben. Eine Veranstaltung ohne Werbung, aber mit sehr viel Technik.

Is Enterprise Java ready for Mobile and Cloud?

 Mark Little Red Hat

18.04.2012 | 11:30-12:15 Uhr
Platform as a Service has gained great popularity over the past two years. Many vendors have rewritten their middleware handbooks, and discarded existing investments in Java EE. With the rapid growth in interest around mobile, we're starting to hear the same things: that existing middleware implementations and approaches are simply not right for the mobile developer. In short, Cloud and Mobile represent the death of middleware! However, we believe that this approach may be short-sighted and risky. Not only does enterprise Java (particularly Java EE) have a critical role to play in Java-based PaaS and mobile solutions, but it can also be used as a platform for other languages such as Ruby, that are finding growing adoption in both of these areas. The requirements for real world Cloud or Mobile applications include reliability, security, fault tolerance and much more: things that your typical enterprise middleware developer has taken for granted for four decades. In this session we will discuss the needs for enterprise Java in both Cloud and Mobile. We will also suggest how Java, the JVM and associated standards and communities need to evolve in order to better serve these two growing and important aspects computing.

Erfahrungen mit Lean und Agile in einer großen Produktentwicklungseinheit

 Harald Müller SAP AG

18.04.2012 | 15:00-15:45 Uhr
Diese Keynote vermittelt Ihnen einen Einblicke in den Transformationsprozess einer sehr großen Organisation hin zu Scrum-basierten Verfahren. Mag für manche ein großes Team bereits aus 50 oder weniger Entwicklern bestehen, reden wir hier von den Herausforderungen, die ein Team von über 2000 Personen zu meistern hatte! Anhand konkreter Beispiele wird gezeigt, welche Auswirkungen diese Transformation auf die Entwicklung einer Java-basierenden Platform as a Service (PaaS) hatte. Dabei legt Harald Müller, Chief Product Owner für die Java Platform der SAP, sein Augenmerk nicht nur auf die Veränderungen, die sich durch gelebte "Lean Production" ergeben haben, sondern auch die technologischen Herausforderungen, die es parallel zu meistern gab, unter anderem bedingt durch die Cloud-Plattform und die signifikante Verwendung von Open Source.

Continuous Delivery and Jenkins

 Kohsuke Kawaguchi CloudBees

18.04.2012 | 19:45-20:30 Uhr
Continuous Integration has firmly established itself as a software development practice, and many people today embrace the notion of automated continuous builds and test executions. But the shift in our industry, toward the abundance of computing, continues to push us further in automation. This trend is sometimes referred to as "continuous delivery." In this talk, we look at the underlying changes that are pushing us toward more automation, some of the emerging best practices, with discussion on how recent improvements in Jenkins make them feasible.

2 Fast 2 Furious: When Organizations Become too Agile

 Stephen Burton AppDynamics

19.04.2012 | 11:30-12:15 Uhr
Declaring yourself "Agile" no longer means you're automatically cool or competitive. It might have in the olden days, when teams would be considered agile if they did 5 releases a year--but the word today has assumed a completely different meaning. Now, many organizations will happily admit to doing multiple releases a day. The problem is this: the majority of self-styled agile teams focus on speed, innovation and change, but very few focus on results. This session takes a look at what happens when organizations become too agile, and how this addiction can become terminal for the business. We'll cover real-life examples outlining the challenges and pain points of organizations striving to be agile. It will also offer top tips for dev teams to do agile the "right" way, helping them better manage change and understand the real impact that frequent releases have upon their business.

Invokedynamic: You ain't seen nothing yet

 Charles Nutter JRuby Core Developer

19.04.2012 | 12:15-13:00 Uhr
You've heard the noise... invokedynamic is changing the JVM forever. What is it? How does it affect you? Where will it take the JVM and Java developers in the future? We'll look back at where the JVM has been and discuss why it will never be the same after invokedynamic.

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