Tag Archives: apachecon

ApacheCon 2007 Europe early-bird rates end Friday

ApacheCon Europe 2007, the official conference, trainings, and expo of the Apache Software Foundation (ASF), today announced the deadline for Early Bird registration ends on Friday, 23 March 2007.

With engaging plenary and keynote addresses, technical presentations, informal networking, peer discussions, Birds-of-a-Feather sessions, and entertaining social events, ApacheCon delves into the highly lauded community that develops and shepherds industry-leading Open Source projects, including Apache HTTP Server – the world’s most popular Web server software for more than a decade.

ApacheCon Europe takes place 1-4 May 2007 at the Moevenpick Hotel in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Special Conference Package offers savings up to US$238; Conference passes range from US$450 – US $1,700 with an average savings of US$150 with Early Bird pricing. Trainings are US$350 for half-day sessions, and US$550 for full-day courses. Register today at http://www.eu.apachecon.com/.

With more than 100 sessions on groundbreaking technologies and emerging industry trends, conference participants meet, mingle, and exchange ideas with like-minded peers in a relaxed, community-focused environment. Highlights include:

“Abstraction and extraction: in praise of”: Keynote addresses from Steven Pemberton, Web Usability Expert at CWI and Chair, W3C XHTML and XForms Working Groups.

“Open Source: It’s a license, not a business model or a development model”: Keynote address by Dr. Margo Seltzer, Herchel Smith Professor of Computer Science, Harvard University Division of Applied Sciences.

Full-and Half-Day Training Sessions taught by industry experts, offering hands-on instruction on Apache Projects Axis2, ApacheDS, Jackrabbit, Jetspeed, HTTP Server, Lucene, Maven, MyFaces, emerging initiatives from the Apache Incubator, and widely-deployed standards such as SSL and XSLT.

Popular Developer Presentations on flagship Apache and Open Source technologies, including Geronimo, Harmony, HTTP Server, Tomcat, AJAX, Cocoon, Databases, Derby, Eclipse, Jakarta, LDAP, Portlets, Roller, Security, SpamAssassin, and WebDAV, as well as a look into projects from the ASF Incubator and Labs at the new ApacheCon Fast Feather Track.

Business Track featuring panel sessions, presentations, and case studies that address core Open Source business, marketing, standardization, community-building, and legal/licensing issues, as well as explore broader areas such as the Semantic Web, Web Services, Web 2.0, and mobile technologies.

Sponsor Events and Expo gives attendees direct access to industry-leading organizations such as BlackHat, Covalent, Google (NASDAQ:GOOG), and the Java Community Process, as well as “first-looks” at new technologies and products showcased by emerging players such as Hippo, Nexaweb, and WSO2.

Special Events include geeking, hacking, and relaxing in the Online Lounge, PGP Keysigning, conference and sponsor receptions, and out-of-the-box public speaking at the Lighting Talks!

Corporate Sponsorship, Exhibitor, and government participation opportunities are available; contact Delia Frees at delia@apachecon.com or on +1 707 765 0823 for more information.

Event media partners include: Apress, CMS Channel, CMS Center, DevTownStation, DigiMedia, European Web Association,
Free Software Magazine, Integration Developer News, Linux Magazine, LXer, Methods & Tools, Open Enterprise Trends, Slashdot, Software Development Articles Directory, Software Development Tools Directory, Software Development News, and Webtech 2007. To become a Media Partner, contact Sally Khudairi on +1 617 921 8656 or sk@apache.org.

Upcoming travels

In the last few days, I’ve received my itineraries for travels in May, and it’s suddenly seeming very close.

The last week of April I’ll be leaving for Apachecon in Amsterdam. I’m still frantically trying to get my tutorial notes done so that I can have them in by the deadline on Friday. I was dumb enough to submit a brand new tutorial for this ApacheCon, after giving the same tutorial every ApacheCon since 2000 in Orlando (with one exception – I was just so sick of it that I didn’t do it in Austin.) and now I have to actually prepare it. Just an enormous amount of time involved in putting together a half-day tutorial.

Two weeks after that, I’ll be speaking at PHP|Tek in Chicago – one of the few places in the world that I can fly to without changing planes. I’ve never been to a PHP conference before, and it’s a great honor to be asked. I’ll be giving my “intro to mod_rewrite” talk, and then I’ll get to hang out with all those cool PHP people for a few days. I’m really looking forward to that.

So, if you’re going to be in either Amsterdam or Chicago in May, do drop by and see me. And if you’re not, well, you should make plans to be. They’ll both be great conferences, and there will be interesting people there.

Apache Cookbook Training in Amsterdam

I’ll be giving a new training session at ApacheCon in Amsterdam. It’s a three hour hands-on tutorial covering as many Apache Web Server recipes as we can fit in.

After I gave me “20 things you didn’t know you could do with your Apache web server” talk at a few conferences, a number of people suggested that I give it at a not-quite-so-frantic pace, and that idea eventually turned into this tutorial. The talk consists of step-by-step how-tos, solving common questions asked on IRC and mailing lists.

This tutorial is geared to the beginner or intermediate Apache Web Server administrator, but experienced admins may also pick up some tricks that they hadn’t considered before.

Closer to the event, I’ll post a list of the specific questions that I intend to cover.

Attendees are encouraged to bring a laptop with Apache installed, so that they can go through each recipe with me, and have them working at the end of the class. Attendees will also be provided with the recipes themselves in either electronic or hardcopy form.

Call for Papers Opens for ApacheCon Europe 2007

The Call for Papers is now open for ApacheCon Europe, to be held May 1-4 at the newly-opened Moevenpick Hotel, Amsterdam. The conference will consist of one day of tutorials (May 1) and three days of regular conference sessions (May 2-4).

Proposals can be submitted at http://www.apachecon.com/. Log in and follow the instructions.

Topics appropriate for submission to this conference are manifold, and may include but are not restricted to:

* ASF projects
* ASF-Incubated projects
* Scripting languages and dynamic content such as Java, Perl, Python, Ruby, XSL, and PHP
* New technologies and broader initiatives such as Web Services and Web 2.0
* Security and e-commerce, performance tuning, load balancing, and high availability
* Business and community issues surrounding the ASF and Open Source

The paper submission deadline is Friday, 12 January 2007, Midnight GMT.

Thanks, and we hope to hear from you, and to see you in Amsterdam


The ApacheCon Planners
http://www.apachecon.com/

Howard’s keynote

Howard claims that his keynote wasn’t so much as tangentially related to the topic of the conference. I disagree. In fact, I’d say it was very relevant.

Yes, we have a habit of choosing keynoters who are interesting and entertaining, rather than ones that are relevant. In that way, we got such folks as Douglas Adams, Wil Wheaton, and Jaron Lanier, among others. Entertaining, but not particularly relevant.

Howard spoke about how to make money while giving away your main product. This is of great relevance to people who believe strongly in free software. We believe that our main product – our software – should be free. Certain factions of us believe that it is even immoral for it not to be free. While I’m not at that particular end of the pool, I believe that it is the free-ness of the software that makes all the rest of the benefits possible. But even the folks in the deep end of the pool have to pay their bills.

Of course, it also helps that I’m a rabid Schlock fan. 😉

Thursday at ApacheCon

… and suddenly it’s Friday, ApacheCon almost over for another year. I try to squeeze in a little bit of everything, while still trying to get done the things that I’m responsible for, and there’s never enough time.

Yesterday was pretty cool, all things considered. Starting the day with seeing myself in the New York Times, and ending with the South Austin Jug Band.

In the morning I gave my “20 Things You Didn’t Know You Could Do With Your Apache Web Server” talk (less interestingly titled as “HTTPd Power Tools” in the schedule) which was fun. I have to admit that it wasn’t as fun as giving it at Ohio LinuxFest. Just a very different audience. The folks here were much more serious. And there were roughly 300 fewer of them in the talk.

Following that, John Coggeshall and I gave a talk entitled “2.2 rocks. Quit using 1.3 already.” This was in part about what’s new in Apache HTTPd 2.2, but was also about the half-truths about PHP on Apache 2, and the finger pointing that “PHP people” and “Apache people” engaged in over the last few years. The talk was well received, I think. Unfortunately, John had to bail out about halfway through to take a call from work, so the conversational nature of the talk stopped there. Anyways, people said nice things about it.

Then I spent a little time with Howard Tayler, the guy who does Schlock, and who is doing our keynote today (Friday). I showed him some photos of Sarah, and he did a wonderful full color sketch of Sarah with Captain Kerchak. Because she likes monkeys, that’s why.

Several of us had lunch down in the hotel restaurant, and then I gave my “Intro to WebDAV” talk. It’s not much fun anymore, and I think I need to either rewrite it from scratch, or scrap it entirely and do something else. It wasn’t as well attended as usual, and I feel like I rather rushed through it.

In the afternoon there were the Incubator minitalks, which were surprisingly well attended, and very good. I got to learn what several of these new Incubator projects are, and what they do. However, I have to say that some of these projects really need a little more practice telling folks what their stuff does. If you can’t explain to someone in 5 minutes what your stuff does in the real world, then you need to reconsider whether it does in fact do anything useful. And it’s also going to be amazingly hard to get new developers interested in the project unless it’s something that they have to do for work.

And then there were the lightning talks. Ever since I gave my “Why I Hate Apache” lightning talk in Stuttgart, folks expect me to be able to give a funny lightning talk. Unfortunately, I think that was a one-time thing, as everything I’ve tried to do since then has rather fallen flat. Perhaps I’ll start now planning my lightning talk for May, and see what I can come up with. Ken did his “What’s on Ken’s belt?” talk again, and it was almost as much fun as in Dublin, but, as usual when these things are repeated, it lacked a certain something compared to the first time.

John, Chris, and Amy wanted to go to the comedy club, and I agreed to join them there in time for the 9:30 show, and went to dinner with Ken et al. We walked down to Iron Works, which is a wonderful barbeque place just a few blocks from here. Excellent food.

On the way back from there, I stopped in at Moonshine, where the Virtuas party was winding down, to see who was still there. Will Rowe and some of the Covalent guys cornered me and dragged me kicking and screaming (ok, not really) to Thorngills, where the South Austin Jug Band was playing. I don’t know what this kind of music is classified as. They had two fiddles, two guitars, and a double bass, and occasionally a banjo. It was amazing. I haven’t heard fiddle playing like that before, anywhere. I wish I could play like that. And they were clearly having a lot of fun, talking and joking with one another between and during songs. It was in an outdoor biergarten with a firepit in the middle. It turned quite cold while we were there.

About this time I realized that it was quite late, and that I really should get back, since I am giving more talks this morning. A few of us called a cab while the rest of the crew moved on to their dinner. While waiting for the cab, a station wagon pulled up – *clearly* not our cab – and one of the guys asked the driver if she was there to pick us up. She agreed to take us to the Hilton, and we piled in and she brought us back. It was very odd. The car was just about held together with strange bumper stickers, and was stuffed with knick knacks, plastic aliens, Spock figurines, and a variety of other strangements. It was very cool that this stranger gave us a ride in order to “be good to the visitors.”

So. That was yesterday. Today I’m giving my mod_rewrite talk and my url mapping talk. Hopefully they will be fun. I’m still kinda tired.

Yet More Feathercasts

If you take a look at FeatherCast, you’ll see what David and I have been doing so far during ApacheCon. We’ve posted 3 feathercasts – one each day. And I’ve uploaded two more for later use, with one that should be done this evening or early tomorrow morning.

I’ve also been trying to get ready for my talks. I think I am now.

At some point I need to write about Cliff Stoll. Opinions are split. Folks either think it was brilliant, or they think it was a waste of their time. I thought it was brilliant. But more later when there’s more time.

ApacheCon TODO list

* Release at least one FeatherCast
* Record a dozen FeatherCast interviews
* Record the Incubator mini-talks
* Finish writing my ApacheCon presentations before it’s time to give them
* Rest up a little from being stressed out for far too long