About the Session Schedule
We are committed to hype-free technical training for software architects, programmers, developers,
and technical managers. This year's symposium places increased emphasis on the role of XML, J2EE,
Web Services, Agile Methodologies, and Open Source. We offer over 50 sessions in the
span of one weekend. Featuring leading industry experts, who share their practical and
real-world experiences; we offer intensive speaker interaction time during sessions
and breaks.
About Sessions
Our sessions are designed to cover the latest in trends, best practices, and latest developments in
Java application development. Each session lasts 90 minutes unless otherwise noted.
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| 1:00 - 1:15 PM | WELCOME | ||||
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| 6:30 - 7:15 PM | DINNER | ||||
| 7:15 - 8:00 PM | KEYNOTE: DAVE THOMAS entitled "Cargo Cults & Angry Monkeys" | ||||
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| 1:15 - 2:00 PM | EXPERT PANEL | ||||
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By Ben Galbraith
Ajax -- called DHTML just a few months ago -- has revolutionized (or "radically iterated", if you like) web application development in the short few months since the term was coined.
What is it all about? Why are we excited about a set of capabilites that have been sitting in our browser for years? What can you do with it? And, how can you do it?
Ajax, short for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, is a technique for communicating with servers from within a web page without causing a page refresh.
This session provides an introduction to Ajax and an orientation to the state of the ajaxian universe. The basic ajaxian techniques will be demonstrated through live coding, and more advanced examples of Ajax will be demonstrated and deconstructed.
Attendees will understand how the Google Maps UI is built (and why it isn't as hard as it looks), how Ajax can improve portals, community sites, and pretty much any other type of web application.
Furthermore, the issues surrounding how to create an Ajax application that doesn't turn into an unmaintainable pile of hacked up crap JavaScript will be discussed.
At the end of the session, an off-line capable, web services consuming Ajax RSS aggregator will also be demonstrated.
This talk will be presented by one or more of the founders of Ajaxian.com.
The session "Ajaxian JavaScript Frameworks" complements this session, and dives deeper into specifics on how to use many of the frameworks introduced in this session.
By Ben Galbraith
In the "Introduction to Ajax" session, we discuss what Ajax is, how it works, and how others are using it.
This session goes deeper into Ajax by reviewing the existing JavaScript frameworks that aim to make it easier.
The scope of the frameworks is all over the made, from unit testing JavaScript to deconstructing other websites to making it easier to create your own ajaxian effects.
If you want to easily add some Ajax to your site, come to this talk, presented by one or more of the founders of Ajaxian.com.
By Ben Galbraith
Java's Swing GUI toolkit is one of the most powerful and flexible frameworks available for creating professional, high-quality desktop applications. Along with its considerable abilities, however, comes considerable complexity. Swing does not have a reputation for ease of use (despite being much easier than many of its competitors--but that's another story). If you could combine the Swings power with the productivity of easier, more restrictive tools, such as Microsoft's Visual Basic - you'd have an incredible tool for application development.
This presentation talks about eight techniques you can employ to realize such an environment, such as how you can successfully integrate GUI builders and XUL frameworks into your project, making it much easier to set and retrieve values on Swing components, how to make it trivial to make JTables easy to use, and more.
Along with the presentation and slides, attendees will be able to download open source code they can use in their projects today to implement these ideas.
By Brian Sletten
Imagine the simplicity of REST married to the power of Unix pipes with the benefits of a loosely-coupled, logically-layered architecture. If that is hard to imagine, it may because the architectures available to you today are convoluted accretions of mismatched technologies, languages, abstractions and data models.
NetKernel is a disruptive technology that changes the game. It has been quietly gaining mind share in the past several years; people who are exposed to it don't want to go back to the tired and blue conventions of J2EE and .NET. Not only does it make building the kinds of systems you are building today easier, it does it more efficiently, with less code and a far more scalable runway to allow you to take advantage of the emerging multi-core, multi-CPU hardware that is coming our way.
Come see how this open source / commercial product can change the way you think about building software.
NetKernel makes the things you are doing now easier, but also makes new types of systems possible.
A wise man once said, "XML is like lye. It is very useful, but humans shouldn't touch it." If you've had to incorporate XML into your project by hand, you have probably been burned by getting too close. NetKernel turns this wisdom on its head and encourages you to use XML like the liquid data stream you want it to be.
But, XML is only part of the story. Resource-oriented computing is a generalized and revolutionary approach to modern, flexible systems. There is less code to write, but it is more fun to do. Orchestration of existing services and data sources is faster, easier and more encompassing than with more conventional technologies.
This talk will help explain what NetKernel is (app server? pipeline tool? embedded SOA?) and, through a comprehensive set of examples, give you a glimpse at a deeper software reality than you might have thought possible.
Disclaimer: There will be no blue pills given to you to make you forget what you have seen. Come with an open mind.
By Brian Sletten
Most people new to Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP) are fed up with separation of concerns zealots explaining how great their techniques are at dealing with... logging. Ok, you get it. Logging is a cross-cutting concern that can be appropriately modularized. What else does AOP have to offer? A lot, it turns out. This talk will give an introduction to the motivations of AOP as well as a series of concrete examples drawn from enterprise and client side Java. Come learn how AspectJ-flavored AOP can begin to benefit you immediately either in development or production environments. Learn how to enforce architectural policies, find Swing threading issues, reduce the invasiveness of the Observer design pattern or even improve the reusability of your domain models. Now that Spring 2.0 provides support for AspectJ, the time has never been better to learn about these new (but backwards compatible) ways of thinking about building software.
Attendees will learn about
The history and reasons behind AOP
Development-oriented aspects that can be useful, but compiled out of
production code
Production-oriented aspects that can simplify development and ease the
burden of future changes
Basic AspectJ usage and jargon
How to use AspectJ with Spring
Rating: Intermediate
Category: Architecture/Languages, Client Side Java, Server Side Java
Prerequisites: Basic Java. Some level of AOP understanding is helpful, but not required. The pace of the introduction will depend on the average level of exposure the audience has previously had to AOP.
By Brian Sletten
Just as the world is feeling comfortable with the Web, Tim Berners-Lee et al inform us that what we have seen so far is just the beginning. His original plans at CERN were larger and grander. The Semantic Web is the new vision of machine-processable documents and metadata to improve search, knowledge discovery and data integration and management. While there are many naysayers chiding such grand visions, there are also pragmatic and useful technologies emerging that can be applied today.
Attendees will learn:
The history and motivations behind the Semantic Web
The technology stack that will make it happen (including RDF and OWL)
An overview of tools and technologies that are beginning to satisfy the vision
This talk stands on its own, but feeds into the "Experiencing the Semantic Web" talk which is more hands on.
Rating: Intermediate
Prerequisites: This is all so new, most engineers will find something to excite them.
By Chris Richardson
Key to making good design decisions is knowing the available options and understanding their respective benefits and drawbacks. This presentation looks at two important design decisions that you must make when developing the business logic for an enterprise Java application: how to organize the business logic and how to encapsulate the business logic.
The first part of the talk describes the two main ways to organize business logic: an object-oriented design (a.k.a domain model) and a procedural design (a.k.a. transaction script). You will learn how to implement the business logic using each of these approaches and which lightweight frameworks to use. We will cover the criteria that you can use to decide between the two approaches.
In the second part of the talk, you will learn about the different options for encapsulating the business logic: the traditional EJB façade pattern, the newer POJO façade pattern and the Open Session in View pattern (a.ka Exposed Domain Model pattern). We describe how to implement each of these patterns and their respective benefits and drawbacks.
By Chris Richardson
Object-oriented design (OOD) is good way to tackle the complexity of modern applications. Yet many complex, enterprise Java applications are written in a procedural style. One reason is because EJB2 created too many obstacles to using object-oriented design techniques. Fortunately, enterprise Java technologies have improved. Plain Object Java Objects (POJOs) and object/relational mapping frameworks such as Hibernate, JDO and EJB3 led to the revival of OOD.
In this presentation, you will learn how to implement business logic using a rich POJO domain model. We will compare and contrast a procedural design with an object-oriented design and describe the benefits of OOD. You will learn how non-invasive frameworks provide dependency injection and persistence for a domain model.
By Chris Richardson
The limitations of EJB2 led to the development of the extremely popular Spring and Hibernate frameworks. These frameworks replaced the cumbersome EJB2 programming model with a nimble, non-invasive Plain Old Java Object (POJO) –based model. But, now, the EJB3 specification has embraced many of the ideas made popular by Spring and Hibernate including POJOs, transparent persistence and dependency injection.
So what’s the future of Spring and Hibernate? Are they obsolete? In this presentation, you will learn the answers to these and other questions. We describe how EJB 3 persistence compares to Hibernate and how EJB3 services such as transaction management and dependency injection compare with those provide by Spring. You will learn the benefits and drawbacks of each of these frameworks.
By Dave Thomas
Ruby recently enjoyed its tenth birthday. Instead of cake and candles, the community celebrated by releasing a wave of new libraries and frameworks that make Ruby programming even easier. This talk features some of the best of these, as we explore Ruby.
We'll spend about half the session getting to know Ruby: the syntax, type system, blocks, iterators, and so on. Then we'll dive in and develop some real-world code using web services, RSS, and databases. If you want to come to the Rails talk, and you're not that familiar with Ruby, this talk is a good starting point.
By Dave Thomas
The Ruby on Rails framework has exploded onto the scene over the last few months. Propelled by some genuine benefits, and fueled by a whole lot of controversy, Rails seems here to stay. So, is it a Java killer? (No.) Is it a great way to develop certain classes of web application? (Yes.) Does it really deliver the 10-fold increase in developer productivity that some have claimed? (It depends...)
If you can't help thinking that there must be an easier way of developing web projects, come and join us as we construct an MVC-based Ruby on Rails application using the very latest libraries and tools. You'll get a taste of Ruby, and also a feel for some of the power and productivity gains offered by this remarkable framework. You'll need a grounding in Ruby to get the most from this talk; if you're not already a Ruby developer you might want to attend the Facets of Ruby talk before coming to this one.
By Dave Thomas
The Ruby on Rails framework has unit and functional testing baked right in. In this talk we'll see how easy it is to get started with testing in Rails, and we'll explore jut how deep the testing support goes.
We'll look at the basics: unit testing models and functional testing views and controllers. But we'll dig deeper, looking at the supplied mock objects and seeing how easy it is to add our own. We'll also investigate test fixtures, using them to generate both static and dnamic test data. Finally, we'll have a quick look at performance testing.
By Dave Thomas
Ajax is becoming a requirement for new applications: it creates richer
user experiences and more dynamic applications. However, doing Ajax by
hand is difficult and error prone. The good news is that if you use
Rails, you don't have to do Ajax the hard way.
Rails has built in helpers that support Ajax development,
and comes packaged with the powerful prototype.js and script.aculo.us
libraries.
Come see how Ajax can be made to work with your Rails applications as
we built a very dynamic ToDo list, and see how Ajax can be made robust
with a simple calculator.
By David Geary
In April 2005, annual growth rates for jobs in JavaServer Faces, Struts, and Ruby on Rails were all at about 0%. Today, Struts' growth rate still hovers around 0%, but JSF and Rails have taken off. At the end of 2007, both JSF and Rails were growing at a rate of between 400-500% annually (according to indeed.com).
JSF has passed the adoption tipping point, and is now the Java-based framework of choice, as is evidenced by its ecosystem. From vendors such as MyEclipse and RedHat to open source projects such as Seam, Facelets, and Ajax4JSF, JSF is where the action is.
Come see why JSF is so popular. In this code- and demo-intensive session, I'll show you the fundamentals of JSF.
This session is taught by a member of the JSF Expert Group for JSF 1.0 and 2.0., and co-author of the best-selling book on JSF: Core JavaServer Faces. David will take you through a whirlwind introduction to JSF including what JSF is, how it was developed, and how you can best take advantage of the technology. Here is a list of topics:
Components, managed beans, value expressions, and static navigation
i18n, CSS, and actions
The Faces Context and Faces messages
The JSF Event Model
Using JavaScript with JSF
This introduction to JSF also contains 5 live-code demos, where David will develop a simple, but robust application during the course of the session.
Prerequisite: Some knowledge of Java-based web applications, such as Struts, is a plus, but is not required. If you have a significant experience with JSF, you probably already know most of what's covered in this session.
By David Geary
In 2005, JSF hit its stride, as evidenced from overwhelming support from both vendors and the open-source community. JSF 1.0 had plenty of holes, but open-source projects have arisen to address those needs. This session takes a look at three of those projects: Tomahawk (MyFaces component library) FaceletsSeam
MyFaces is an open-source implementation of the JSF spec. In addition, MyFaces developers got a little carried away and also developed a useful set of custom components that you can use in your own applications, regardless of whether you use MyFaces as your JSF implementation. Those components are now packaged separately from MyFaces under the name Tomahawk.
Facelets is an open-source project from java.net that lets you implement views with Tapestry-like HTML pages. That technique is a powerful feature that lets graphic designers and software developers work separately in parallel.
Seam is a framework from JBoss that provides a component model that unifies the EJB and JSF component models. Seam makes great use of annotations to meld EJBs and JSF components in a seamless fashion (thus the name).
Lots is happening in the JSF space. Come to this talk and learn about these three exciting open-source projects.
By David Geary
JavaServer Faces is a well designed user interface framework, but it lacks a number of features you might otherwise expect out of the box; for example, JSF does not explicitly provide support for client-side validation.
So, from the folks that brought you Struts, comes Shale, a collection of useful enhancements to JSF. A top-level Apache Software Foundation project, Shale adds some really cool features to vanilla JSF, including:
Web flow: script dialog flow
Remote Method Calls: easily call JavaBean methods from JavaScript
Tapestry-like views: code views in pure HTML
Use Apache Commons Validator validators on the client or server, or both
JSF testing framework: mocks for easy JSF testing
There's a lot of cool stuff in Shale that makes JSF a much more compelling proposition. Come see what it's all about.
This is a code-intensive, fast-paced look at Apache Shale. Forty-plus slides and five demos makes for an action packed session that illustrates the cool features that Shale provides.
By David Geary
JavaServer Faces is a perfect platform for implementing Web 2.0 interfaces with Ajax. This session explores how you can use these two potent technologies--JSF and Ajax--together to create applications that look and behave like desktop applications but run in the browser.
JavaServer Faces, with a mature component model and flexible lifecyle, is a perfect platform for implementing Web 2.0 user interfaces with Ajax. This session explores using JSF and Ajax to create applications that act like desktop applications but run in a browser.
We'll start with a quick look at implementing basic Ajax in a JSF application. Then, once your bloodthirst has been slaked, we'll dive deeper into Ajaxian Faces dynamics with a form completion demo that requires its implementor to understand two simple, but vital facts about JSF.
If you're savvy, you probably use client-side validation to augment your server side validation logic, which parenthetically, is no no-brainer in either of the leading web application frameworks, JSF or Rails. But anyway, client-side validation is old school. All the cool developers nowadays use Ajax to implement realtime validation, where you sneak a trip to the server as an unwary user types into your input fields. But to accomplish that, we'll have to dive even deeper into JSF, with concerns such as accessing view state and accounting for client-side state saving.
All of this Ajax development is great fun, but most of it is best relegated to components and frameworks, which are the topics that will wrap up our session. We'll see how to keep your JavaScript separate from your JSF components and how to pass JSP tag attributes all the way through to JavaScript. Finally, we'll take a look at Ajax4jsf, a JSF component library with a tag library that blends Ajax into JSF in a natural, intuitive way without having to write JavaScript.
As web developers, we've been handcuffed long enough by the shackles of Web 1.0 development. Come to this session and see the brave new world of Web 2.0 development with one of the hottest web application frameworks.
By David Geary
User interfaces are usually the most turbulent aspect of an application during development. Constant tinkering with the UI means constant changes to your code, so as a UI developer, you want to minimize the scope and effects of those code changes.
Open-source Java provides two powerful software packages that help you manage UI complexity: Tiles and Sitemesh. Tiles composes webpages from discrete regions of your user interface known as tiles. A tile contains a JSP page for layout and one or more JSP pages for content. Sitemesh decorates webpages with decorators that can be associated with URL patterns. Once you set up your decorators, you can decorate pages that match a decorator's URL pattern.
Come see how to use Tiles and Sitemesh with a guided tour from the inventor of Tiles, who has recently become a Sitemesh believer.
By Eitan Suez
JiBX is an open source XML data binding API for Java. JiBX is younger than most other APIs in this space (Castor XML, BEA XMLBeans, JAXB). JiBX's philosophy on data binding is that: [a] databinding should be fast, and [b] databinding frameworks should allow for the divergence and evolution of your codebase from its xml representation. JiBX excels on both counts and consequently is a practical tool for the purpose of data binding. In this session, Eitan will be covering all aspects of Dennis Sosnoski's JiBX framework.
Session Goals:
To learn the JiBX API in detail. JiBX can considerably simplify the task of parsing XML content into business objects and generating XML representations of these business objects.
Prerequisites:
Basic understanding of XML, but not of any of the variety of standards that build upon that foundation. Basic understanding of the Java programming language.
Session Rating:
Intermediate
Category:
XML/Web Services
By Eitan Suez
An exercise in refactoring, playing with Java 5 annotations, varargs, JUnit, and more (see detail description for more).
This talk is a little story. It begins, innocently enough, with a speaker's dilemma: how to give an effective talk on Hibernate? The speaker quickly realizes that to he's going to have to automate some of the associated configuration and setup code. There's an interesting refactoring hurdle along the way, whereby the author:
[a] dreams he could be writing the code in JavaScript
[b] tries out the Spring Framework's medicine for Hibernate
[c] ends up simply using JUnit
[d] gets inspired and writes his own mechanism to resolve the situation
[e] finally, looks towards the future with a sigh, and thinks "AOP"
An exercise in refactoring, playing with Java 5 annotations, varargs, JUnit, and more.
By Eitan Suez
This talk covers the core of the Hibernate Object/Relational Mapping framework by example; that is: in a hands-on manner.
What does this mean? Two things:
1. Rather than spending 1.5 hours going from slide to slide, passively covering various aspects of the Hibernate framework, you'll be actively building a sample application, modeling, persisting, querying information using Hibernate 3.1
2. Hibernate today is a mature and rich framework consisting of _many_ features. Discussion of features outside of the Hibernate "Core" will be sacrificed for the sake of presenting Hibernate in an active, "by example" style.
No a-priori knowledge of Hibernate is assumed. We'll cover the basics of Hibernate v3.1, XML mappings, the Hibernate Query Language (HQL), the Criteria API, custom UserType's, Components, and more! (This talk does not discuss auxiliary topics such as the EJB 3 persistence API, Annotations, or integrating Hibernate in managed (J2EE) environments).
By Eitan Suez
Join Eitan in this hands-on session on Naked Objects. This session uses the "learning by doing" approach to learning an API or framework. Naked Objects is a powerful tool that can give you a significant advantage in the development of business systems. It gives you the ability to prototype a software application so quickly that it can be performed during information gathering phases of a project. It gives you the power to codevelop the core business model of your application with a non-developer business expert at your side. No prerequisite knowledge of Naked Objects is required.
Session Goals:
To learn to write software applications (possibly system prototypes) using the NakedObjects framework. Developing applications that use NakedObjects requires knowledge of the conventions and contract of this framework. NakedObjects is a fairly radical development in the domain of business software application development. Awareness of the concepts and implications of expressive systems is an important secondary goal.
Prerequisites:
Basic understanding of the Java programming language and of object-oriented programming and design. Familiarity in the domain of business application software development.
Session Rating:
Intermediate
Category:
Architecture
By Howard Lewis Ship
An introduction to the Apache Tapestry web application framework, which will explain the concepts and features of the framework with some simple applications. We'll discsuss Tapestry forms, request cycle, component object model. The use of several important components, including BeanForm and Table will be highlighted, along with meta-programming using the Trails framework.
Tapestry is a powerful open-source Java web application framework that stands apart from most other technologies used for creating web applications ? it is based on highly reusable components, which are assembled to form complete pages. This session will get you started with Tapestry, showing how to build a simple form-based application. Along the way, we'll see how Tapestry simplifies your job: We'll see how Tapestry HTML templates are easier to create and maintain than JavaServer pages (JSPs). We'll see how Tapestry's built in error reporting lets you find and correct errors with startling speed. We'll see how Tapestry takes over responsibility for building and interpreting application URLs, eliminating large amounts of boring, error-prone, manual coding. Most importantly, we'll see how Tapestry bridges from the stateless world of HTTP and servlets into a more natural, more productive world of actual object oriented engineering ? allowing you to build applications in terms of objects with methods and properties (a true revolution if you are used to traditional servlets).
We'll also take a peek into more advanced aspects of Tapestry, such as its input validation subsystem that provides server- and client-side validation, as well as more advanced Tapestry components such as Table (a powerful data grid), and the Trails meta-framework that creates complete applications without almost no coding. Once you've learned a little bit about Tapestry, you might find it hard to go back to your old approach!
By Howard Lewis Ship
In Tapestry, components are not an add-on; in fact, anything but! Tapestry components are integral to the entire framework ? if something dynamic is going on in a page, there's a component involved.
When building Tapestry applications, a constant problem solving approach is to create new components. Tapestry makes creating components very, very easy. In this session, we'll see how to create simple output-only components, and how to create components with their own templates. We'll also see how to create components that can have interactions with the user independent of the containing page. Tapestry is designed so that the components just drop in and work, and we'll touch on some advanced services included in Tapestry, such as JavaScript generation.
By Howard Lewis Ship
You've heard about unit testing but were daunted when it came time to put the pedal to the metal. That's because JUnit is just one tool and there's others you need to learn about, including the wonderful and wierd EasyMock and the easy and powerful TestNG.
Unit testing with JUnit only gets you so far; even when you've refactored your code and hidden all your implementations behinds interfaces you are still stuck with the problem of testing the individual pieces. If you've hit this point and despaired, know that there are tools to help ... including the wierd and wonderful EasyMock. We'll discuss unit testing in general, and how EasyMock is used to to generate mock objects, allowing you test each class in isolation. We'll also leave JUnit behind and investigate using TestNG, a modern and improved test framework. We'll then learn how to tame EasyMock's awkward API with some modest refactoring and naming conventions.
By Mike Cohn
The technique of expressing requirements as user stories is one of the most broadly applicable techniques introduced by Extreme Programming. User stories are an effective approach on all time constrained projects, not just those using XP.
In this class we will look at how to identify and write good user stories. The class will describe the six attributes all good stories must exhibit and present thirteen guidelines for writing better stories. We will explore how user role modeling can help when gathering a project’s initial stories. This class will be equally suited for programmers, testers, managers and even customers and analysts who are interested in applying these agile techniques to their projects.
By Mike Cohn
Estimating and planning are key skills. A good plan helps both the organization and the developers working on the project. In this session you’ll learn how an easy and effective approach to estimating and planning that can help you create more realistic plans.
Planning is important for all projects, even for projects using agile processes such as XP, Scrum, or Feature-Driven Development. Unfortunately, we’ve all seen so many worthless plans that we’d like to throw them away altogether. The good news is that it is possible to create a project plan that looks forward six to nine months that can be accurate and useful. In this class we will look at why traditional plans fail but why planning is still necessary even on agile projects. We will look at various approaches to estimating including unit-less points and ideal time. The class will describe four techniques for deriving estimates as well as when and how to re-estimate. We will look at techniques to create a plan that dramatically improves the project’s chances of on-time completion. Also discussed will be using velocity to track progress against the plan. This class will be equally suited for managers, programmers, testers, or anyone involved in estimating or planning a project.
By Mike Cohn
There is a myth that agile projects do not need project management and that they cannot be estimated and planned. In this session we will dispel those rumors and learn why the job of the agile project manager is to do more than just buy pizza and get out of the way.
In this session you will learn why a self-organizing team will always outperform a team managed through command-and-control, how to tell when a project is on track, and how and when to make an adaptive action to get it back on track. This session will describe the four types of agile teams and the appropriate project management style for each type. You will learn how to move a team quickly from the Telling phase, through the Selling phase, and into true agility. You will also learn how to achieve unified commitment on your team through powerful focusing tools such as the product vision box, the one-page product data sheet, and elevator statement.
By Mike Cohn
Almost all of us have worked on too many projects that have failed because of economic reasons rather than technical reasons. Just as the technical team is required to estimate the effort that will go into a project, a marketing or product management team should estimate the benefits of doing the project. Benefits can come in the form of additional sales, increased customer retention, increased operating efficiencies, and so on.
In this session we will look at return on investment (ROI) as well as traditional discounted cash flow methods such as net present value (NPV), and discounted payback period. We will also look at newer approaches such as economic value added (EVA).
The math is easy, the concepts are powerful. You will return home with practical knowledge about how to apply these straight-forward techniques to prioritizing and selecting projects.
By Mike Cohn
Projects struggle for many reasons—overly aggressive deadlines, unproven technologies, scope creep, team dynamics, communication problems, and inter-team coordination are just some of the reasons. If not given attention, these problems can ultimately cause a project to fail entirely. However, if you act early and in the right way, most struggling projects can be turned around.
In this class we will look at how to determine what is causing a project to fail and then at what to do about it. You will learn how which remedies to consider in which situations and how to determine the appropriateness of each. Also covered will be advice on communicating the project correction plan to executives or project sponsors who may still think the project is on track. The class offers practical advice from the presenter’s years of experience in assessing both successful and unsuccessful projects.
By Neal Ford
Is Service Oriented Architecture the next wave of distributed computing or just the same old crap in a shiny new package? This session provides an overview of what most people agree is the definition of SOA. I talk about SOA, ESB, CORBA, your MOM, and a bunch of other acronyms.
This session is a pragmatic look at SOA from a developer perspective, including such (never talked about) topics like tranports, granularity, versioning services, transformations, and whether you should be doing this or not. I show lots of slides with diagrams and talk about how to evolve towards an SOA. SOA can work if you ignore the hype and focus on the real meat: building loosely coupled message-based applications. This session discusses just that.
By Neal Ford
This session talks about how to actually get XP done in the real world (and what to tell your boss).
Extreme programming sounds a little too ?ESPN2? for most managers, but there is a lot of sound engineering behind its principles. My employer, ThoughtWorks, has been extremely successful using the full XP stack and we have developed lots of experience with it. This session talks about how to do XP in the real world. XP is all about feedback loops, so I discuss how to replace the radical sounding ones with more palatable ones. I talk about the parts of XP that are absolutely vital (unit testing, collective ownership, continuous integration, etc) and the ones that you can introduce a little more slowly (pair programming, only a 40 hour work week). This session focuses on the practicality of XP and how you can adopt it at your organization. I also talk about political battles with managers, other departments, and barriers that pop up anytime you try to introduce change in a large enterprise. Discussion is encouraged (required) in this session.
Key Session Points:
XP and Feedback Loops
A pragmatic look at the XP practices
The planning game
Small releases
Metaphor
Simple design
Testing
Refactoring
Pair programming
Collective ownership
Continuous integration
40-hour week
On-site customer
Coding standards
XP in the real world
By Neal Ford
This session shows you how to become a more productive programmer every day by using tools that you didn't know you already had.
<grizzled-programmer>
Why, in my day, we didn't have any fancy Gooey tools -- we did everything from the command line and we liked it. And, we got a lot more done than all you point-and-click monkeys
<grizzled-programmer>
Have you ever noticed that some old-school developers can run rings around you at the keyboard? Have you ever seen a 2 week problem become a 2 hour solution because someone knew a better way to solve it? This session is about all the command line and other tools that are extremely powerful yet widely neglected in today's graphical environments. This session shows you how to take advantage of those tools whether you run Windows, *Nix, or Mac. It focuses on specific recipes to make your job easier. I'll show you how to get around your computer in a hurry (no more clicking around in trees), how to find anything fast, how to manage projects and artifacts from the command line, how to automate the repetative tasks you find yourself doing every single day, how to stop repeating yourself, and how to stop repeating yourself. This session is guaranteed to improve your developer productivity by an order of magnitude.
Key Session Points
By Neal Ford
Lots of developers want to use Agile development technique but don't know where to start. This session discusses how to get started with Agility, the key benefits you can expect, and the pitfalls to avoid.
There's the perfect world, and then there's the world you have to live in. Lots of organizations would like to reap the benefits of Agile development techniques but don't know how to get started. This session discusses the key benefits you can derive from Agile software development so that you can decide for yourself how many agile techniques will work within your organization. I discuss project planning and estimation, how to benefit from pair programming when you aren't allowed to pair, how to measure your progress, and other project milestones. Agile software development isn't just an unrelated set of activities, it is a discipline. Once you understand the component parts of the discipline, you can apply them to your less-than-perfect world.
Key Session Points
By Scott Davis
How do you get started with an Agile development methodology? Everyone has been talking about eXtreme Programming for years, but how do you get it introduced to your team? Many times, you're not simply transitioning from from one methodology to another -- you're introducing a methodology for the first time. Adding structure to a previously unstructured endeavor. Adding a touch of discipline where programmers once roamed free.
This presentation talks about how to introduce Agile practices slowly. Think of it as refactoring your team iteratively. If you drop 25 new "best practices" on developers all at once, the chances of getting any of them to stick is slim. If you start with one practice and get buy-in on it, sneaking in the next one (especially if it is complementary) is far easier.
By Scott Davis
In this talk, we'll survey the web services exposed by leading websites (Google, Yahoo, Amazon, eBay) and discuss how they are driving the AJAX revolution. You'll see examples of RESTful, SOAP, and JSON web services, as well as the strengths and weaknesses of each.
Everyone seems to be talking about AJAX and Web 2.0 these days. While the UIs of AJAX-enabled websites such as Google Maps and Flickr are undeniably cool, they wouldn't exist without a strong SOA/Web Services infrastructure behind the scenes.
"Web Services" is an overloaded term. While SOAP is a mainstay in the web services world, there are other equally valid flavors (REST, JSON) that accomplish the same goal -- decoupling the data from the presentation layer, the platform, and even the programming language used.
Rather than talking about web services in the abstract, this talk shows examples of each flavor of web services as it is used in the wild by leading web companies. They have all taken slightly different approaches to the same problem. We'll compare and contrast their public-facing offerings.
There is no one "right way" to expose your API via web services. After this talk, you should have a better idea of the relative strengths and weaknesses of each variant.
By Scott Davis
Mark Twain once said, "Everyone talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it." Do you feel the same way about Unit Testing? Are you actively testing your code, or are you just thinking about testing your code... some day... once you get some more free time...
Unit testing offers benefits beyond the obvious. A happy side effect of writing unit tests is that your code ends up being better architected. By forcing you to be a consumer of your own code outside of the context of the main application, you end up seeing your code in a different light. Hidden dependencies get flushed out early. Good unit tests force your code to be more loosely coupled and highly cohesive.
This presentation is a survey of the testing ecosystem. A good testing infrastructure should include more than just JUnit. Cobertura, a test coverage tool, shows you how much of your code base is being tested. Writing test cases in Groovy adds a measure of flexibility that makes working with XML (and string data in general) a piece of cake. EasyMock allows you to test interfaces instead of implementations (and also avoid having to hand-code and maintain your own mock objects). We'll also look at functional testing libraries like HttpUnit, DbUnit, and JUnitPerf that allow you to test how your code behaves out in the wild, interacting with real subsystems instead of just mocks.
Most importantly, you'll see these tools live in action -- real code examples instead a simple slideware overview. Rather than looking at each tool in isolation, you'll see how they interact and complement each other. Rather than just talking about testing, we'll (finally) do something about it.
By Stuart Halloway
The Spring framework is one of the fastest growing open source frameworks. New job postings are gaining rapidly, and many customers are adopting Spring instead of heavier alternatives. In this session, we’ll introduce Spring. You’ll see how Spring can give you much of the power of EJB, without the complexity or pain.
Spring uses concepts like dependency injection and aspect oriented programming to ease standard enterprise development. Spring developers write plain, ordinary Java objects (POJOs), instead of sophisticated components. In this session, you’ll see a basic Spring application. You’ll also see some details about some of the enterprise integration strategies, including:
• Spring AOP
• Transactions
• Persistence
• Model/view/controller
When the session is over, you won’t be an expert, but you should have a much clearer understanding of what Spring does, what it doesn’t do, and why it’s growing so rapidly.
By Stuart Halloway
Dependency Injection (DI) is the cornerstone of Spring. The core concept is quite simple, but (surprise!) actual practice can become complex. To take full advantage of Spring DI, you need to understand not only the basics on configuration, but also the container lifecycle model and the various hooks provided by the framework.
Topics will include
By Stuart Halloway
Ajax applications have unique architectural challenges and opportunities. This presentation will show you how to take advantage of the Ajax's strengths, and work around its quirks.
We'll start with an overview of Ajax, and then dive right into an extended example where we add Ajax to an existing web application. Along the way we'll cover several tools that we use to aid in Ajax development: The JavaScript Shell, Firebug, and the Web Developer's Toolbar. We'll also look at two popular JavaScript Ajax libraries: Prototype and Scriptaculous.
With the example application under our belts, we'll move to a discussion of Ajax architectural questions, including:
