NFJS Fall 2010: What do you want to learn?
Hi everyone! I’m currently in the process of developing new talks for my Fall 2010 NFJS tour dates. While I don’t know yet where I’ll be speaking, I can tell you that I’ve registered availability for the following shows:
- Boston, MA
- Seattle, WA
- Atlanta, GA
- Minneapolis, MN
- Chicago, IL
- Denver, CO
So, if you’re in one of those cities and you’re thinking about attending NFJS when it comes your way (see here for the schedule), I’d like to know what you want to hear about assuming I come your way.
To narrow down the potentials a bit, here are my personal areas of focus:
- Agility/Lean/Kanban
- Native Mobile and Web Mobile Software Development (iPhone/iPad/Android)
- Web Development in General (HTML5/CSS3/JavaScript)
- Modularity and OSGi
If there are any topics from these four areas that you’d like to hear more about, please speak up in the comments section. And even if you’re not in one of these cities, most of any talks I develop for the Fall will likely show up on the 2011 tour as well, so please speak up anyway!
Thanks in advance for your feedback!
About Matt Stine
Matt Stine is a Technical Architect at AutoZone in Memphis, TN. He is an eleven year veteran of the enterprise software and web development industries, with experience spanning the healthcare, biomedical research, e-commerce, and now retail store domains. His current focus is the development and support of an enterprise Java platform supporting 4600+ AutoZone stores. Matt appears frequently on the No Fluff Just Stuff symposium series tour, as well as at other conferences such as JavaOne, SpringOne/2GX, The Rich Web Experience, and The Project Automation Experience. He has served as Agile Zone Leader for DZone, and his articles also appear in GroovyMag and NFJS the Magazine. Matt is also author of the Selenium 2.0 DZone Refcard. When he’s not on the road, Matt also enjoys his role as President of the Memphis/Mid-South Java User Group. His current areas of interest include lean/agile software development, modular software architecture, object-oriented design, functional programming, automated testing of modern web applications, and NoSQL datastores.
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