Thursday, March 23, 2006
Upcoming Speaking Engagements
Figured I would share all of my upcoming speaking engagements. Hopefully, if you will be in attendance at any of these events, please leave a comment...
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
2007
| | View blog reactionsApril 2006
- InformationWeek Spring Conference: Will be on a panel discussing service-oriented architectures. Would love for audience members to ask questions around open source how it can help create them faster and cheaper.
- Long Island Java Users Group: Doing a presentation on extreme scalability. Will dive deep into what it takes to design an application to run on 384 CPUs
May 2006
- Infoworld SOA: Will be on a panel discussing service-oriented architectures. Would love for audience members to ask questions about security and management aspects to developing enterprise-class services
June 2006
- Enterprise Open Source Conference: Will be presenting on how enterprise architecture practices can embrace all aspects of open source and not just focus in on getting software for free but to make the enterprise and the planet better at the same time
2007
- RubyCon: Will be presenting on how the Ruby Community has embraced enterprise thinking and provide a status on the port of Ruby to Z/OS. Will also present a case study on the first enterprise application in production within a Fortune 100 enterprise written entirely in Ruby
- Agile Software Development: Will be talking about the growth of the agile software development community and how they have crossed the chasm. Will provide several case studies using analogies of how Six Sigma and CMM grew beyond the original creators enabling its success
- Agile Software Development: Will be talking about the growth of the agile software development community and how they have crossed the chasm. Will provide several case studies using analogies of how Six Sigma and CMM grew beyond the original creators enabling its success and increased the velocity of uptake.
- Enterprise Architecture Summit: Will present several case studies on how enterprises have finally gained control of their own destiny, have standardized on a set of tools, enabling consistency and interchangability amongst its development staff reducing the overhead of having disparate skillsets. One of the case studies will feature a large enterprise who no longer lets every new product claiming productivity gains sneak into the backdoor but forces those who bring them to walk through the front door with facts on adoption rates amongst peer groups, depth of integrators supporting it and quantification of marketshare
- OOPSLA: A deep dive into how the agile community has realized that Individuals and Interactions are more important than processes and tools and why they should continue to put more value on interactions with those who share different perspectives so that all communities benefit...