Hi All,

I'm interested in attending an OJUG meeting, but I don't see any on the events page. Am I missing something? Is there a standard meeting location I'm not seeing?

Also, do you all do anything through the Meetup app at all? Would you like me to post programming or tech meetups that I see in my groups for the Orlando area? I saw that Michael added PyCon, but there are others out there that may be interesting as well and I'd be happy to help fill the Events page for people that are interested.

Views: 142

Comment

You need to be a member of Codetown to add comments!

Join Codetown

Comment by Michael Levin on August 23, 2017 at 7:42am

Hi Nicholas, Did you notice we're having an OrlandoJUG meeting tomorrow (Thursday)? Hope you can make it. 

Comment by Michael Levin on August 1, 2017 at 8:01pm

One easy way to share info is to post a blog post, or a discussion within the Ojug group or the Forum. I can give you admin privileges in the Ojug group and you can create a webpage within that group. 


Mentoring happens in Hackathons, which I've held once with a mentor, in that case it was James Ward. It went over well. Off the clock, you need to make friends you can ask questions of. You can post snippets or as much code as you like here and ask people to comment. For example, you can post a Discussion in the Forum and add snippets to it.

Comment by Nicholas Belli on August 1, 2017 at 6:24pm

Hi Michael! Thanks for the reply. I didn't originally see the OJug Meetup group so I didn't think it existed, but I was able to find it and submit a request to join. Thank you!

As far as the Meetup information sharing, since there are so many intermingled languages and opportunities to share knowledge between APIs, I thought it might be useful for us as Java Developers to see what might go into the front end design or the integration of a Web interface, and share knowledge about what considerations we go through as well. It may even be useful to let everyone know about the SQL and database communities and trainings in case someone needs to find out how to make their application work more effectively with their databases. Almost a full-stack approach if you will.

As far as the programming and learning is coming, I'm really enjoying it tremendously. My final project this semester was to build a simple 3 Layer Architecture system, so I built a very small and basic front end GUI with JavaFX and integrated it with a simple table in MySQL. I'm so used to SQLServer at work that the SQL syntax was a bit strange in the code, but it was definitely a fun challenge. 

My next step is to get on Git and GitHub to understand how that works so that I can start uploading my projects (which is what I have been told is an essential step to finding a job in the industry). I've also been told that pulling down open source projects and working on bugs is another way, but I don't even have a grasp of where to start looking for that. 

As far as mentoring a new Java Developer, are there any groups out there that do that sort of thing? A college education can only take me so far before I feel like I need to find questions to answer and challenges to solve with my programs, but without the feedback of "you did this well, but you missed this here" it feels like any of us could develop bad habits just because "it works". I'd be open to ideas on that front. 

As always, thanks so much, and I may reach out to you to see where I can assist with my currently limited schedule. 

Comment by Michael Levin on August 1, 2017 at 10:13am

Hi Nicholas, Correct! The upcoming OJUG meeting will be posted right here in the Codetown Events section and on the Meetup page. When you join the Codetown OJUG group, you will get an email when a comment is posted and that includes meeting announcements. There's also a mailing list with about 1400 people on it!

I got an inquiry the other day about a presentation someone wants to give so we'll see what happens with that.

Sure, if you'd like to post Orlando events we can create a page in the OJUG group here on Codetown and we may also be able to put them on the Meetup page.

The next OJUG meeting will be at the new Canvs offices in Winter Park. I'm looking for a speaker and sponsor. Summer is usually slow so maybe we'll have an August meetup if there's interest. I'd love some help with organizing so if you're interested or know someone who is, please contact me.

How's the programming coming along? Learning and working on some interesting stuff?

 

 

Happy 10th year, JCertif!

Notes

Welcome to Codetown!

Codetown is a social network. It's got blogs, forums, groups, personal pages and more! You might think of Codetown as a funky camper van with lots of compartments for your stuff and a great multimedia system, too! Best of all, Codetown has room for all of your friends.

When you create a profile for yourself you get a personal page automatically. That's where you can be creative and do your own thing. People who want to get to know you will click on your name or picture and…
Continue

Created by Michael Levin Dec 18, 2008 at 6:56pm. Last updated by Michael Levin May 4, 2018.

Looking for Jobs or Staff?

Check out the Codetown Jobs group.

 

Enjoy the site? Support Codetown with your donation.



InfoQ Reading List

Presentation: Hybrid Cloud-Native Networking in Enterprise - Some Assembly Required

Louis Ryan shares a compelling vision for modern cloud native hybrid networking. He critiques primitive network abstractions (the "Big IP" problem) and rigid security policies that rot and cause SPOFs. Discover how architects can elevate network functionality, bake in identity (mTLS/PKI), and leverage composability to achieve repeatable policy enforcement everywhere their applications run.

By Louis Ryan

Grab Adds Real-Time Data Quality Monitoring to Its Platform

Grab updated its internal platform to monitor Apache Kafka data quality in real time. The system uses FlinkSQL and an LLM to detect syntactic and semantic errors. It currently tracks 100+ topics, preventing invalid data from reaching downstream users. This proactive strategy aligns with industry trends to treat data streams as reliable products.

By Patrick Farry

NVIDIA Dynamo Addresses Multi-Node LLM Inference Challenges

Serving Large Language Models (LLMs) at scale is complex. Modern LLMs now exceed the memory and compute capacity of a single GPU or even a single multi-GPU node. As a result, inference workloads for 70B+, 120B+ parameter models, or pipelines with large context windows, require multi-node, distributed GPU deployments.

By Claudio Masolo

Karrot Improves Conversion Rates by 70% with New Scalable Feature Platform on AWS

Karrot replaced its legacy recommendation system with a scalable architecture that leverages various AWS services. The company sought to address challenges related to tight coupling, limited scalability, and poor reliability in its previous solution, opting instead for a distributed, event-driven architecture built on top of scalable cloud services.

By Rafal Gancarz

Growing Yourself as a Software Engineer, Using AI to Develop Software

Sharing your work as a software engineer inspires others, invites feedback, and fosters personal growth, Suhail Patel said at QCon London. Normalizing and owning incidents builds trust, and it supports understanding the complexities. AI enables automation but needs proper guidance, context, and security guardrails.

By Ben Linders

© 2025   Created by Michael Levin.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service