Codetown ::: a software developer's community
Time: December 1, 2009 to December 4, 2009
Location: Loew's Portofino Hotel
City/Town: Orlando
Website or Map: http://maps.google.com/maps?q…
Phone: http://www.jsfsummit.com/conference/orlando/2009/12/home
Event Type: conference
Organized By: No Fluff Just Stuff and JSFCentral
Latest Activity: Oct 20, 2009
No Fluff Just Stuff and JSFCentral are teaming up again to bring you JSF Summit.
JavaServer Faces has come a long way in the past few years. Everyone from small startups to large financial institutions are using JSF. Dozens of open source projects are built on JSF.
This conference will focus on core skills, development tools, frameworks, third-party components, and the latest industry trends. Sessions will target the needs of application developers, solution architects, and project managers. Some of the key topics covered include: JSF 2.0, Seam, Spring integration, Ajax support, portlet development, testing, and other popular component suites.
JSF Summit is your chance to take your skills a step up, network with your peers, and learn from some of the most talented people in the industry. Come join us at the annual JSF Summit conference as we explore the JSF in depth!
Save $200 with Early-bird Registration
Two Great Conferences
The Rich Web Experience JSF Summit will be held concurrently with The Rich Web Experience. Your admission to JSF Summit includes access to both of these great events. The Rich Web Experience focuses on enhancing user experience on the web. Some of the topics covered will include: Ajax, Javascript, and Web Standards. Session and location details will be announced soon. Check out therichwebexperience.com.
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.
Created by Michael Levin Dec 18, 2008 at 6:56pm. Last updated by Michael Levin May 4, 2018.
Check out the Codetown Jobs group.
Atlassian recently migrated 4 million Jira databases to Amazon Aurora, intending to reduce costs and improve the reliability of its Jira Cloud platform. Due to the large number of files involved and the constraints of managed services, the team developed a custom tool to orchestrate the process, as traditional cloud migration strategies were not viable.
By Renato LosioLM Studio has released version 0.3.17, introducing support for the Model Context Protocol (MCP) — a step forward in enabling language models to access external tools and data sources. Originally developed by Anthropic, MCP defines a standardized interface for connecting LLMs to services such as GitHub, Notion, or Stripe, enabling more powerful, contextual reasoning.
By Robert KrzaczyńskiGrafana released Tempo 2.8 on June 12, 2025, introducing substantial memory optimizations and expanded functionality in its trace query language, TraceQL. This update is part of an ongoing effort to make distributed tracing more performant and accessible within observability stacks.
By Craig RisiLaunched in early preview last May, Gemma 3n is now officially available. It targets mobile-first, on-device AI applications, using new techniques designed to increase efficiency and improve performance, such as per-layer embeddings and transformer nesting.
By Sergio De SimoneIn this article, we explore how AI agents are reshaping software development and the impact they have on a developer’s workflow. We introduce a practical approach to staying in control while working with these tools by adopting key best practices from the discipline of software architecture, including defining an implementation plan, splitting tasks, and so on.
By Enrico Piccinin
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