Codetown ::: a software developer's community
Time: December 1, 2009 to December 4, 2009
Location: Loews Portofino Hotel
City/Town: Orlando
Website or Map: http://www.therichwebexperien…
Phone: http://www.therichwebexperience.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 is pleased to announce The 2009 Rich Web Experience.
RWE 2009 will cover the hot areas of interest in the web space today: JavaScript, Ajax frameworks, CSS, Flex, Design, security, and more. RWE 2009 will feature 5 parallel tracks, over 15 speakers, 50 technical sessions, panel discussions, and keynote presentations. At RWE 2009 you will interact with industry experts, project leads, authors, and top developers.
Register by November 2nd and save $200!
Front-end development practices continue to evolve at a frantic pace. RWE will help you stay up-to-speed with the latest tools, frameworks, usability, and development practices. Our speakers are opensource leaders, project committers, published authors, and professional trainers. We are excited to make them available to you!
If you are ready to take your web skills to the next level, join us in Orlando. All Inclusive Package available - registration pass, airfare and lodging!
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.
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This week's Java roundup for February 16th, 2026, features news highlighting: the second release candidate of JDK 26; an update on Jakarta EE 12; the February 2026 edition of Payara Platform; a point release of Apache Camel; and maintenance releases of Hibernate Search and Quarkus.
By Michael Redlich
Uber has open-sourced uForwarder, a push-based Kafka consumer proxy built to handle trillions of messages and multiple petabytes of data daily. The system introduces context-aware routing, head-of-line blocking mitigation, adaptive auto-rebalancing, and partition-level delay processing to improve scalability, workload isolation, and hardware efficiency in large-scale event-driven microservices.
By Leela Kumili
TSSLint 3, the lightweight TypeScript linting tool by Johnson Chu, enhances performance with a reduced dependencies and improved migration paths from legacy linters. As a spiritual successor to TSLint, it offers near-instant diagnostics and fixes, leveraging native Node support for .ts imports. Enhanced developer tooling and a new TSL compatibility layer simplify linting in large-scale projects.
By Daniel CurtisIn this podcast, Michael Stiefel spoke with Chris Richardson about using microservices to modernize software applications and the use of artificial intelligence in software architecture. We first discussed the problems of monolithic enterprise software and how to use microservices to evolve them to enable fast flow - the ability to achieve rapid software delivery.
By Chris Richardson
This article presents a least-privilege AI Agent Gateway that places clear controls between AI agents and infrastructure. Agents do not access infrastructure APIs directly. Instead, every request is validated, authorized using policy as code with Open Policy Agent (OPA), and executed in short-lived, isolated environments, with built-in observability using OpenTelemetry.
By Nabin Debnath
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