Speakers
- Dan Allen
- Jay Balunas
- Lincoln Baxter III
- Emmanuel Bernard
- Andy Bosch
- David Chandler
- Cagatay Civici
- James Cook
- Keith Donald
- Michael Freedman
- Jeremy Grelle
- Neil Griffin
- Daniel Hinojosa
- Ian Hlavats
- Max Katz
- Micha Kiener
- Jason Lee
- Martin Marinschek
- Pete Muir
- Scott O'Bryan
- Christian Schalk
- Andy Schwartz
- Stan Silvert
- Matthias Wessendorf
- Michael Yuan
Martin Marinschek
Committer and PMC member of Apache MyFaces, Trinidad and Tobago
Trinidad and Tobago, as well as member of the expert
groups for JSF 2.0, JSF Metadata, the JSF portlet bridge and WebBeans.
As a consultant of IRIAN he has successfully aided in developing
web-applications for customers in Austria, Germany, Switzerland and
the US. He lectures web- and software-development at universities in
Vienna and writes books on JSF (JSF@Work, Pro Apache MyFaces) GWT
(Google Webtoolkit) and Rails, and articles for the german Java
magazine. At national and international conferences (JavaOne,
Javapolis, JAX, W-JAX, Webinale, ApacheCon US and Europe) he presents
on JSF, MyFaces, AJAX and the highly dynamic and interactive web of
the future.
http://www.irian.at
Presentations
Accessible Web Applications with or without JavaScript
This session explains how you can build accessible JSF applications with or without JavaScript.
We will discuss why JSF should work completely without JavaScript as a fallback, how this can be achieved, and which component suites have already implemented this feature. Furthermore, we will look into how you can still build accessible web-applications - even if JavaScript is used.
MyFaces 2.0
We will look into the last year's development of the MyFaces component libraries and how their community reacted to the JSF 2.0 feature enhancements.
It has been half a year since JSF 2.0 has been released - let us see how the MyFaces community has responded to this, what parts of the new standard have been implemented, and what parts remain to be done.
Conversation Overload: Seam, Orchestra, Spring Webflow, Spring, JSR 299, JSR 330
How to select a conversation scope framework in the age of war of the dependency injection frameworks.
Seam has one, Orchestra has one, Webflow has one, some JSRs have one, Spring 3.1 plans to have one: but who has the best conversation scope for your everyday needs? How does one select a conversation scope framework in the age of war of the dependency injection frameworks? Some clear winners seem to emerge if you follow the new standardization efforts for dependency injection, and JSR-330 might be the base for all your dependency injection and JSR-299 on top of JSR-330 the base for all your conversation scope needs in the future.