Martin Marinschek
Committer and PMC member of Apache MyFaces, Trinidad and Tobago
Martin Marinschek is a Committer and PMC member of Apache MyFaces,
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
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
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, with JavaScript enabled.
An introduction to Web-Beans and a comparison with Spring
In this talk, you will get a short introduction to WebBeans - the specification which will glue JSF and EJB3 together.
We will look into the features of WebBeans, how you can configure WebBeans annotation and XML-based, and how the features compare to other popular Dependency Injection frameworks, especially Spring.
