Thursday May 25, 2006
Late JavaOne impressions
Last week was a lot of fun
JavaOne time. But at the end of it, I was very tired.
Everything started with the
NetBeans Day on Monday. Or better with the
registration to it. Seeing all those people standing in line to listen
to what's new and coming in NB was quite a sight. I talked to a couple
of people while standing in line about what tools they were using. Most
of the people I talked to there where using more than one editor/IDE.
Some little missing features can sometimes make the live harder than it should be. I pointed a couple to
Sandip's
blog to show them that there is more out there and how easy it is to
write your own little additional modules.
The presentations were good, but the conference rooms in the hotel
could not hold all the people. I was especially interested in Sandip's
presentation of the future Creator pack. That went well and I think a
lot of people liked the idea that we are finally combining the two.
Tuesday, the AXAJ and Semplice showings in the keynotes were well
recieved. I don't think too many people understood really what
Tor was
showing there. I think a couple got it later in the week at the
Semplice coming out session.
One session was called "Twelve Reasons to Use Creator".
Charles Ditzel
wrote about it. I know a lot about Creator but I wanted to see what
questions and concerns would come up there. Overall, I think the
audience did learn a lot about different corners of Creator. For me the
best part was when Octavian tried to squeeze into a small NetBeans
shell (ahm t-shirt

. I tried to take some pictures but those little digital cameras don't work so well at a distance
I talked to a lot of people during my shift at the
Creator booth in the
Pavillion. Some things that came up again where Tomcat and JBoss, Java
EE 5 support (and the unfortunate lack of Java SE 5 support in the
current Creator), JDBC driver issues, and portlets/portal questions.
Overall I somehow seem to see an increase in interest in the portlet
area. At J1, at the
Creator forum and I even get emails asking about
deploying our portlets to different portals. So I used the pavillion to
talk to the JBoss Portal and the LifeRay people. In the end I was
successful to deploy our portlets to both of them
Later in the evening I went to the packed
JavaPosse BOF. The room in
the Argent hotel could hardly hold all the people. Ofcourse I know all
those four guys and it was a fun evening. Listen to
episode #55 to get an impression

But it ended (officially) at
23:20 and I had to get home.
On Wednesday the most interesting talk for me was probably the Groovy
talk. I come from a Unix background and did some scripting all along. I
find that combination of Java and a scripting language good. I hope I
can try to play with that a bit more in the near future.
Thursday started with the IBM keynote. I did not know what to expect
but was surprised by the Eclipse and it's community talk. I found the
demo of the tight integration of the IDE with the overall process very
interesting. There was an old joke in the Emacs world: "When do you
know that an editor matures? - When it can send email." I guess that
process integration is a step into the same direction, doing more in
the same environment.
Next was the Semplice talk. Unfortunately it was moved from the
afternoon to the moring. So I don't know how many people did not make
it. But the people who made it found it very interesting. Unfortunately
the talk now collided with another talk "Dynamic Typed Languages and
the JVM" which I would have also liked to attend
In the evening, the famous J1 Bash with James Gosling's t-shirt throwing-machine contest. Some time to relax a bit and have fun.
Later I went to two NetBeans BOF's. In the first one
Geertjan and Petr
showed how easy it is to extend or customize NB with a new Web
Framework. The second one was about the NB collaboration modules with a
twist. The transport layer was JXTA

At that BOF one guy came up and
talked about how he had tried to get the NB collaboration modules
working in Creator. He was not completely happy. I tried that as well
way back when. I got most of it to work but then too much other stuff
came in between and that never went anywhere.
And it was again 23:20 and time to get home.
Friday started with the fun Sun keynote. I did not ride my bicycle that
week

I was simply too tired and BART has restrictions on which
trains you can bring your bike, so it did not play out. But quite some
people did ride

And one guy won the Lance Armstrong jersey
James Gosling had the final of the RT Slot Car Race on stage. That race
track was always surrounded by a lot of people at the pavillion. And
I've seen quite a few people spending a lot of time there trying to get
into that final. Four kids from Germany made it and ended up taking
second place
Two interesting talks were the NB API development talk and a session on JSF in portlets.
Overall I trink it was a very good conference. I don't have any numbers
but it looked more buzzing than the last couple of years. One thing, I
have to think about, is how to better handle late BOF's, early keynotes
and a 1.5 hour commute time.
And now I need some time to play with my new toy

The
Jasper S20 phone. So far, it works pretty well as normal cell phone but I got it
to play with the devlopment for it
Have fun

-- Marco
PS: I had big problems today. For whatever reason, my FireFox timed out all the time when I tried to write this post
( May 25 2006, 03:36:26 PM PDT )
Permalink
Posted by gonzo on May 25, 2006 at 06:23 PM PDT #
Posted by Craig McClanahan on May 25, 2006 at 10:09 PM PDT #
Posted by Marco Walther on May 30, 2006 at 01:58 PM PDT #