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20080201 Friday February 01, 2008

Why Your JavaOne Submission Was Rejected

JavaOne submission acceptance letters - and rejection letters - starting going out last night. This year, I was on the review committee for one of the tracks, so I got to see the proposals as well as the reasons for rejecting many of them. I thought I'd write these up, both to explain to the many submitters what might have gone wrong, as well as to give some tips for how to improve your chances next year. I'll probably link back to this post around the time submissions for JavaOne 2009 open up later this year.

Finally, work one one strong submission rather than submitting 5-10 half-baked ones; just adding lots of abstracts does not help your odds given my points above about the low number of available slots; each submission has to be fantastic.

(2008-02-01 12:59:41.0) Permalink Comments [3]

Comments:

I, for one, think it is just because you guys are ***holes!

:P

Posted by Robert Cooper on February 02, 2008 at 06:23 PM PST #

Hi Tor! Is that Mercurial not so good as expected?

Posted by ruby.freeman on February 11, 2008 at 02:40 PM PST #

Hi again! Tor, it would be very useful to add this feature to the NetBeans debugger - to set breakpoint only if some condition is true (often I need to click many times on "Continue" till the needed breakpoint happens).
Thanks!

Posted by ruby.freeman on February 13, 2008 at 12:11 AM PST #

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