
Tuesday March 07, 2006
Singapore Sun Tech Days Trip Report
Hello Vijay, Kuldip and all,
Here are some notes from my trip to Singapore to speak about Studio 11 at the Sun Tech Days.
Conference Organization
Singapore was a very good place for Sun Tech Days - the attendance was high, and the attenders were generally very much interested in Sun technologies. They listened well and asked interesting questions.
Security was organized quite well - each attender had his/her badge scanned before entering the room where presentation took place.
Many people from other departments of Sun (Deepak Jeevan Kumar and Kian-Chau Ng from Educational Sales, Ed Pilatowicz from Solaris Kernel) were interested in what we do and how we do it, and also in specifics of Sun Studio. I eagerly told them, and we agreed they'll contact us with compiler questions.
Studio 11 talk
Once again it was confirmed that the developers awareness of our product is in serious need of improvement. Thus the audience, in my opinion, has been divided into two parts - people who used Forte/Studio products before, and people who didn't have an idea about what's going on. In my speech I tried to address both parties. The message for the second party was that the Studio is very cool, and if you develop for Solaris or Linux, you should use Studio. At the same time, I listed and advertised cool new features for the developers who are already our customers to get them into using the latest Studio, and also to urge them to express their concerns about Studio usage.
Note for novice speakers in a foreign language: speaking in short sentences really helps to get the point across. As do eye contact, open gestures and well-placed jokes.
I've had 45 slides and 45 minutes for sides and Q&A. Instead of reading the slides, I've prepared message for each slide and delivered them, sometimes in details, so it wouldn't overlap with the slide text. I think it worked well enough - I said almost all I was planning to say, and managed to complete the talk in 38 minutes.
Alot of questions were asked some time after the speech. I've roamed the conference facilities, using t-shirt with Sun logo and an inviting smile to urge the attenders to ask questions, and it worked!
Main points of concern:
Cross-compilation issue was brought up again. Customers want to develop on x86/x64 for all around efficiency and to compile for SPARC for stability. I've been asked the same during the other customer visits. I think we should seriously consider this direction.
Customers want even more integration with Java development tools. Basically, they want Java Studio Enterprise and Sun Studio in one to be able to develop mixed code application without having to install two products. Sounds reasonable enough to me, and in the spirit of getting JED products together.
There is alot of confusion about product naming. When people hear "Sun Studio", they often think of Java first. Nobody thinks of compilers, dbx, or analyzer for this matter. Of course, Tech days help to unravel this misunderstanding a great deal.
One of the concerns expressed was by a customer whose program dumped core after a few days of work. I offered him possible approaches to the problem - try to debug the core file and to examine his program for memory leaks using run-time checking feature of dbx. Ed Pilatowicz chimed in and offered to preload a library to track memory access (just for the future reference - which of the ways is preferred?)
All in all, it was a very educating experience. The only thing I missed was pepper crab 
Thanks for reading that far!
Boris Ivanovsky
Posted by x86be
( Mar 07 2006, 02:50:43 PM PST )
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Sun Tech Days - Singapore Presentation
Sigapore
Sun Tech Days: Solaris sun Studio11 Presentation
--given by Boris Ivanovski on Feb 24, 2006
Posted by x86be
( Mar 07 2006, 02:46:56 PM PST )
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