JBoss World, Day 1

14 February 2008

java jboss jbossorg jbossworld

JBoss World kicked off today around noon, with people pouring in to pick up their badges, bags and thumbdrives.

The first sessions of the day were packed and standing-room-only. People were spilling out of the JBoss Clustering talk presented by Bela Ban and Brian Stansberry. Greg Hinkle presented the JBoss Operations Network (JBoss ON), which, as announced previously, is working with Hyperic to create an awesome open-source systems-management system. Ales and Scott presented about Microcontainer's new OSGi facilities. Ales also spoke about the OSGi bits of MC earlier this month with Mark Newton.

The afternoon sessions were wrapped up with the conference keynote. Emceed by Craig Muzilla, we heard from Jim Whitehurst, the new CEO of Red Hat for the last 42 days. He reaffirmed Red Hat's commitment to invest in the JBoss division, its technology and its community.

Jim Whitehurst

Sacha Labourey reflected on our past, and spoke about the future of JBoss, including the Enterprise Acceleration initiative. Enterprise Acceleration aims to make JBoss as ubiquitous in production environments as it is in development environments.

Then, Sacha lead into an ultimately ill-fated demo. It was awesome while it lasted, but then, as is typical, the demo demons took over, and cut it short. Before that happened, though, Max Andersen demonstrated the power of JBoss Developer Studio by going from 0-to-60 in about 3 seconds. JBDS makes it simple to start a new project skeleton, complete with everything you need, and automatically deployed within an instance of AS managed by the IDE. The integrated Exadel WYSIWYG tooling significantly reduces the code/compile/test cycle. He expects another spin of JBDS this quarter to include the 4.3 version of JBoss Enterprise Application Platform (JBEAP).

Following that nicely, Julien Viet of the JBoss Portal team jumped up and did a quick demonstration of integrating JSF/Seam within Portal using the new JBoss Portlet Bridge project. He also was able to point out support for remote portlets using WSRP before the demo demons killed the power to the stage. The Portal team released Portal 2.6.4 just last week, and expect 2.7 sometime in the 3rd quarter of this year.

The keynote was followed by a festive cocktail hour in the exhibitor hall.

And all of that was followed by the BoFs and Hackathon. The BoFs were well-attended, the Hackathon was not, alas. Manik Surtani, Ales Justin, Mike Brock, and a few others dropped by the Hackathon for a while. Mark Proctor demonstrated the nice visualization, traceability and breakpoints provided by Drools Eclipse tooling during his BoF.

Overall, it was an excellent day, and at 4am, I'm simply worn out. An even fuller day awaits us tomorrow.

Eyeballs

14 February 2008

java jboss jbossorg jbossworld

I've started streaming up photos from JBoss World to Flickr.

20 Million Downloads of JBoss Love

14 February 2008

java jboss jbossworld

JBoss reached a nice milestone in time for JBoss World. At the keynote today, Craig Muzilla, the co-GM of JBoss Division, let us know that we've seen over 20,000,000 downloads, now. That breaks down to about 10 million before the acquisition (5 years), and about 10 million since then (20 months).

If this were a constant stream of downloads, that'd be over 8000/day, for over 6 and a half years. Over 300 and hour, or 5 a second.

But it wasn't linear. Since the acquisition, it's been more like 16.5k downloads a day, across our product lines.

JBoss World, Day 0

13 February 2008

ical java jboss jbossorg jbossworld

Started today in Georgia, I think, as I was still en route to Orlando. Arrived around 4am.

Awoke and joined the JBoss Developer's Conference (the conference for JBoss developers, before JBoss World) this morning. Met the normal assortment of JBoss guys you'd expect to find at such a gathering. In addition to the developers, there were some non-developers present. This included Patrick MacDonald discussing our approach to the build and release process, and Andrig Miller addressing the differences between community and enterprise versions.

JBoss World itself cranks up at noon on Wednesday, and should prove to be exciting.

To help organize your attendance, you can subscribe to the agenda iCal we've put together. I suggest subscribing to it, instead of importing it, so that you can pick up any changes we make during the course of the conference. Go ahead and sync it to your Blackberry, or iPhone, or Android handset.

And don't forget the Hackathon on Wednesday night. I know it conflicts with the BoFs, but the Hackathon runs until "late" and we'll welcome stragglers.

Update: Max Andersen asked for the actual root gCal. Here it is.

JBoss World This Week!

11 February 2008

java jboss jbossorg jbossworld twitter

I'm packing up the grocery-getter and about to roll down to Orlando to get ready for JBoss World. Rebecca Goldstein has worked her fingers to the nub to ensure that this year's JBoss World conference will be awesome.

I'll be working with Karsten Wade of Red Hat Dev-Fu to produce daily show reports. You can also follow along at home through my twitter. If you're at JBW and twitting, leave a comment here with your Twitter URL, so others might can follow you.

See you there!

JBoss World Hackathon wiki is live

15 January 2008

java jboss jbossorg jbossworld

As mentioned previously, at the JBoss World 2008 conference in Orlando, we'll be running a Hackathon.

Now's the time to head over to the Hackathon wiki, and start making some plans. If you haven't bought your pass to JBoss World yet, you need to jump on that, also. There's less than a month before we're all hanging out in sunny Florida with the gators and Canadians. The agenda is published, so you can see that you'll be missing a lot if you don't come.

Going down to FUDCon (and other updates)

11 January 2008

fedora jboss

Tomorrow, I'm trekking down from my mountain to the flatlands, destined for Raleigh.

FUDCon Raleigh 2008 is taking place. In the interest of Red Hat open-source communities playing friendly and synergizing, I've been invited to join the Fedora Board. This means I've also installed VMWare Fusion and have built a Fedora image for my Mac.

Luckily, I'll also be coordinating with Karsten Wade about some of plans for JBossWorld, which the Red Hat team is pitching in on.

It'll also be a chance for me to meet a newly-hired designer on my team, and the new CEO of Red Hat. Amazingly, he and I went to the same small high-school in the same po-dunk Georgia town of Columbus. Tom's Peanuts, RC Cola, Carmike Cinemas, and AFLAC. That's Columbus.

Free to Fee

10 January 2008

java jboss jbossorg

Since I've been with JBoss, we've been making a move towards "the Fedora model" in terms of the divide between the open-source community projects and the "official" bits you can buy support against. Once we introduced our Platforms and Frameworks product configurations, it became slightly less clear what was what. Unlike Fedora, when tends to aggregate a lot of things from a lot of projects, the JBoss community projects are the primary upstream source for JBoss commercial support offerings.

Working with Jon Atkins and Shaun Connolly who handle the .com side of the house, we've worked up some statements to help try to clarify it all. Additionally, James Cobb whipped up a pretty intuitive diagram demonstrating the way the open-source community is cherry-picked and how the rough edges are sanded off to create the supported bits.

Org and Enterprise

JBoss Innovation Awards

14 November 2007

events java jboss red-hat

Once again, we'll announce winners of the Innovation Awards at JBoss World in February.

While there's other opportunities for the projects at JBoss to get the nod for their innovation, the Innovation Awards are a chance for you, the users of JBoss projects, to get some glory. That glory includes a free pass to the conference, a VIP dinner, and some special attention during the conference.

What's interesting about what you're doing? There's 8 different categories, surely you fit into at least one.

  1. Joint Red Hat/JBoss Deployment: Everyone deploys their Java stuff on Linux. If that's JBossAS and RHEL for you, you're ready to rock.
  2. SOA Implementation: Are you using JBossESB, Drools, JBoss WebServices, jBPM?
  3. Increased ROI: Ask your CIO/CFO.
  4. Ecosystem: The whole ecosystem around Seam/JSF could be ripe for an award here.
  5. Emerging Technologies: Have you been doing Seam with Groovy?
  6. Migration: Have you ditched your app-server from one of the Other Guys lately?
  7. Business Process Automation: Did you implement jBPM or Drools?
  8. User Experience: Did you produce a slick UI using Portal, RichFaces and AJAX?

The Innovation Awards are a chance to highlight the good work your team has been doing. You've got until the end of the month to send us your story using the simple form at the bottom of this page.

JBoss World 2008 CFP

06 September 2007

community events java jboss opensource

presentation-boy.gifThe 2008 JBoss World conference has been announced as happening in Orlando during February 13-15. That's Valentine's Day. Bring your sweetie south, and thaw out with some hot Java in the sun.

Want to be a superstar and get a free pass to the conference? Of course you do!

Just submit a presentation. If you're selected, you get a conference badge, some free meals, and the glory of the community.

You know you want to.