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Festa do 10º Aniversário do DFJUG
São 10 anos de convivência Agora o DFJUG prepara-se para
trilhar os próximos anos, e o convidamos a conhecer o que
as empresas como Politec - Sun Microsystens -
Borland - IBM planejam realizar nos
próximos anos, e aonde VOCÊ desenvolvedor deverá focar seus estudos
para ter uma carreira de sucesso. Aproveite para trazer seu
currículo e quem sabe não entrar em 2008 de emprego
novo.
A festa aconteceu dia 09 de fevereiro de 2008 na UnB e contou com mais de 300 participantes. Muito obrigado pela sua contribuição com a lata de leite em pó.

>> Desabilite o bloqueador de pop up e clique na imagem para ampliar.
FOTOS: Maísa Coutinho

13:00 ~ 13:50 |
Recepção e obtenção dos aparelhos de tradução simultânea; |
13:50 ~ 14:00 |
Entrada no Auditório - Recebimento do Material; |
14:00 ~ 14:15 |
Abertura do Evento; |
14:15 ~ 15:00 |
Futuro visão Politec - Hiraclis Nicolaidis - Diretor de
Tecnologia; |
15:00 ~ 15:45 |
Futuro visão Code Gear - Ravi Kumar - Arquiteto de Ferramentas Java; |
15:45 ~ 16:30 |
Futuro visão Sun Microsystems - Reginald Hutcherson - Evangelista Java; |
16:30 ~ 17:15 |
Futuro visão Sun Microsystems - Simon Ritter - Evangelista Java; |
17:15 ~ 18:00 |
Futuro visão IBM - Marcelo
Mendes Marinho; |
18:00 ~ 18:30 |
DFJUG - 10 anos de história - Coordenadores do DFJUG. |

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Hiraclis Nicolaidis Júnior |
Hiraclis Nicolaidis Júnior, Diretor de Tecnologia da
Politec. É graduado em Química pela Universidade de Brasília, pós-graduado em
Tecnologia da Informação pela Universidade de Brasília, mestre em Gestão de
Conhecimento e Tecnologia da Informação pela Universidade Católica de Brasília,
com forte participação no processo de internacionalização da Politec através da
criação de processos de implementação de Offshoring Outsourcing. Atua na área
de Tecnologia da Informação desde 1984 e suas áreas de interesse são Fábrica de
Software, CMMI, modelo de Offshoring/Outsourcing e competências de equipes.
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Ravi Kumar |
Ravi Kumar is principal architect in the Java
tools group at CodeGear and is responsible
for the vision and the architecture of
Eclipse-based JBuilder product line. He
specializes in SOA and Web Services
tooling. He represents CodeGear on the
Java Community Process and is on the Expert Group for
JSR 208, Java Business Integration. veja +
Resumo da palestra:
Application Factories:
Moving from a Generic IDE to an Application-specific IDE
Over the last couple of decades, development tools have come a long way. CodeGear / Borland, among others, have had a significant contribution to this evolution. CodeGear invented the first commercial Integrated Development Environment (IDE), the first Rapid Application Development (RAD), brought to market the first pure Java IDE, the first IDE for C++, the first J2EE-compliant IDE, and the first RAD IDE for Linux.
Today's IDEs are an indispensable arsenal in any developer's tool box - most tout a rich array of features which span the entire development lifecycle. Take for instance JBuilder. It is packed with features such as a Visual JEE Workbench for EJB, JPA and WebServices, TeamInsightTM to manage complex projects across multiple locations through distributed development and collaboration tools, Powerful software archeology tools such as LiveSourceTM UML, Code Audits & Metrics, and OptimizeITTM performance management tools for Profiling, Code Coverage and JEE performance among others.
Now, what’s next for the IDEs?
Let’s step back and look at software development today.
Over the last few decades a ton of applications has been written and thanks to open source, a large part of it is in the public domain. The capability as well as the complexity of applications has continued to grow exponentially. Most applications are developed in teams, often geographically distributed. Most applications have evolved over a number of years with many nuances, patterns and best practices very specific to each application, and a tremendous flux of personnel leave their fingerprints through the evolution of the application.
The transcendental challenge in application development today is to factor in application-specific information. Capture application evolution and capture developers’ knowledge of building and extending the application as metadata so that it's not lost in time or translation. Once that can be done effectively, the combination of the application code with metadata pertaining to application evolution can be meaningfully packaged into reusable software asset libraries.
The CodeGear vision is for the IDE to be ground-zero in this transformation. This vision is Application Factories.
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Reggie
Hutcherson |
Reginald (Reggie) is the manager of the Sun
Technology Evangelism group. His group is responsible for providing the
long-term strategic vision of Sun's technologies to developers, executives,
press and key customers worldwide. He has responsibility for creating and
leveraging relationships with Sun's Global Sales and Marketing team and key ISVs
to facilitate technology adoption and development of applied solutions.
Reggie has an extensive background developing state-of-the-art software
systems. At the Stanford Research Institute, he researched distributed systems
and network protocols. At Sybase Inc., he worked in the Performance & Kernel
Architecture group on their state-of-the-art distributed database engine.
Reggie has a BS in Computer Science and a MBA from the University of
California at Berkeley. Additionally, he matriculated in the MS program for
Computer Science at Stanford University.
Resumo da palestra:
THE NEXT GENERATION DEVELOPER
Some people call it Web 2.0. Others call it the “writeable Web” or the “next-generation Web.” Whatever you want to call it, it's real; it's here; and it's changing everything.
What's so different about the next-generation Web? It's no longer about empowering the individual. It's about the power of the community. Sharing. Exchanging ideas. Contributing. Participating. It has already created a whole new vocabulary, with terms like:
* *Smart mobs*: referring to the collective wisdom of groups of people
* Wikis: sites where everyone contributes, edits and adds to the content, creates new value.
* *Tags*: making Web content easy to search and sort
* *Co-creation*: a new style of collaboration where ideas are built by communities and companies, not just individuals
* *Blogosphere*: there are 50 million active blogs out there—people sharing their thoughts, ideas, opinions, pictures, and life experiences
* *Social networks*: they're almost life forms, growing organically as people with common interests join, participate, and share with the community—mySpace, FaceBook, etc.
* *The long tail:* old songs and old movies have new life because of the Web—they're more accessible to more people, extending and expanding the revenue streams they produce
The companies that launched the *“Webolution” *are now very familiar names—and very big money makers. Google, Flickr, YouTube, eBay. They've set new standards, but there's nothing standard about them.
This keynote will explain the challenges and opportunities developers face developing innovative software systems with WEB 2.0 technologies!
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Simon Ritter |
Simon Ritter specialises in looking at emerging technologies including grid computing, RFID,
wireless sensor networks, robotics and wearable computing. Simon has been in the IT
business since 1984 and holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Physics from
Brunel University in the U.K.Originally working in the area of UNIX development
for AT&T UNIX System Labs and then Novell, Simon joined Sun in 1996 and
started working with Java technology; he has spent time doing both Java
development and consultancy.
Resumo da palestra:
Ten years of DFJUG. What do the next ten years hold for Java?
As DFJUG celebrates its tenth birthday let's explore what the next ten years may hold. There are already plans for Java for the next two years at least, in terms of the development of both the Java Standard Edition and Java Enterprise Edition. With the announcement of JavaFX, Java for the client will also figure promenently in the near future. This session will also explore some ideas for the farthest reaches of how Java will play a part in the computing landscape reaching out to the twentieth anniversary of DFJUG in 2018.
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Marcelo
Mendes Marinho |
Marcelo é consultor de Processos e Ferrramentas de
Desenvolvimento de Software da IBM. Juntou-se à IBM na aquisição de Rational
Software, linha de produtos em que é especialista a mais de 5 anos. Graduou-se
em Ciência da Computação pela Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP) e é
Mestre em Gestão do Conhecimento e Tecnologia da Informação pela Universidade
Católica de Brasília. Atua pricipalmente como consultor junto a grandes empresas
públicas e privadas do Brasil na melhoria de seus processos e ambientes de
desenvolvimento de software. Atualmente, suas áreas de interesse englobam
Arquitetura Orientada a Serviços (SOA) e Governança de TI.
Resumo da palestra:
Desenvolvendo uma Arquitetura Orientada a Serviços: A Ponte Entre o Presente e o Futuro
Se a visão de futuro para o mercado de TI, e da indústria de software mais especificamente, pudesse ser resumida em uma única expressão essa expressão seria "Arquitetura Orientada a Serviços" -- SOA. Os grandes fornecedores de soluções de TI vêm apresentando a sua visão de SOA para o mercado já a algum tempo. Contudo uma parte importante desta visão está sendo esquecida, em especial pelas próprias empresas que decidem adotar esse novo paradigma: como adaptar as aplicações à nova realidade? Questões de infra-estrutura, tais como "Barramentos de Serviços", têm afastado os desenvolvedores do centro das discussões, quando, na verdade, é sobre os ombros destes profissionais que recai a responsabilidade de mover toda empresa para a este mundo. A IBM acredita que o papel do desenvolvedor vai muito além da produção de serviços e é guiar as empresas do presente para o futuro baseado em serviços. Esta apresentação cobrirá os principais tópicos e conceitos que os desenvolvedores de software precisam conhecer para que possam realmente liderar a adoção de SOA dentro de suas empresas e na indústria de um modo geral.
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