Category: ESUG

  • Conference news: ESUG 2008 – more information

    A set of posts to the squeak mailing lists has given more details about the 16th International Smalltalk Joint Conference organised by the European Smalltalk Users’ Group, to be held 25-29 August 2008 at CWI in Amsterdam.

    Programme Details

    Mathieu van Echtelt writes that the programme features more than 40 presentations on, among others, the following subjects:

    Programming Language Platforms

    • Newspeak (New open source dynamic language focusing on modularity, security and interoperability)
    • Cog (New highly optimized open source Squeak VM)
    • Maglev (Highly scalable Ruby VM)
    • OpenCroquet (Deeply collaborative, multi-user online Smalltalk development environment)

    Web Frameworks

    • Seaside (The continuation & component-based web framework)
    • WebVelocity
    • AidaWeb (Smalltalk Web Application Server)
    • WebTerminal

    Model Driven Engineering:

    • The Meta Environment Language Workbench
    • ObjectStudio ModelingTool
    • Fame; Meta-modeling Framework
    • MBA Smalltalk; to manage your objects

     
    Additionally, the winners of the ABN Amro sponsored Innovation Awards will be presented.

    Booking Accommodation 

    Noury Bouraqadi notes that discount hotel rates for conference attendees are available until 11 July.

    Seaside Sprint

    Lukas Renggli has announced that the core Seaside dev team will be holding the first official Seaside Sprint, starting after the conference closes at 14:00 on 29 August, and finishing when the last participant collapses over their smoking keyboard. He invites anyone interested in working on Seaside or related code to participate. The venue details will be announced once agreed.

    Camp Smalltalk

    As usual, the weekend preceding the conference will be used to host Camp Smalltalk, an opportunity to work with colleagues on a number of exciting projects. See the Camp Smalltalk page for more information.

  • ESUG Awards for innovative software

    Noury Bouraqadi wants to  remind all Smalltalkers that the deadline for entries in the ESUG Innovation Technology Awards is in two weeks time. The Innovation Technology Awards, to be awarded at the 16th International Smalltalk Joint Conference in Amsterdam, are intended to make public part of the innovative software built using Smalltalk. The top 3 teams with the most innovative software will receive, respectively, €500, €300 and €200 during an awards ceremony at the conference.

    The winners will be selected based on criteria of creativity, stability, performance, successful use, and impact for the community. No constraints are put on the software except that it should be Smalltalk-based or Smalltalk-related;  all flavours of Smalltalk are accepted.

     The awards were founded by Nouri in 2004, and details of past winners can be found on his web-site.

     

  • 16th International Smalltalk Joint Conference – Call for Contributions

    ESUG, the organisers of the 16th International Smalltalk Joint Conference, to be held 25-29 August 2008 in Amsterdam, have issued a call for contributions. Submissions are to be made by 1st June 2008, with notification of acceptance on 15th June 2008.

    About the Conference

    For the past 16 years, the European Smalltalk User Group (ESUG) has organised the International Smalltalk Conference, a lively forum on cutting edge software technologies that attract people from both academia and industry for a whole week. The attendees are both engineers using Smalltalk in business and students and teachers using Smalltalk both for research and didactic purposes.
    As every year, this year’s edition of the largest European Smalltalk event will include the regular Smalltalk developers conference with renowned invited speakers, a Smalltalk camp that proves fruitful for interactions and discussions. This year’s conference will also see the 4th year of the Innovation Technology Awards, where prizes will be awarded to authors of best pieces of Smalltalk-related projects.

    The conference features the following events:

    • Camp Smalltalk – There will be a Smalltalk camp on 23-24 August
    • Developers Forum
    • Technology Forum

    Developers Forum
    This year we are looking for your experience with using Smalltalk. The list of topics includes, but is not limited to, the following:

    • XP practices
    • Development tools
    • Experience reports
    • Model driven development
    • Web development
    • Team management
    • Meta-Modelling
    • Security
    • New libraries & frameworks
    • Educational material
    • Embedded systems and robotics
    • SOA and Web services
    • Interaction with other programming languages

    Technology Forum
    We are proud to announce the 4th Innovation Technology Awards. The top 3 teams with the most innovative software will receive, respectively, €500, €300 and €200 during an awards ceremony at the conference. Developers of any Smalltalk-based software are welcome to compete.

    Student Volunteer Program
    If you are a student wanting to attend ESUG, have you considered being a student volunteer? Student volunteers help keep the conference running smoothly; in return, they have free accommodations, while still having most of the time to enjoy the conference.

    We hope to see you there and have fun together.

  • Squeak at ESUG

    ESUG 2007

    The European Smalltalk User Group (ESUG) has organised the International Smalltalk Conference for the last 14 years, and this year, at Lugano in Switzerland, the program included a number of presentations interesting to Squeakers. These included:

    There’s lots more material, and links to photographs taken during the events, at the ESUG 2007 media page.

  • ESUG 2007 Call for Contributions

    ESUG Conference 2007 Call for Contributions

    15th International Smalltalk Joint Conference – Call for Contributions

    August 25 – 31, 2007 – Lugano, Switzerland

    http://www.esug.org/conferences/2007

    For the past 14 years, the European Smalltalk User Group (ESUG) has organised the International Smalltalk Conference, a lively forum on cutting edge software technologies that attract people from both academia and industry for a whole week. The attendees are both engineers using Smalltalk in business and students and teachers using Smalltalk both for research and didactic purposes.

    As every year, this year’s edition of the largest European Smalltalk event will include the regular Smalltalk developers conference with renowned invited speakers, a Smalltalk camp that proves fruitful for interactions and discussions. Besides, this year will be held the 4th edition of the Innovation Technology Awards where prizes will be awarded to authors of best pieces of Smalltalk-related projects. Last, but not least the event includes as usual a research conference which was renamed this year into “International Conference on Dynamic Languages”. This reflects the widening of the scope of this conference to enable cross-fertilization with research conducted using other dynamic languages.

    You can support the ESUG conference in many different ways:

    * Sponsor the conference. New sponsoring packages are described at http://www.esug.org/supportesug/becomeasponsor/
    * Submit a talk, a software or a paper to one of the events. See below.
    * Attend the conference. We’d like to beat the previous record of attendance (116 people at Köthen, Germany in 2004)!
    * Students can get free registration and hosting if they enroll into the the Student Volunteers program. See below.

    The conference features the following events:

    * Camp Smalltalk
    * Developers Forum
    * Research Forum
    * Technology Forum

    Camp Smalltalk
    Camp Smalltalk is a free forum where smalltalk developers can join forces on projects.
    Developers Forum : International Smalltalk Developers Conference

    This year we are looking for YOUR experience on using Smalltalk. The list of topics includes, but is not limited to the following:

    * XP practices
    * Development tools
    * Experience reports
    * Model driven development
    * Web development
    * Team management
    * Meta-Modeling
    * Security
    * New libraries & frameworks
    * Educational material
    * Embedded systems and robotics
    * SOA and Web services
    * Interaction with other programming languages

    Submissions are due on 30th of May 2007.

    Notification of acceptance on 15 of June 2007.

    More information here.

    Research Forum : International Conference on Dynamic Languages
    Smalltalk is one of the oldest object-oriented languages, but its conception and programming environment can still be considered as a design pearl and as a beacon in the realm of programming languages and programming environments. The bulk of its modern contenders are still lacking many of the features that Smalltalkers find both mundane and essential. Nevertheless, as software engineering practices and new application fields evolve, Smalltalk should keep up. This concerns the language, its implementation technology, its programming tools as well as the software development culture it supports. The research forum invites scientific articles that report on original research conducted in and/or for Smalltalk. The list of topics includes, but is not limited to the following:

    * Aspects, Aspect languages and Applications
    * Ambient Intelligence, Ubiquitous & Pervasive Computing
    * Embedded Systems
    * Compilation Technology, Optimization, Virtual Machines
    * Formalizations
    * Language Engineering, Extensions
    * Model Driven Engineering
    * Programming in the Large, Design, Architectures, Components
    * Development Environments
    * Program Analysis
    * Reflection and Metaprogramming
    * Testing
    * Agile Techniques
    * Web Services & Internet Applications

    More information can be found here.

    Technology Forum
    We are proud to announce the 4th Innovation Technology Awards. The top 3 teams with the most innovative software will receive, respectively, 500 Euros, 300 Euros and 200 Euros during an awards ceremony at the conference. Developers of any Smalltalk-based software are welcome to compete.

    More information.

    Student Volunteer Program
    If you are a student wanting to attend ESUG, have you considered being a student volunteer? Student volunteers help keep the conference running smoothly; in return, they have free accommodations, while still having most of the time to enjoy the conference.

    More information is available here.

  • ESUG 2006 – Friday’s presentations

    Since I had to catch a plane to get back home, I couldn’t attend the session on Friday morning.

    The last day of the conference saw three presentations. The first was delivered by Norm Green of Gemstone, who talked about the state of Gemstone 64, the 64-bit version of their database system. After that, Mathieu Van Echelt presented Cosmocows‘ development and modelling enviroment used to create database-backed web-applications. The last presentation of the conference was delivered by Rob Vens, on “Packaging freeware and shareware applications in VisualWorks”.

  • Niall Ross – Testing for Real

    As the last presentation for Thursday, Niall Ross paused his incessant (and absolutely useful) note-taking to deliver a talk on how to use real domain objects in your tests. This objects can be created by leveraging the rewrite engine of the Refactoring Browser in order to create readable and easily-modifiable tests which nonetheless manipulate complex objects.

  • Rowan Bunning – Scrum+XP in Practice

    Rowan Bunning delivered a presentation on Scrum and its use at Wizard Information Services. Wizard has much benefied from the introduction of Scrum, both in conjunction with Extreme Programming and Smalltalk for its development process, and as an agile management framework for managing non-development processes. Rowan described the use of Scrum+XP in Wizard, then delivered a short demo on how a Scrum sprint should work, and then talked about how to “sell” Scrum.

  • Romain Robbes – Spyware-ridden software development

    One of the presentations of Thursday’s afternoon session was delivered by Romain Robbes, who presented SpyWare, a tool developed by the University of Lugano. SpyWare model the evolution of a program as a series of change operations, thus allowing a much richer analysis of your program and its evolution.

  • Lukas Renggli – Web 2.0 for Seaside

    Right after lunch on Thursday afternoon, Lukas Renggli delivered a tasty presentation on how to integrate “Web 2.0” techniques into your Seaside application using the Prototype and Script.aculo.us libraries, which allow you web application to have nifty features like drag’n’drop, entry field autocompletion etc. Script.aculo.us is very well integrated into Seaside, to the point that the user doesn’t need to write even a single line of JavaScript code by hand.