up vote 4 down vote favorite
3
share [g+] share [fb]

My company allows me to visit one international work related (I'm Java/JEE Developer/Technical Lead interested in polyglot programming) conference each year. I've visited JavaOne and Javapolis (devox?) in the past.

For next year I'm looking for a conference which is less technology but a bit more methodology focussed... possible like JAOO or QCon. What would you recommend?

link|improve this question

I went to QCon London, exactly what I was looking for! – p3t0r Aug 9 '09 at 11:40
feedback

closed as not constructive by Lord Torgamus, Michael Myers Nov 9 '11 at 21:12

This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. See the FAQ.

11 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

The No Fluff Just Stuff touring conference http://nofluffjuststuff.com has a great mix of Java, polyglot, and methodology sessions, is economical, and may even come through your own town.

link|improve this answer
I've been to a nfjs night last spring and it was great. the 'economical' part may not hold ground if you're based in europe ;) – p3t0r Sep 22 '08 at 6:29
feedback

OSCON sounded pretty good this year and covers a pretty broad range of stuff.

http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2008/public/content/home

link|improve this answer
feedback

It's not specific to Java, but OOPSLA can be a very good conference for learning methodologies. It's not just Object Oriented Programming any more in spite of the title. Lot's of interesting papers are presented plus the tutorials are usually very good.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I've attended two conferences: No Fluff Just Stuff and JavaOne. NFJS was almost exclusively beginner sessions. JavaOne had lots more sessions with deep dives into technology and was a better run conference in general.

link|improve this answer
feedback

And I've heard some good things recently about CodeMash as a good place to see a mix of technologies in a unique venue (indoor water park).

http://www.codemash.org/

link|improve this answer
feedback

The Java Posse Roundup is one of the best conferences I've been to. It's a small intimate non-conference set in the lovely ski town of Crested Butte, Colorado. It attracts great people who are passionate about what they do and the subjects they want to discuss. That means high-quality, very focused content. Most of it is (and the rest will be) published on the Java Posse page as podcasts. Can't wait for the next one :)

If you're in Israel though, you can't get any better than the JavaEdge conference. This a 1 day higher profile conference with great content and great speakers. This year its on December 18th, check out the schedule.

Disclaimer: I'm presenting at the JavaEdge conference.

link|improve this answer
If you have any connection to the JavaEdge people, please let them know that when trying to browse javaedge.net, you get "Domain has expired" error. That's a shame as I'm looking for info on that conf – Ken Egozi Sep 19 '10 at 21:10
feedback

It seems like JAOO (http://jaoo.dk) would be a good match for you. JAOO turned from a pure JAva Object Oriented conference to a conference that also includes strong tracks on Agile methodology and practices spiced with the latest trends.

Best Regards Jørgen Larsen

link|improve this answer
feedback

Strange Loop is a great conference in St. Louis for a range of emerging technologies and polyglot programmers. It tends to focus on JVM (but not Java) and functional languages (Clojure, Scala, Ruby, JavaScript, Erlang, F#, Lisp, etc) but also mixes in things like nosql, mobile, web, etc.

(Bias alert: I am the creator of Strange Loop.)

link|improve this answer
feedback

I work for JAX London and this is a good conference for learning about Java, Enterprise, Web and Agile. This conference focuses on methodology as well, with an entire Agile day and a good mix of methodology sessions. Take a look at the content here:

http://jaxlondon.com/2011s/timetable

link|improve this answer
feedback

I haven't been myself, but Devoxx has great speakers and colleagues say it's very cool.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Question: What's the best conference to visit?

Answer: The one with the most exhibitors to get swag from. ;-)

Yes, a jokey answer. But in all seriousness, most of what you can learn from a conference you could learn by browsing the web, especially since most good conference speakers have their talks videoed and put online anyway.

The real reasons for visiting a conference are:

  1. To pick up free stuff (aka 'swag') from the exhibitors.
  2. To network for job opportunities.
  3. To get a day out and a free lunch on the company's expense.

Listening to the speakers comes a distant fourth for most people.

Therefore, I'll repeat the jokey assertion that the best conference is the one with the best swag. (I bet all the people who went to MIX11 were very happy with their free X-Box Move controllers, regardless of what they thought of the actual conference).

link|improve this answer
feedback

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.