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What conferences do any of you attend? I'm personally interested in both Linux/System Administration and Java conferences, but experiences about any conference are welcome as well.

If you have been to any to any, what was your opinion, and were they worth the money?

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18 Answers

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Been to JavaOne - it's fabulous - lots of good information - and fairly entertaining. :) Just make sure you have your propaganda filters firmly in place - they do like to spin things in whatever direction Sun happens to be going at the time - though that's common across most conferences (the spin that is).

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PAX when it comes to the east coast.

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DevConnections and PDC

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JAOO in Denmark... a small conference with a lot of prominent speakers (Fowler, Heilsberg, Evans etc.)... good for achitecture (not about new MS Beta products or the like). Both .NET, JAVA, Ruby etc.

Starting in 2 weeks :-)

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DevLink! http://www.devlink.net/ It is a small two day developers conference in Middle Tennessee. It has a ton of sessions, good speakers, lots of goodies, and is cheap (< $100). For the price you can't beat it. It is Microsoft centric though.

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I like JavaOne and OOPSLA.

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I've been to WCC 2008, last week. It was a conference not just about developing, but about research in the field. There was a bit for everyone, i've seen a lot of interesting talks. For anyone in research or a broad interest in this field, definately worth the EUR 210.

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If you are using the SpringFramework for Java, SpringOne (was The Spring Experience) is a really good one. It's not a cheap one but the speakers is really good.

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Java conference: Devoxx (previously known as Javoxx, previously known as JavaPolis) in Antwerp, Belgium each December.

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The Embedded Systems Conference has great classes on all areas of development, languages, systems, and management.

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The SD West conference is another great all-around conference. Good classes and talks covering many languages and systems.

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OOPSLA is fantastic for programming in any language, and software design and architecture in general. Much of it is at the leading edge of OO theory.

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http://www.nofluffjuststuff.com

Best. Java. Conference. Ever.

There are so many things to like about this one:

  • the conference travels all over the country -- good chance they come to you, making it easier to justify going to your boss
  • limited attendance - you have the chance to interact with the speakers more
  • brilliant speakers, most of whom are authors of books and/or frameworks like spring, tapestry, ...
  • inexpensive!

I attended the first seven JavaOne conferences and it leaned more and more to marketing, and the tech content got weaker and weaker.

Then I went to the Colorado Software Summit. After a few, it really turned me off how biased the speakers were (I'd call them "linux bigots")

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Bizarre comment about Colorado Software Summit. I've been twice, and it is the most productive professional experience I have all year. (And no, I am not currently using Linux.) – Chris Noe Sep 27 '08 at 17:43
They generally have good speakers at CSS, but many of them feel they have to M$ bash at least 8 times an hour during a talk, and it gets old. Try NoFluffJustStuff -- it feels much less biased. – Scott Stanchfield Feb 24 at 17:35
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GDC. It's not that amazingly valuable when it comes to lectures (90% of the papers can be later found on the net), but it's great place for industry chats and finding new connections.

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The Java Posse has an OpenSpace Conference each year called the Java Posse Roundup. I have never been, but a friend of mine that went said it was great. Maybe next year.

Of course, it goes without saying that JavaOne is by far the premier Java conference. By premier, I mean most hyped, most attendees and biggest show floor. Because there are so many, the quality of talks at JavaOne is highly variable. In my personal experience going to JavaOne, I came back very energized and with lots of new ideas.

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If you can't justify a full-blown conference or feel like you'd be in over your head at one, check your area and see if you have any user groups geared towards your technology of interest. It can be hit or miss, but you never know until you look.

The Linux usergroup in my area struggles to get people to show up, but the .NET usergroup I attend has a pretty strong following. We have a speaker every month and the less formal environment means you can ask questions or even have an open discussion of the concepts with the speaker afterwards.

The speakers may not always be of the same caliber that you would get at a real conference, but it can still be a good way to expose yourself to new technologies and ways of approaching your code.

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OWASP Hartford has worked out nicely for me...

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Apple's WWDC ;-)

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