Session: Why Axis2: The Future of Web Services
Working for WSO2 as a Software Engineer, currently contributing to Apache Axis2 and Apache Synapse.
Session: Apache Derby Security
Jean Anderson has twenty years experience developing server-side and client-side applications on relational and object-relational databases. Currently she is the Community Architect for IBM Cloudscape.
Sessions: Advanced Topics in Module Design: Threadsafety and Portability, Building Scalable Web Architectures, Scalable Apache for Beginners
Aaron Bannert is a member of the Apache Software Foundation and works as an Open Source Consultant for his company Codemass, Inc. Some of the projects he's been involved in are httpd, APR, the Apache.org infrastructure team, and the Incubator, and he has been known to dabble in other projects such as PHP and Flood as well. Lately he has been spending a lot of time working on high-performance webservers and writing high-concurrency network services. Aaron has been living in San Francisco for the past year after having lived in Orange County for most of his life, and absolutely loves the new area.
Session: Dealing with Enterprise Database Challenges In OO Applications
Clinton Begin is a Senior Applications Developer for ThoughtWorks Canada. He has been building enterprise applications based on the Java platform for 8 years and has extensive experience with persistence frameworks and relational databases. Clinton is the creator of the iBATIS Data Mapper, which he designed in response to the challenges faced by object oriented developers dealing with enterprise relational databases. Clinton is an experienced speaker. He has delivered formal presentations, training seminars and boot camps for audiences of up to 400, from San Francisco to New York City.
Session: Portlet Development using JSR-168
Noel J Bergman's background in object-oriented programming spans close to 25 years, including participation on the original CORBA and Common Object Services Task Forces. Noel is a Member of the Apache Software Foundation, where he participates on various projects and the infrastructure team; helps in Community building; and is the Apache Incubator PMC Chair. Noel's presentations are intended to introduce attendees to the various technologies, and bring them up to speed. The goal is to enable attendees to immediately benefit from such technologies in their own projects.
Sessions: Apache authentication, Intro to WebDAV, Introduction to mod_rewrite, Introduction to the Apache Web Server, URL Mapping
Rich Bowen is the Web Database Programmer for Asbury College in Wilmore, Kentucky. Additionally, he does Apache and mod_perl training classes when the opportunity arises. Rich is the author of "Apache Server Administrator's Handbook" and co-author of Apache Cookbook. He is a member of the Apache documentation project and of the Apache Software Foundation.
Session: Keynote by Tim Bray
Tim Bray managed the Oxford English Dictionary project at the University of Waterloo in 1987-1989, co-founded Open Text Corporation (Nasdaq:OTEX) in 1989, launched one of the first public web search engines in 1995, co-invented XML 1.0 and co-edited "Namespaces in XML" between 1996 and 1999, founded Antarctica Systems (antarctica.net) in 1999, and served as a Tim Berners-Lee appointee on the W3C Technical Architecture Group (http://www.w3.org/2001/tag) in 2002-2004. Currently, he serves as Director of Web Technologies at Sun Microsystems, publishes a popular weblog (http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/), and co-chairs the IETF AtomPub Working Group (http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/atompub-charter.html).
Session: Struts 2006: An Embarrassment of Riches
Don Brown is currently a principal programmer for BAE Systems, Information Technology, where he develops warfighter support solutions for the US Department of Defense. He has worked with Struts since 2002, and became a Committer in the fall of 2003. He is also a committer on several Jakarta Commons projects, and a Jakarta and Struts Project Management Committee (PMC) member.
Session: Building Highly Available Applications with Geronimo and Derby
Emmanuel Cecchet has a Ph.D. from Institut National Polytechnique de Grenoble, France. He contributed to the DynaServer project at Rice University to study the design of scalable, high-performance and highly available e-business servers. After leaving Rice, he led a team at INRIA in France to provide open-source middleware for large scale data servers. In 2005, Emmanuel joined Continuent where he now servers as Chief Architect. Emmanuel was Chief Architect of the ObjectWeb open source consortium and the leader of the C-JDBC project (http://c-jdbc.objectweb.org). He now leads Continuent.org and the Sequoia project (http://sequoia.continuent.org)
Sessions: From CGI to mod_perl 2.0, Fast!, mod_perl for Speed Freaks!
Philippe M. Chiasson is an open-source developer, spending most of his time working on mod_perl, an ASF project to open up the power of the apache API to Perl developers. He is a member of the ASF and currently works for ActiveState.
Session: Why Axis2: The Future of Web Services
Pioneering member in Apache Axis2 and Synapse projects, working fulltime with WSO2. Implemented AXIOM, WS-Addressing , SOAP 1.1 and 1.2, client interaction patterns for Axis2. Implemented Visual Modelling tool for BPEL4WS. Worked as an Architect for projects with web services, business process automation, mobile development, telecommunication network management.
Sessions: Closing Session, Opening Plenary
Ken Coar is a director and vice president of the Apache Software Foundation, a director and vice president of the Open Software Initiative, and a Senior Software Engineer with IBM. He has over two decades of experience with software engineering and system administration. Ken has worked with the Web since 1992, and in addition to working on Apache and PHP he was one of the authors of RFC 3874 (the CGI specification). He is the author of 'Apache Server for Dummies', a lead author of 'Apache Server Unleashed', and a co-author of 'Apache Cookbook'.
Session: Intro to XSLT
Chris J. Davis is a Web Developer and Mac Head living in Central Kentucky, USA. Currently Chris is the Webmaster for Asbury College, a contributing developer to the WordPress Project and a contributing author for Blog Design Solutions from Friends of Ed. You can find his ramblings at Sillyness Spelled Wrong Intentionally.
Session: Embedding Apache Pluto
David DeWolf has been developing web applications, portals and portlet applications for six years. He is a member of the Apache Portals Project Management Committe and an active commiter to Apache Pluto, the reference implementation of the Portlet Specification. David currently works at Digital Focus. Digital Focus provides software development, agile coaching, and IT consulting services to Fortune 1000 and medium-sized businesses.
Session: Keynote by Cory Doctorow
Cory Doctorow is the European Affairs Coordinator for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). He's also a visiting lecturer at Yale University Engineering, a fellow at Stanhope Centre in London, a Contributing Writer to Wired Magazine and a columnist for Popular Science and Make Magazines. I sit on the committee for the O'Reilly Emerging Technology conference and am an advisor to Ludicorp, Inc and Musicbrainz. I'm also the co-editor of the popular weblog Boing Boing. I co-founded the open source P2P technology company OpenCola, which was sold to OpenText in 2003.
Session: Open Source for Business and Profit
Jim Driscoll has been at Sun for nearly nine years, ever since he joined JavaSoft to work on the Java Web Server and the first version of Servlets. At various times, he has been the manager of the J2EE RI, the Java Web Services Developer Pack, and a host of Open Source, web and XML projects that Sun has either participated in or led. His current job title is Manager, Project GlassFish. He lives and works in the southern part of the San Francisco Bay area.
Sessions: How to Unit Test the User Interface of Web Applications, Java-XML Binding Approaches at Apache
Thomas Dudziak is a comitter to the OJB project since 2003, and to the DdlUtils project (former commons-sql). Since 1997 he is a researcher in the Fraunhofer organization, a large German research organization, in the Fraunhofer FIRST institute in the fields of applied computer graphics and modern visualization technologies. He also works for IT Service Omikron since 1998, a small company specialized in web and desktop application development, and development and quality assurance consulting.
Session: Cosmo and CalDAV: Open Source, Standards-based Calendar Sharing
Lisa Dusseault is a development manager and standards architect at the Open Source Applications Foundation, where she's involved in the Chandler, Cosmo and Scooby projects. Previously, Lisa came from Xythos, an Internet startup where she was development manager for four years. She has also been an IETF contributor on various Internet applications protocols for eight years now, and continues to do this kind of work at OSAF. She co-chairs the IETF IMAP extensions and CALSIFY (Calendaring and Scheduling Standards Simplification) Working Groups. She is also the author of a book on WebDAV and co-author of CalDAV, an open and interoperable protocol for calendar access and sharing.
Sessions: Behind the Scenes of the Apache Software Foundation (Part 1), Behind the Scenes of the Apache Software Foundation (Part 2), Panel: Inside Apache
Lars is co-founder and member of the Apache Software Foundation and started contributing to the Apache web server project in 1997. In addition, he is a member of the ApacheCon planning committee, the Apache security team, and the Apache public relations committee. He has a degree in computer engineering from the University of Siegen, Germany, where he wrote his first book about the Apache web server. He held various senior engineering, consulting and management positions at various ISPs, mobile network providers and software development companies. Lars is also a member of the International Financial Cryptography Association. Currently he is working as a senior security officer for a software development company in Munich specializing in cryptographic research and development, and the operation of highly secure data centers.
Session: Cocoon Blocks
Daniel Fagerstrom has been involved in the Cocoon community since 2001 and a committer since 2003. He share his time between developing Cocoon based applications at Lentus AB and doing research in computer vision at KTH. He lives in Stockholm, Sweden.
Sessions: ApacheCon Lightning Lottery Talks and a Movie, From CVS to SVN: Case studies in migrating your team to a new tool, Subversion Tutorial
Brian W. Fitzpatrick is a software engineer at Google, working on their open source efforts. Prior to that, Brian worked for CollabNet on Subversion and related version control tools. He also worked at Apple as a senior engineer in the education and professional services divisions. He is a member of the Apache Software Foundation, a Subversion developer since 2000, and a co-author of the O'Reilly book "Version Control with Subversion." Personal information can be found at http://www.red-bean.com/fitz/
Sessions: Clean Up Your Code: 10 Java Coding Tricks, Techniques, and Philosophy, Power Regular Expressions, Ruby for Java Developers
Neal Ford is an Application Architect for ThoughtWorks. He is an architect, designer, and developer of applications, instructional materials, magazine articles, and video/DVD presentations. Neal is also the author of Developing with Delphi: Object-Oriented Techniques (Prentice Hall PTR, 1996), JBuilder 3 Unleashed (SAMS Publishing, 1999), and Art of Java Web Development (Manning, 2003). His language proficiencies include Java, C#/.NET, Ruby, Object Pascal, C++, and C. Neal’s primary consulting focus is the design and construction of large-scale enterprise applications. He is also an internationally acclaimed speaker, having spoken at over 40 developers’ conferences worldwide.
Session: Apache Synapse and the Open Service Bus
Paul Fremantle works on Open Source projects in Apache, and has contributed to Apache since the first Apache SOAP project. While at IBM, he was instrumental in starting up the Apache WSIF, and Apache Woden projects, as well as being heavily involved in the AxisC/C++ initiative, where he led IBM's involvement. Paul was a Senior Technical Staff Member in IBM, where he was the lead architect and co-creator of IBM's Web Services Gateway. Paul is the co-chair of the OASIS WS-RX technical committee and lead the JSR110 committee (JWSDL). Before joining IBM, Paul worked as a consultant in the pharmaceutical industry. Publications include co-authoring "Building Web Services in Java, 2nd Edition", articles on Web Services and SOA, and a redbook - "The XML Files: Using XML and XSL in WebSphere". Paul has presented at ApacheCon, Colorado Software Summit, XML Europe, Software Architecture and other industry conferences. Paul has an M.A. in Mathematics and Philosophy and an M.Sc in Computation from Oxford University.
Session: Apache Geronimo for Developers
Jeff Genender is a Practice Leader for Virtuas Solutions, an open source strategy and consulting organization. He has over 16 years of software architecture, team lead, and development experience in multiple industries. Jeff is an active committer and PMC member for Apache Geronimo, a committer on OpenEJB, SevcieMix, Mojo (Maven plugins), and the WADI project. He has authored Enterprise Java Servlets (Addison Wesley Longman, 2001), also is currently co-authoring Professional Geronimo (2005, Wiley) and authoring JBoss Live (2005, Sourcebeat). Jeff is an open source evangelist and has successfully brought open source development efforts, initiatives, and success stories into a number of Global 2000 companies, saving these organizations millions in licensing costs.
Session: Business Tips for the Open Source Consultant
Will Glass-Husain is Chief Software Architect of Forio Business Simulations, a small startup located in San Francisco offering products and consulting services to customers around the world. Will has been programming since he was 10 and in one business or another since he was 14. He's a committer on the Jakarta Velocity project and user / bug reporter for many other open source projects.
Session: Practical mod_perl
Philip M. Gollucci works on mod_perl, Apache-Test, and mod_perl_docs and frequently contributes to libapreq. As of November 2005, he joined TicketMaster as a Senior Software Engineer. In his free time, he works for his Consulting Firm, P6M7G8 Consutling, using FAMP(FreeBSD) stacks to design custom sites for clients.
Session: Pragmatic XML Security
Hans Granqvist is a member of VeriSign's Advanced Research group and represents VeriSign in standards relating to Web Services and security. He also heads up several internal VeriSign projects to analyze and improve code security and quality. Hans implemented an XML security toolkit, TSIK, and leads the Apache TSIK incubation effort. He has previosuly spoken at JavaOne and SD Expo. In his spare time, he writes feature movies. He hangs out at commented.org.
Sessions: Java Modularity Support in OSGi R4, The Future of Open-Source OSGi
Richard S. Hall is a guest researcher in the software engineering group of the software systems and network research laboratory (LSR) of Grenoble University in France. He is also an invited research member of the OSGi Alliance. His research focuses on component and service orientation and mechanisms to dynamically assemble applications at runtime. Other research interests include software deployment, which was the focus of his Ph.D. thesis. He received his Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Sessions: Declarative Services in OSGi R4, The Future of Open-Source OSGi
BJ Hargrave has over 19 years of experience as an IBM software architect and developer. His focus is small computer operating systems (kernels, file systems, development tools, application binary interface specifications) and Java technology. He holds multiple patents for JVM performance improvements and is the IBM expert and lead architect for OSGi technologies. BJ holds a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a Master of Science in Computer Science from the University of Miami. BJ has been a leader in the development of the OSGi technology since its inception and was named an OSGi Fellow during the 1st OSGi World Congress for his technical contributions and leadership. He is currently CTO of the OSGi Alliance and chair of the OSGi Core Platform Expert Group.
Session: Struts 2006: An Embarrassment of Riches
Ted Husted is a member of the Apache iBATIS, Struts, and MyFaces teams. His speciality is building agile web applications with open source products for Java or .NET, and helping others do the same. Ted's books include JUnit in Action, Struts in Action, and Professional JSP Site Design. He has consulted with teams throughout the United States, including CitiGroup, Nationwide Insurance, and Pepsi Bottling Group. Ted is currently working with the Oklahoma State Department of Environmental Services to improve their permitting system. His Pieces of Me site is an anthology of Ted's postings to public mailing lists.
Session: Advanced Lucene
Grant Ingersoll is a Senior Software Engineer at the Center for Natural Language Processing (CNLP). He has been developing commercial and research systems in Java for 10 years, many of which leverage Apache projects. Since joining CNLP, Grant has used Lucene for implementing cross-language information retrieval (CLIR) systems, as well as commercial question answering (QA) and collection analysis and customization applications. He has contributed several patches to Lucene, including the integration of term vectors into the 1.4 code base. Prior to CNLP, Grant worked for several years on commercial information extraction and CLIR applications. Grant has a Bachelor's in Mathematics and Computer Science from Amherst College and a Masters in Computer Science from Syracuse University.
Session: Accelerating Web Services Development with Axis2
I am an Apache committer and current work involves the architecting and developing of Apache Axis2 and Apache Synapse. My expertise is majorly in Distributed computing, Fault tolerance systems and web service related technologies. I am currently one of the core developers for Apache Axis2 working with WSO2 .
Session: Roller: An Open Source Blogging Platform
Dave Johnson is a North Carolina based software developer who has worked in a variety of software companies including Rogue Wave, HAHT Software and SAS Institute. In 2002, unable to satisfy his urge to create cool software at work, Dave worked nights and weekends to create the open source, Java-based Roller blog server. Dave now works on Roller full-time as a Staff Engineer in the blogs.sun.com team at Sun Microsystems. Dave is the author of Manning Publications book RSS and Atom In Action.
Session: Embedding Apache Directory Server into Applications
Alex Karasulu is proud to be an Apache Member. He founded the Apache Directory Project and is presently the V.P. and PMC Chair for Directory. Alex is a committer on several projects: directory, jarkarta, excalibur, and felix. He is also an incubator mentor for Felix: Apache's new OSGi effort.
Session: Keynote by Jaron Lanier
Jaron Lanier is a computer scientist, composer, visual artist, and author.
Lanier's name is often associated with Virtual Reality research. Indeed, he did coin the term ‘Virtual Reality’ and in the early 1980s founded VPL Research, the first company to sell VR products. In the late 1980s he lead the team that developed the first implementations of multi-person virtual worlds using head mounted displays, for both local and wide area networks, as well as the first "avatars", or representations of users within such systems. While at VPL, he co-developed the first implementations of virtual reality applications in surgical simulation, vehicle interior prototyping, virtual sets for television production, and assorted other areas. He led the team that developed the first widely used software platform architecture for immersive virtual reality applications. Sun Microsystems acquired VPL’s seminal portfolio of patents related to Virtual Reality and networked 3D graphics in 1999.
Since then, he has collaborated broadly with researchers in machine vision, computational neuroscience, cell biology modeling, and other disciplines defining the border between human cognition and the rest of the world. One major recent investigation, into what he has dubbed “Phenotropics”, concerns rejecting traditional protocol-based approaches in favor of statistical and pattern-recognition techniques to bind software components together in order to improve large scale reliability. A non-technical introduction to this work is found in the chapter he contributed to the 2002 book “The Next Fifty Years; Science in the Twenty First Century,” edited by John Brockman.
Session: Introduction to MINA
Trustin Lee is one of lead developers of the Apache Directory project and its subprojects. He has been developing high-performance network applications including a massive SMS gateway and a lightweight ESB in Java for more than 3 years.
Session: Struts on Steroids: Leveraging Bolt-On Components
Jonathan has been developing software and evangelizing his favorite IT technologies for more than twenty years. He is the founder of About Objects, Inc., a software training and consulting firm in Northern Virginia with clients in the Fortune 500 and the Federal Government, and is also the founder of the StrutsLive open source project. Over the past five years he has served as a lead architect on several mission-critical J2EE software projects, working with development teams that ranged in size from five to one hundred fifty. He is the author of Struts Live (SourceBeat), and a co-author of Jakarta Pitfalls and Mastering JavaServer Faces (Wiley).
Session: Large-Scale PHP
Rasmus Lerdorf is known for having gotten the PHP project off the ground in 1995, the mod_info Apache module and he can be blamed for the ANSI92 SQL-defying LIMIT clause in mSQL 1.x which has now, at least conceptually, crept into both MySQL and PostgreSQL. Prior to joining Yahoo! as an infrastructure engineer in 2002, he was at a string of companies including Linuxcare, IBM, and Bell Canada working on Internet technologies.
Session: XML at the ASF: The XML, WS, and Cocoon Projects
Ted Leung is a senior engineer at the Open Source Applications Foundation, where he is working on the Chandler project. He is the author of "Professional XML Development with Apache Tools". Ted was the technical lead for the IBM XML4J parser which served as the initial code base for the Java version of xml.apache.org's Xerces parser. He is a member of the Apache Software Foundation, co-maintainer of the PlanetApache group blog, and a pyblosxom developer. During his career, Ted has also worked on handheld computing, compound document architectures, and object-oriented databases. You can read his weblog to keep up with his latest adventures
Session: Struts 2006: An Embarrassment of Riches
Patrick Lightbody is the founder of Autoriginate,the provider of cutting edge solutions for software QA. Previously Patrick has was the manager of the professional services organization at Jive Software, as well as an engineer for various silicon valley companies of all size. Patrick also leads the open source organizations OpenSymphony and OpenQA. He actively developers WebWork and is the creator of OSWorkflow.
Session: Content and Document Management Ecosystem
Christophe Lombart is a open source developer and architect who is working on Graffito, a new incubating project focusing on CMS technologies sponsored by the Apache Portals project. Christophe is also working for Sword Group which is an european IT consultancy company providing services for ECMS, portal and BI applications.
Session: Apache Harmony
Geir Magnusson Jr. is a software engineer at Intel, working on middleware architecture and open source technology. Prior to that, he worked on open source java strategy in the areas of J2EE and J2SE for IBM, and was the VP of Products and Strategy for Gluecode, Inc prior to it's acquisition by IBM. Geir is a proud member of the Apache Software Foundation and currently represents the ASF on the JCP's Executive Committee. A past director and PMC chair, he is an active contributor to several Apache projects and activities, and is very interested in helping the ASF grow and continue to create great communities and software. He is interested in how open source will continue to change how organizations and individuals collaborate, and how independent projects and communities can be brought together to solve larger technical problems, for which Apache Geronimo and Apache Harmony are examples. His current focus at Apache is the Apache Harmony project (in incubation).
Session: The Future of Open-Source OSGi
Jeff McAffer leads the Eclipse RCP and Eclipse Equinox OSGi teams. He is one of the architects of the Eclipse Platform and a co-author of The Eclipse Rich Client Platform (Addison-Wesley). He has been involved in Eclipse from the beginning and is currently interested in helping realize Eclipse's original vision as a platform for composing general sets of application function to solve real problems. Previous lives included work in distributed/parallel OO computing (Server Smalltalk, massively parallel Smalltalk, etc) as well as expert systems, meta-level architectures and a PhD at the University of Tokyo.
Sessions: Cheap, Fast, and Good: You can have it all with Ruby on Rails, Introduction to Rules Engines using Drools, Managing Open Source: Getting the Most from an Investment
Brian McCallister has worked on a number of open source projects, at Apache and otherwise. At Apache, he has worn several hats, ranging the being the documentation guy to becoming a Vice President (of the DB project). In his day job he is an architect with Ning, building a playground for social apps.
Session: Shale: The Next Struts?
Craig McClanhan is a Senior Staff Engineer at Sun Microsystems. His current responsibilities include being the architect for Sun Java Studio Creator, an IDE focused on easy development of web applications using JavaServer Faces. He is also the original founder of the Struts Framework project, and has been involved in other Apache projects as well (such as Tomcat and Jakarta Commons).
Session: Secure Web Gateway with mod_security and mod_proxy
Kiran Mendonce Currently working for Hewlett-Packard, Bangalore, India. Involved in supporting Apache and other products on HP-UX.
Session: AJAX in Apache MyFaces
Gerald Müllan is a web-engineer who lives in Vienna (Austria). He has studied computer science at the fh-campuswien and is currently working on intregrating AJAX into JSF web applications and into the Apache MyFaces project. Gerald has profound programming experience in developing applications, especially in the J2EE area. In the last years he shifted his emphasis towards developing web applications with the JavaServer Faces technology. Gerald, employee of IRIAN.at, currently works on developing an online auction system using Apache MyFaces.
Session: J2EE Development with Apache Geronimo
Aaron Mulder has been working with Java technology since Java Alpha. He has worked on applets, applications, and Web applications using Java, CORBA, and J2EE. He has contributed to the Apache Geronimo, JBoss, and OpenEJB open-source J2EE servers, as well as the JDBC drivers for the PostgreSQL database. He co-authored the book Professional EJB, and is the author of the WebLogic 7 Deployment and Administration Handbook and an upcoming book on Apache Geronimo. Mulder is also a member of the JSR-88 (J2EE Application Deployment API) expert group. He has presented on a variety of Java-related topics in forums such as Java Users Group meetings, seminars, and the 2001 through 2005 JavaOne conferences. He is currently the Chief Technical Officer of Chariot Solutions, a Java consulting company.
Session: New Modular Authentication Architecture in Apache 2.2
Brad Nicholes has been a software engineer at Novell for 9 years and a member of the NetWare Engineering Group since 1998. While at Novell he has worked on the Apache and Enterprise Web Servers along with various scripting languages and database interfaces. Brad is currently a member of the Apache Software Foundation and has been working with the Apache community to make sure that the Apache Web Server is fully supported on NetWare. His work in this area includes porting Apache 2.0 and APR as well as maintaining Apache 1.3 on the NetWare platform. Brad attended school at the University of Utah and Brigham Young University and holds a degree in Computer Science.
Sessions: Extending Apache SpamAssassin using Plugins, Storing SpamAssassin User Data in SQL Databases
Michael Parker is a SpamAssassin developer and member of the SpamAssassin PMC. He has been involved, mostly as a lurker, in open source projects for the last 10 years. His primary SpamAssassin focus is on backend processes and modules with a slant towards SQL database interfaces. He has lived all of his life in Texas and currently lives outside of Austin with his wife Denise and son Ryan.
Session: The Zen of Free: Deriving a General Model for Open Source
Simon Phipps is the Chief Open Source Officer at Sun Microsystems, co-ordinating Sun's extensive participation in free and open source software communities and actively participating in the global conversation they express. Prior to this appointment he co-founded Sun’s pioneering staff weblog facility at blogs.sun.com, based on Roller.
A computer industry insider of 20+ years standing, Simon has worked in such hands-on roles as field engineer, programmer and systems analyst as well as being involved at a strategic level in some of the world’s leading computer companies. Fascinated by the idea of ‘action at a distance’, he worked with OSI standards in the eighties, on the first commercial collaborative conferencing software in the nineties, and helped introduce both Java and XML at IBM. He joined Sun in mid-2000.
He is currently Chair of the OpenSolaris Community Advisory Board and takes an active interest in several free/open source software organisations. He holds a degree in electronic engineering and is a Chartered Engineer and Member of the British Computer Society where he is on the committee of his local branch.
Simon lives in the UK with his wife and three children but is based in Silicon Valley in the US. With membership of airline frequent flyer clubs thus taken care of, he is free to indulge in his favourite pastimes of reading, writing poetry, collecting music, taking photographs and playing with cool toys. His personal home page and blog is http://www.webmink.net and Sun's software home page is at http://www.sun.com/software. He can be reached via e-mail as webmink@sun.com
Session: Building Projects with Maven
Eric Pugh has been heavily involved in Java open source development for the past 3 years. He is one of the founders of OpenSource Connections, a consultancy working with organizations to leverage open source tools.
Session: What's new in Apache HTTP Server 2.2
Paul Querna is an APR and HTTPD developer. He currently works on Bloglines.com for Ask Jeeves.
Session: SpamAssassin Tutorial
Daniel Quinlan works as Anti-Spam Architect at IronPort Systems, an email security provider in San Bruno, CA. He is a SpamAssassin developer and a V.P. of the Apache Software Foundation. In addition to working on anti-spam stuff, he is founder and chairperson of the Free Standards Group. Daniel lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, enjoys rock climbing, and is trying to figure out how to not lose at Texas Hold'em.
Sessions: Slicing and dicing REST with Apache Cocoon, Taming Apache Cocoon, Your Open Source Strategy Sucks!
Gianugo Rabellino is the CTO of Pro-netics, a company member of the Orixo XML Business Alliance, a network of companies supporting Apache Cocoon. He has been involved in Open Source since 1993, founding the first italian Linux official support group. ASF committer since 2001 and proud ASF member since 2004, he is involved in the Apache Cocoon and Apache Xindice communities. He writes articles on XML and security technologies on european IT magazines, loves to hack at late night, sing opera, play violin and learn golf.
Sessions: HTTP Caching and Cache-busting for Content Publishers, Hacking Apache HTTP Server at Yahoo!
Michael J. Radwin is an engineering manager at Yahoo! Inc. His team develops and supports core web infrastructure such as Apache, MySQL, and PHP and more recently SOAP/REST toolkits. Radwin has been hacking on Apache since 1998 in high-performance environments and has a particular affinity for HTTP Cookies.
Session: Web Service Client Programming Models Using Axis2
Ajith is one of the major committers for the Apcahe Axis2 project and has been working on Web service based projects for the past 4 years. His technical expertise is majorly in Web services and XML processing technologies. Ajith started his open source activities as one of the core developers for Apache Axis2 while he was at Lanka Software Foundation and now works for WSO2 (http://www..wso2.com) sharing his time between Axis, synapse and other opensource projects.
Sessions: Secure Single-Sign-On with Apache Directory and Apache Kerberos, The Future of Open-Source OSGi
Enrique Rodriguez is a Project Management Committee (PMC) member and a committer on the Apache Directory project. Enrique originally joined the Apache Directory project as the lead developer of the Kerberos protocol provider plug-in and continues to focus on the protocol provider implementations and integration with the OSGi Service Platform. Enrique was formerly a Systems Architect contracting for Microsoft Consulting Services, the Director of Implementation and Principal Product Architect for a dot-com, and the Director of Global Systems for Liberty Mutual Insurance. His recreation and work experiences have taken him to 47 U.S. states and to over 100 other locations across six continents. Enrique earned a degree in Electrical Engineering and minored in the Biology of Behavior at Rensselaer (RPI). Enrique is an avid mountaineer and has climbed the highest mountains in North America (Mt. McKinley, United States), South America (Aconcagua, Argentina), Europe (Elbrus, Russian Federation), and Africa (Kilimanjaro, Tanzania). Between climbing expeditions, Enrique competes for Team Mercury Multisport in triathlons and marathons.
Session: ApacheCon Lightning Lottery Talks and a Movie
Wilfredo Sánchez is a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, after which he co-founded an Internet publishing company, Agora Technology Group, in Cambridge, Massachusetts; he then worked on enabling electronic commerce and dynamic applications via the world wide web at Disney Online in North Hollywood, California. Wilfredo is presently a senior software engineer at Apple Computer in Cupertino, California. He was worked on the BSD subsystem in Mac OS X as a member of the Core Operating System group, and as open source engineering lead at Apple. He later became part of the team that built and launched the iTunes Music Store, and presently works on Collaboration Technologies for Mac OS X Server. Wilfredo is also a member of the Apache Software Foundation, and a contributor to various open source projects.
Session: Performance Analysis of Apache Derby
Olav Sandstå is staff engineer in the Database Technology Group at Sun Microsystems. For the last six years he have been working on the internals of high-availability database management systems with focus on high performance. Today he is working as a Apache Derby developer. Prior to joining Sun he worked on the Clustra DBMS. He has a PhD in storage systems for digital video from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology.
Sessions: Clustered logging with mod_log_spread, Scalable Internet Architectures
Theo Schlossnagle is a Principal Consultant at OmniTI Computer Consulting where he designs and implements scalable solutions for highly trafficked sites and other clients in need of sound, scalable architectural engineering. During the last several years, he was a key participant at The Center for Networking and Distributed Systems at The Johns Hopkins University researching scalable distributed system design. Current research includes resource allocation techniques in dynamic models and distributed mail systems based on "eventual consistency". Theo is the author and maintainer of the mod_backhand load-balancing module for Apache, an author and maintainer of the Backhand Project.
Sessions: Behind the Scenes of the Apache Software Foundation (Part 1), Behind the Scenes of the Apache Software Foundation (Part 2), Deep Comprehension of XPath and XSLT
Cliff Schmidt is an Apache member, Vice President for Legal Affairs and XMLBeans, and an active member of the Incubator PMC. He is also the principal consultant for Symbioss Strategy, where he helps companies evaluate and execute business strategies that are symbiotic with open source communities. Prior to founding Symbioss Strategy, he was responsible for starting BEA's open source strategy and relationship with open source communities as well as the standards strategy for the WebLogic Workshop product. He has been involved in standards working groups at OASIS, the JCP, and the World Wide Web Consortium. Cliff has been working in the software industry since 1987, with the exception of serving six years as a submarine officer in the US Navy.
Sessions: Apache Containers, Apache James - The Java Mail Server, Rapid application development with Maven and Turbine
Henning Schmiedehausen, born in 1968, got his degree in computer science from the Friedrich-Alexander University in Erlangen in 1996. Since as long as he can remember he is "toying with computers", first with the Amiga, later with Unix and Unix-like operating systems. He is currently working as an independent software developer and consultant and describes his current work as doing "all things Internet". If he's not sitting in front of an X-Desktop, he enjoys Football (european style), role playing or tries to resurrect his lawn.
Session: Power PHP Testing
Chris Shiflett is an internationally recognized expert in the field of PHP security and the founder and President of Brain Bulb, a PHP consultancy that offers a variety of services to clients around the world.
Chris is a leader in the PHP community, and his involvement includes being the founder of the PHP Security Consortium, the founder of PHPCommunity.org, a member of the Zend PHP Advisory Board, and an author of the Zend PHP Certification.
A prolific writer, Chris has regular columns in both PHP Magazine and php|architect. He is also the author of the HTTP Developer's Handbook (Sams) as well as the highly anticipated Essential PHP Security (O'Reilly).
Sessions: Inside the ASF Infrastructure Workflow, Introducing Apache Gump 3
Leo Simons is a Dutch student and software developer. He has been working on a variety of Apache projects for most of his adult life, acting as committer, mentor, Vice President, documentation author or sysadmin. Proud to be an ASF member, he is currently spending most of his time as one of the main developers of Apache Gump and in his role as member of the ASF Infrastructure Team.
Session: Apache Geronimo for Developers
Bruce Snyder is a 10-year veteran of enterprise software development and a recognized leader in open source software. Bruce has experience in a wide range of technologies, focusing mainly on J2EE and more recently on Service Oriented Architecture and Enterprise Service Bus. In addition to his role as a Senior Architect for LogicBlaze, Bruce is also a founding member of Apache Geronimo (http://geronimo.apache.org/), a lead developer for the Castor project (http://www.castor.org/), a developer for the ServiceMix project (http://servicemix.codehaus.org/), a developer for the ActiveMQ project (http://activemq.codehaus.org/) and a developer for the WADI project (http://wadi.codehaus.org/). Bruce also serves as a member of the JCP expert group for JSR-243 (Java Data Objects 2.0) (http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=243). In addition, Bruce is also currently co-authoring Professional Apache Geronimo for Wrox Press and is a speaker at industry conferences including Colorado Software Summit, JavaOne, ApacheCon and No Fluff Just Stuff.
Session: Single Source Publishing with Apache Forrest
Ferdinand Soethe is a Committer and PMC member of the Apache Forrest project. For more than 15 years he has been working as a consultant in various areas of PC-based computing. As a technical author he has published two books for Addison-Wesley (in German) and several articles in German and English publications. Documentation has always been an important part of his work and his favorite topic of research and experimental programming.
Session: State of the Web Services Union
Davanum Srinivas is currently the PMC chair of Apache Web Services and V.P of Engineering at WSO2 Inc.
Session: Building an Enterprise Portal with Apache Portals and Jetspeed-2
David is an open source developer and member at the Apache Software Foundation. David is a founder of the Apache Portals project and architect of the Jetspeed-2 open source enterprise portal. He is also a member of the Java Portlet API Expert Group. He owns Bluesunrise Software, dedicated to open source software solutions. URL: http://www.bluesunrise.com/
Session: ApacheCon Lightning Lottery Talks and a Movie
Omar is currently Chief Open Source Evangelist with Oracle middleware and tools where he is responsible for OSS strategy and Evangelism. Prior to joining Oracle, Omar was the CEO of Orbeon where he created a successful business model based on services using Open Source Software donated by Orbeon to the community. Omar was an active member of the Java Community Process (JCP) Executive Committee where he also particpated in several JSRs. Before crossing the Atlantic, Omar has held several research and teaching positions in the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, specializing in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Object Oriented Programming (OOP). He holds an M.S. in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering. See Omar's blog at: http://otazi.blogspot.com
Session: Performance Analysis of Apache Derby
Dyre Tjeldvoll is senior engineer in the Database Technology Group at Sun Microsystems. For the last five years he has been working on the internals of a distributed high-availability database management system. He is currently working as an Apache Derby developer.
Session: Apache 2 mod_ssl by example
Mads Toftum is an independent consultant with more than eight years of experience in various ISP jobs. Previous projects include designing and developing HA www hosting in a shared unix/NT environment and more than two years building a commercial CA. In his spare time he is a committer on the httpd-docs project, developing payment software and actively helping users in #apache (freenode) and on the mod-ssl mailing list.
Session: Consuming Web Services Using PHP 5
Adam Trachtenberg is the Manager of Technical Evangelism at eBay, where he preaches the gospel of the eBay platform to developers and businessmen around the globe. Before eBay, Adam co-founded and served as Vice President for Development at two companies, Student.Com and TVGrid.Com. At both firms, he led the front- and middle-end web site design and development. Adam began using PHP in 1997, and is the author of "Upgrading to PHP 5" and coauthor of "PHP Cookbook," both published by O'Reilly Media. He lives in San Francisco, and has a B.A. and M.B.A. from Columbia University.
Session: Introduction to Mod_Python
Gregory "Grisha" Trubetskoy is the original author of mod_python and a member of the Apache Software Foundation. Born and raised in Moscow, Russia, he now lives in Vienna, Virginia, where he balances his time between developing software, watching after the kids and his latest endeavor - a hosting startup openhosting.com.
Session: The Future of Open-Source OSGi
I am the founder of the Jakarta Velocity subproject. I work extensively on Turbine, and develop the Turbine Developers Kit. I currently work for a company in NYC developing a B2B solution for the printing and publishing industing which is based on Turbine/Velocity.
Session: Open Forum with Dr. Wenn-Hann Wang - Open Source Development - A Platform Perspective
Dr. Wen-Hann Wang is General Manager of Managed Run Time Division of Intel Software and Solution Group (SSG). He joined Intel in 1991 as P6 (PentiumPro) Platform Architect where he made significant contributions to the highly successful P6 product family. In addition, Wen-Hann's platform architecture and analysis work was instrumental in the creation of the Xeon server product line. After the well-received P6 product launch in 1995, Wen-Hann served as Platform Infrastructure Research Manager of the newly formed Intel Microprocessor Research Lab (MRL). In late 1998 Wen-Hann became Director of Emerging Platforms Lab, delivering cutting-edge technologies and reference platforms for Intel product groups. Wen-Hann relocated to Shanghai June 2000, for three years, to head up theTechnology Development Division of SSG, developing software technologies and reference designs to accelerate emerging market growth. Prior to joining Intel, Wen-Hann was a Research Staff Member at IBM T. J. Watson Research Center.
Wen-Hann was a winner of the first Intel Microprocessor Innovators Day invention contest in 1993 and received the Award of Innovation. Wen-Hann was granted 13 patents and received the first Influential Paper Award at 2003 IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Computer Architectures. He also won the Best Paper Award at the ACM SIGMETRICS conference in 1991 for his seminal work on computer architecture simulation methodology.
Wen-Hann is an active participant in professional activities. He was Program Chair of 1999 IEEE Computer Elements Mesa Workshop and Co-General Chair in 2000. He served on the Program Committee of International Symposium on High Performance Computer Architectures in 1998, 2000, 2001 and was a Special Issue Guest Editor for the International Journal on Computer Simulations. Wen-Hann was awarded Certificate of Appreciation from IEEE Computer Society in 1999 and 2000.
Wen-Hann has worked and studied in three continents. He received his BSEE from the National Taiwan University, his MSEE from the Philips International Institute of Technological Studies, in the Netherlands, and his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Washington in the United States.
Session: Lenya and Jackrabbit Make a Fine Couple
Michael Wechner is co-founder of Wyona and the original creator of Lenya, a CMS based on Cocoon. Before entering the world of open source software he studied mathematical physics at ETH and was doing three years of basic research on computer simulations of dendritic growth. He co-founded OSCOM and also spends a lot of time with other Open Source Content Management Systems.
Sessions: New (and old) Trends in Web Application Security, PHP Web Services
Christian Wenz is author, trainer and consultant with focus on web programming. He is author or co-author of over four dozen books, among them several titles on PHP, most recently the PHP Phrasebook (Sams Publishing). Christian regularly writes for renowned IT magazines and speaks at developer conferences around the globe. He maintains or co-maintains several PEAR packages and is Germany's very first Zend Certified Professional and founding principial at the PHP Security Consortium.
Session: Apache MyFaces - Open Source JavaServer Faces
Matthias Wessendorf (March 2nd 1979) lives and works in Cologne (Germany). His focus is creating J2EE based (web) apps. In his university he works with Struts, Apache Axis, JavaServer Faces and EJB. In 2004 he was speaker on several German conferences and talks about "Struts and JSF" and also using Axis based Web Services on mobile devices with J2ME/WML. In 2004 he published his first book about Apache Struts Framework. In 2005 one book about JSF is following. He is committer of Apache MyFaces and contributer of Jakarta Commons (Email).
Session: Power PHP Testing
Geoffrey Young is a member of the Apache Software Foundation, current chair of the mod_perl PMC, and lead author of the mod_perl Developer's Cookbook. When not programming or writing he is busy spending time with his wife and growing family, slowly rebuilding their house a room at a time.
Sessions: (A) Maven is Your Friend, Cocoon - One Hour Portal, Portals@Apache: Standards and the Portals Projects
Carsten Ziegeler is the release manager of Apache Cocoon. He has been a committer on the project since 2000 and played a major role in designing and developing the current architecture. Carsten is the chief architect of the Open Source Group at S&N; AG, Paderborn, Germany. He participates in several Open Source projects and various Apache communities. In July 2003 Carsten has been elected as an Apache Member.
Session: PHP and Unicode: A Love at Fifth Sight
Andrei Zmievski works on internal tools at Yahoo! Inc. specializing in i18n and infrastructure software, such as PHP and Apache. He is also a core PHP developer, leader of the PHP-GTK project, and a co-author of "PHP Developer's Cookbook" and Smarty templating system. His current focus is the native Unicode support in PHP. In his free time he studies languages and linguistics, goes sailing, and travels to other countries.