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Computers: Programming_Languages

Google Web Toolkit Conference December 3, 2007 December 6, 2007 USA

http://www.voicesthatmatter.com/gwt2007/index.html
About the Conference

December 3-6 2007
San Francisco, California
http://www.voicesthatmatter.com/gwt2007/index.html

Google Web Toolkit enables developers to use their favorite Java tools to build AJAX applications without having to tackle the steep learning curve and quirks of JavaScript and CSS. The Voices That Matter: Google Web Toolkit Conference will insure you understand why this is so and how you can leverage the power and functionality of GWT for your applications.

From the people who are publishing the definitive books on Google Web Toolkit, this conference will be a forum of the Google engineers, the open source community of contributors and developers like you.

Addison-Wesley and Prentice Hall have been part of the evolution of software development. Our mission is to enable the industry’s luminaries to deliver their expertise to software professionals, via books, conferences, or other methods.

http://www.voicesthatmatter.com/gwt2007/index.html

What Makes This Conference Unique?

World Class Speakers
Meet and learn from the folks, both Google engineers and community members, who have developed GWT. In addition, speakers will share their experiences in building real-world applications with GWT. Speakers confirmed to date include Bruce Johnson, Joel Webber, Ryan Dewsbury, Scott Blum, David Geary, and Kelly Norton.

Community Building
The Voices That Matter: Google Web Toolkit Conference will not be an isolated island of education. Starting with pre-event conference calls and including a conference blog and speaker podcasts, participants will be given a range of opportunities to interact with the speakers and each other. They will be part of an ongoing conversation before and beyond the event itself.

What You Will Learn

Introductory Topics

* Getting started with GWT
* Solving traditional web usability problems with AJAX and GWT
* Building user interfaces
* Client/server communication, including RPC, JSON, and XML
* Integration and interoperation with existing applications and libraries
* Unit testing and benchmarking
* Deploying GWT applications effectively

Advanced Topics

* Advanced UI programming: Widgets, Panels, DOM, and JSNI
* Using deferred binding for dependency injection and code generation
* Designing for no-compromise usability, including tips for maximizing responsiveness, supporting history, and internationalizing well
* Maximizing code reuse
* Understanding compilation, the JavaScript Native Interface (JSNI), and optimizations
* Security considerations for AJAX and GWT
* Architecting big applications with GWT

Network with colleagues and GWT team members to discuss the underlying promise of GWT as well as its current challenges:

* How can I integrate GWT into my existing application?
* How have others added functionality to GWT?
* How can one best take advantage of Java design patterns in GWT?
* For large projects, how can we handle multiple entry points?
* What are the best practices for debugging GWT applications?
* Which IDEs work best with GWT?
* How have others integrated Spring and Hibernate?
* How can you contribute to the Google Web Toolkit project?

Who Should Attend

* Enterprise Developers and Programmers
* Software Company Developers and Programmers
* Technical Directors
* Software Engineers
* Project Managers
* Technical Strategists
* Product Managers for Software Companies
* User Interface and User Experience Specialists
* Web Systems Architects

http://www.voicesthatmatter.com/gwt2007/index.html

SPSS SYNTAX, MACROS AND OMS WORKSHOP (SHEFFIELD) June 27, 2007 June 29, 2007 United Kingdom

http://www.spssusers.co.uk/Events/2007/workshopannounce.html
This workshop, along with the other in Edinburgh, extends the successful workshops run by the ASSESS SPSS Users’ Group in previous years.
Cost is 150 GBP for the three days in total at either workshop (Sheffield or Edinburgh). Reductions for group or student bookings. A downloadable booking form is available at http://www.spssusers.co.uk/Events/2007/workshopannounce.html
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

THREE DAY WORKSHOP ON SPSS SYNTAX, MACROS AND OMS June 20, 2007 June 22, 2007 United Kingdom

http://www.spssusers.co.uk/Events/2007/workshopannounce.html
This workshop, along with the other in Sheffield, extends the successful workshops run by the ASSESS SPSS User Group in previous years.
Reegistration for the three days in total at either the Edinburgh or Sheffield workshop is 150 GBP. Concessions available for group bookings and students. Please see http://www.spssusers.co.uk/Events/2007/workshopannounce.html for further details and a downloadable booking form.
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

Language Standards for Global Business Summit Vienna December 14, 2006 December 15, 2006 Austria

http://www.internationalization-conference.org/lsgbVienna/index.html
The third in the Language Standards for Global Business Summit series will continue to follow the principles of the past events.

This event will take place in Vienna, Austria, between the dates of December 14-15, 2006.

LSGB Vienna will focus on providing an inventory of all relevant standards, draft standards and present existing tools which could be adjusted to meet the needs of future communication standards. This meeting shall help to form a platform for future technical standards that enable full interoperability, compatibility and data exchange among user groups in the long term. It is intended to identify standards that are important in the GILT business. The meeting will last 2 days and this will be a fully interactive conference, including both audience and electronic media. The results obtained in this conference will be directly entered in Wikiforstandards, providing thus the basis for further long term projects.

Experts in the fields of software development, language service providers, linguists, standards bodies, associations, and industry will come together to assist in isolating these standards, and provide the framework for the continued work of future summits.

This event will also highlight the first visible result of the Berlin Summit, where Wikiforstandards.org was introduced. Gerard Meijssen, initiator of Wikiforstandards, will present the creation and implementation of this tool for future work.

Other highlights include:

Keynote presentation - From chaos to order

Panel: Globalisation - Speed versus quality?

Case studies of available resources

Workshop: To An Inventory of Tools

We invite software developers, language service providers, linguists, publishers, government agencies, standards bodies and practitioners to join us in Vienna, and contribute to building an inventory toward the next step of full interoperability and data exchange in the future.

10914 Glenda Ct

Russian Outsourcing and Software Summit 2006 May 31, 2006 June 2, 2006 Russia

http://www.soft-outsourcing.com
Russian Outsourcing and Software Summit 2006 is the flagship event of East European IT Outsourcing industry. The Summit is one of the largest and the most prominent events in the sphere of IT-outsourcing, software development and international cooperation on information technologies in Russia, CIS and Western Europe.

First time the conference was held in 2001. In 2006 year the Sixth Russian Software Summit will be held in Imperial hotel, Moscow.

The main goals of the Summit are

- to get up-to-date information about state and prospects of export software market in Russia and CIS, about practices of development of this industry in the leading competitive countries

- to share experience of software market participants in Russia and CIS

- to establish direct contacts between customers and service/product providers in the sphere of software development

As always the official program of the Conference will include an unforgettable cultural program, which will give the participants the opportunity to get acquainted with culture and architecture of the city and to communicate to each other.
You are very welcome to register at http://www.soft-outsourcing.com/?page=register&language=eng to get early bird discounts!

Extreme Markup Languages 2006 August 7, 2006 August 11, 2006 Canada

http://www.extrememarkup.com
<html>
<head>
<link rel=”stylesheet” href=”http://www.mulberrytech.com/mulberry.css” type=”text/css”>
<title>Extreme Markup Languages® 2006</title>
<meta name=”author” content=”Mulberry Technologies, Inc.”>
<meta name=”title” content=”Extreme Markup Languages 2006″>
<meta name=”keywords” content=”XML Conference”>
<meta name=”keywords” content=”XSLT, XSL-FO, ‘topic maps’, XML”>
<meta name=”keywords” content=”IDEAlliance Extreme 2006 Knowledge Technologies”>
</head>
<body bgcolor=”#C3D3C3″ text=”#000000″ vlink=”#054BBB” link=”#054BBB” alink=”#8C7300″>

<table border=”0″ cellspacing=”0″ cellpadding=”0″ width=”100%”>
<td width=”85%”>
<table bgcolor=”#FFFFFF” border=”2″ cellspacing=”0″ cellpadding=”12″ width=”100%”>

Extreme Markup Languages<sup>®</sup> 2006

August 7-11, 2006 Montréal, Canada

Extreme is an open marketplace of theories about markup and
all the things that they support or that support them: the
difficult cases in publishing, linguistics, transformation,
searching, indexing, storage and retrieval, the things you wish
you could do in XML so much that you?re thinking of creating
your own markup system. At Extreme, markup enthusiasts
gather each year to trade in ideas, not to convince management
to buy new stuff. Extreme actively seeks controversy, not just the
same old applications.

Call for Participation:

Looking for a theory to apply? Got one to market? Want a cause to support for
your next open-source project? Got a good implementation story to tell? Have a
new approach to handling overlapping markup or to treating non-XML data as
if it were XML? Any opinions on the future of XML or one of the XML-related
specifications? Do you make real demands of markup technology? Do you
have an approach to modeling, creation, manipulation, or display of markup?
If you do, we want to hear from you at Extreme!

Extreme welcomes contributions on any topic related to markup and
knowledge management, including (but emphatically not limited to):

    <li>Theory of markup languages</li>
    <li>XML authoring, parsing, storage, and processing</li>
    <li>Fundamentals of ? or advanced topics in ? knowledge
    representation and knowledge management</li>
    <li>Indexing and searching XML documents</li>
    <li>Topic maps</li>
    <li>Virtual XML; treating non-XML data as if it were in XML</li>
    <li>Binary formats for XML</li>
    <li>Reinventing SGML</li>
    <li>Non-SGML-based markup systems</li>
    <li>RDF and semantic web technologies</li>
    <li>Validation of markup and/or data</li>
    <li>Semantics of data, markup, and/or processes</li>
    <li>Markup of overlapping structures</li>
    <li>XML and databases</li>
    <li>Practical tests of theoretical predictions</li>
    <li>Theoretical ? or at least thoughtful ? evaluation of practical
    experience
    </ul>

    Rumor has it that some folks are afraid they are not ?geek enough?
    for Extreme. Hold on to your socks! If you find the topics above
    interesting we think you?re geek enough for Extreme. And we think
    you may have something to offer.

    Deadlines:

    <dl>

    <dt>March 24, 2006</dt>
    <dd><a href=”http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Peer/ReviewAppForm.html”>Peer Review applications</dd>

    <dt>March 24, 2006</dt>
    <dd><a href=”http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/tutorialcall.html”>Tutorial proposals</dd>

    <dt>April 7, 2006</dt>
    <dd><a href-”http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/details.html”>Paper submissions</dd>
    </dl>

    Call for Posters

    Extreme has a tradition of lively <a href=”http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/posters.html”>poster sessions.
    Posters are an ideal presentation form for material that is short, graphical, or best read carefully. Posters provide an opportunity to present your ideas and to discuss them with conference attendees throughout the conference.

    Reports on Extreme 2004

    These three serious reports on the 2004 conference presentations also find time to mention
    the “curiously-decorated” hotel, hats, and a short heard-in-the-halls:

      <li>James Mason in xml.com:<a href=”http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2004/09/15/xtreme.html”>Extreme Markup 2004.</li>

      <li>Lou Burnard in the UK: <a href=”http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/Reports/2004-08-extreme.html”>Extreme Markup Languages 2004: a brief report</li>

      <li>Norman Walsh, <a href=”http://norman.walsh.name/2004/08/08/extreme”>Extremely Good Again
      </li>
      </ul>

      <a href=”http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Proceedings/”>Link
      here to the Aggregated Proceedings for Extreme 2001-2004

      Questions

      Email to <a
      href=”mailto:Extreme@mulberrytech.com”>Extreme@mulberrytech.com or
      call Tommie Usdin at +1 301/315-9634

      More Information

      For updated information on the program and plans for the conference, see <a href=”http://www.extrememarkup.com/extreme/”>http://www.extrememarkup.com/extreme/ (which will redirect you back here until it’s available).

      <table border=”0″ cellpadding=”4″>

      <th align=”right” width=”20%”>Produced by

      <A HREF=”http://www.idealliance.org”>IDEAlliance

      <th align=”right”>Chair

      B. Tommie Usdin, Mulberry Technologies, Inc.

      <th align=”right”>Co-Chairs

      Deborah A. Lapeyre, Mulberry Technologies, Inc.

      C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, World Wide Web Consortium/MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL)

      Steven R. Newcomb, Coolheads Consulting

      James David Mason, Y-12 National Security Complex

      <th align=”right”>Advisors

      Syd Bauman, Brown University

      Jeff Beck, NIH/NCBI

      Jon Bosak, Sun

      Mary Fernandez, AT&T Labs - Research

      Allen Renear, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

      There is nothing so practical as a good theory

      For the home page of Extreme Markup Languages<sup>®</sup>, please see the <a href=”http://www.extrememarkup.com/extreme/”>Extreme Conference Web Site.

      </body>
      </html>

      1421 Prince St., Suite 230

SBLP 2005 - 9th Brazilian Symposium on Programming Languages May 23, 2005 May 25, 2005 Brazil

http://www.upe.poli.br/dsc/sblp2005/
<p class=”tituloDestaque”> SBLP 2005 - 9th Brazilian Symposium on Programming Languages

<p class=”textoConteudo”> Selected papers from the proceedings will appear
in a Special Issue of the Journal of Universal Computer Science - JUCS.
Only accepted contributions written in English are eligible to be published
in the JUCS.

(<a href=”http://www.jucs.org” target=”_blank” class=”linkCorpo”>www.jucs.org)

<p class=”titulo”>Scope

<p class=”textoConteudo”> The Brazilian Symposium on Programming Languages
(SBLP), sponsored by the Brazilian Computer Society (SBC), is a forum
where researchers, educators, and practitioners can present and discuss
the fundamental principles and innovations in the design, analysis and
implementation of programming languages and systems.
<p class=”textoConteudo”> We invite authors to contribute to SBLP 2005
with the following kinds of submissions:

    <li>Technical research papers introducing original research results
    on topics such as (but not limited to): programming language design
    and implementation, formal semantics of programming languages, domain-specific
    programming languages, programming languages for mobile, WWW, and
    network computing, script languages, new programming models, theoretical
    foundations of programming languages and teaching programming languages.</li>

    <li>Tutorial proposals on subjects related to programming languages,
    APIs, tools, environments or theories, at graduate level.</li>
    </ul>
    <p class=”titulo”>Important Dates

      <li><span class=”textoDestaque”>Deadline for submissions:</span> February
      28th, 2005</li>
      <li><span class=”textoDestaque”>Notification of acceptance:</span> March
      31th, 2005</li>

      <li><span class=”textoDestaque”>Camera-ready version:</span> April 11th,
      2005</li>
      </ul>
      <p class=”titulo”>Submission Guidelines

      <p class=”textoConteudo”>Contributions can be written in Portuguese or
      English. Papers should have at most 14 pages. All accepted papers will
      be published in the conference proceedings. Tutorial submissions may
      be in the form of a proposal. The final version of a selected tutorial
      should contain at most 30 pages and will be published in separate proceedings.
      Talks must be in the language of submission.

      <p class=”textoConteudo”> Please check the symposium web site (<a href=”http://www.upe.poli.br/dsc/sblp2005″ target=”_blank” class=”linkCorpo”>http://www.upe.poli.br/dsc/sblp2005)
      for more information about submissions guidelines and procedures.
      <p class=”titulo”>Program Committee

        <li>Adriana Compagnoni, Stevens Institute of Technology (USA)</li>
        <li>Alberto Pardo, Univ. de La Republica (Uruguay)</li>
        <li>Alex Garcia, IME (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Alfio Martini (PUC-RS)</li>
        <li>Andre Santos, UFPE (Brazil)</li>

        <li>Barrett Bryant, Univ. of Alabama (USA)</li>
        <li>Carlos Camarao, UFMG (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Cecilia Rubira, Unicamp (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Christiano Braga, UFF (Brazil)</li>
        <li>David Naumann, Stevens Tech (USA)</li>
        <li>Edil Fernandes, UFRJ (Brazil)</li>

        <li>Edward Hermann Haeusler, PUC-Rio (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Francisco Heron de Carvalho Jr., UPE (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Gabriel Baum, Univ. Nacional de La Plata (Argentina)</li>
        <li>Guy Cousineau, Univ. Paris 7 (France)</li>
        <li>Hermano Moura, UFPE (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Isabel Cafezeiro, UFF (Brazil)</li>

        <li>Johan Jeuring, Utrecht Univ. (Netherlands)</li>
        <li>John Hughes, Chalmers Univ. of Technology (Sweden)</li>
        <li>Jose Guimaraes, UFSCAR (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Jose Labra, Univ. of Oviedo (Spain)</li>
        <li>Jose Luiz Fiadeiro, Univ. of Leicester (England)</li>
        <li>Luc?lia Figueiredo, UFOP (Brazil)</li>

        <li>Luiz Carlos Menezes, UFPE, (Brasil)</li>
        <li>Luis Soares Barbosa, Universidade do Minho (Portugal)</li>
        <li>Marco Tulio Valente, PUC-MG (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Mariza Bigonha, UFMG (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Martin Musicante, UFPR (Brazil) - Chair</li>
        <li>Nick Benton, Microsoft Research (England)</li>

        <li>Noemi Rodriguez, PUC-Rio (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Paulo Blauth Menezes, UFRGS (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Paulo Borba, UFPE (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Peter D. Mosses, Brics-Aarhus University (Denmark)</li>
        <li>Peter Thiemann, Univ. Freiburg (Germany)</li>
        <li>Rafael Dueire Lins, UFPE (Brazil)</li>

        <li>Renato Cerqueira, PUC-Rio (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Ricardo Massa Lima, UPE (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Roberto Bigonha, UFMG (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Roberto Ierusalimschy, PUC-Rio (Brazil)</li>
        <li>Sergiu Dascalu, Univ. of Nevada, Reno (USA)</li>
        <li>Simon Thompson, Univ. of Kent (England)</li>

        <li>Uday Reddy, Univ. of Birmingham (England)</li>
        </ul>
        <p class=”titulo”>Organizing Committee

          <li>Adriano Lorena In?cio de Oliveira, UPE</li>
          <li>Andr? Lu?s de Medeiros Santos, UFPE</li>
          <li>Carlos Alexandre Mello, UPE</li>

          <li>Francisco Heron de Carvalho Jr., UPE</li>
          <li>Fernando Buarque de Lima Neto, UPE</li>
          <li>M?rcio Lopes Corn?lio, UPE</li>
          <li>Maria Lencastre, UPE</li>
          <li>Ricardo Massa, UPE - Chair (<a href=”mailto:ricardo@upe.poli.br” class=”linkCorpo”>ricardo@upe.poli.br)</li>

          </ul>
          <p class=”titulo”>Symposium Location

          <p class=”textoConteudo”> “Recife is one of the biggest cities in brazilian’s
          northeast and it is one of the most important cities of Brazil. It is
          very important for the country history and it has many touristic attractions.
          The commercial center of Recife has a preserved architecture of the
          last century contrasting with modern buildings. All of this makes Recife
          one of the most attractive cities of Brazil”
          <p class=”titulo”>More Information

          <p class=”textoConteudo”> For further information, visit the symposium
          web site at

          <a href=”http://www.upe.poli.br/dsc/sblp2005″ target=”_blank” class=”linkCorpo”>http://www.upe.poli.br/dsc/sblp2005/
          or send e-mail to <a href=”mailto:ricardo@upe.poli.br” class=”linkCorpo”>ricardo@upe.poli.br.

          <!– InstanceEndEditable –>


          <TD COLSPAN=2 WIDTH=778 HEIGHT=18> <IMG SRC=”images/sblp_04.gif” border=”0″ usemap=”#Map”>


          </center>

          Pra?a do Internacional, 445

Culture and Youth Enpowerment as well Website Designing February 2, 2005 February 8, 2005 Nigeria

http://www.oswda.tk
The great cultural history about a goddess in Nigeria known as “Osun” has been spreading and confusing alot of people but now we want it clear to every one.
<font color=maroon size=5><marquee>You are welcome to the great seminar of the Osun State Website Designers Association.
No 10 Adewale Avenue Behind Bovas Flling Station Oroki Estate ,Osogbo,OSun State,Nigeria,23435.

1st International Workshop on Interpreted Languages September 27, 2004 Germany

http://www.sebastian-bergmann.de/InterpretedLanguages2004/

Interpreted programming languages are increasingly gaining importance in both the commercial and scientific world.

Python, for instance, is used by both Hollywood’s digital designers to script visual effects and astronomers, who like it because of its good support for numerical mathmatics. Perl has been the de facto standard for UNIX system administration for almost 20 years now and PHP already drives more than 15 million websites.

This world of interpreted programming languages, to which also C# and Java belong, is changing: New platforms and runtime environments like Microsoft.Net or Parrot, which will become the core of Perl 6, emerge while languages like PHP and Python evolve and younger languages like Ruby enter the stage.

The “1st International Workshop on Interpreted Languages” will take this into account and present current developments from the exciting world of interpreted languages as part of the Net.ObjectDays conference that is held September 27-30 in Erfurt, Germany.

Net.ObjectDays is one of the major international conferences on object-oriented and internet-based technologies, concepts, and applications. Based on a strong research and innovation focus, Net.ObjectDays has a tradition in bringing together leading researchers from academia and industry on the one hand and system architects, developers, and users from industry and administration on the other hand.

2004 IEEE Symposium on Visual Languages and Human-Centric Computing September 26, 2004 September 29, 2004 Italy

http://vlhcc04.dsi.uniroma1.it/registration.php
The IEEE Symposium on Visual Languages and Human-Centric Computing (VL/HCC) celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2004. Predicated on the idea that visual representations can greatly benefit the task of computer programming, the conference has become the premier international forum on VL research. Originally named “Symposium on Visual Languages”, the conference has undergone several changes in response to the evolution of the field. Its present name, extended to Human-Centric Computing, reflects the expanded mission of the symposium:

to support the design, formalization, implementation, and evaluation of computing languages that are easier to learn, easier to use, and easier to understand by a broader group of people.
This includes all research aimed at the above mission, regardless of whether it is focuses entirely on visual technology, text, or instead focuses on the use of sound, taste, virtual reality, the web, or other technologies. Examples of research in this area include, but are not limited to, language/environmental design aspects, theory that supports the many media used toward this goal, implementation aspects, empirical work, software comprehension aspects (including software visualization), and software modeling and/or software engineering aspects.

Following the 2003 edition in New Zealand, this year’s symposium will be held from September 26-29, 2004 in Rome Italy, the site of the 1989 edition. This wonderful city affords participants a unique environment for scientific discussion. Distinguished researchers, including Paul Dourish of the University of California, Irvine, USA, and Margaret-Anne Storey of the University of Victoria, Canada, will give talks on relevant and emerging issues related to the field of visual languages and human-centric computing. The conference also includes a demo section of working prototype systems that provide a closer look at recent results within this broad area.

VL/HCC 2004 will be colocated with ICGT 2004, (International Conference on Graph Transformation), the premier venue for research and applications in the field of Graph Transformations. Joint participation in the two conferences is highly recommended and will be facilitated.
Please see conference URL