This is a compilation of pictures and tweets tagged as dpc09. This was run during the closing keynote.
Note to photographers: We apologize if we have used your picture without permission. We respect your IP and will gladly remove any offending photos from this slide deck if yoyu so desire.
Après la présentation de #Flutter, Julien nous révèle toute la puissance de #Go, encore un autre langage de programmation créé par Google.
After the #Flutter presentation, Julien reveals all the power of #Go, yet another programming language created by Google.
Après la présentation de #Flutter, Julien nous révèle toute la puissance de #Go, encore un autre langage de programmation créé par Google.
After the #Flutter presentation, Julien reveals all the power of #Go, yet another programming language created by Google.
Replay and more: https://blogs.embarcadero.com/pytorch-for-delphi-with-the-python-data-sciences-libraries/
The next installment of the Embarcadero Open Source Live Stream takes a look at the Delphi side of the Python Ecosystem with the new Python Data Sciences Libraries and related projects that make it super easy write Delphi code against Python libraries and easily deploy on Windows, Linux, MacOS, and Android. Specific examples with the Python Natural Language Toolkit and PyTorch, the library that powers projects like Tesla Autopilot, Uber's Pyro, Hugging Face's Transformers.
This is part of a series of regular live streams discussing the latest in Embarcadero open source projects. Hosted by Jim McKeeth and joined by members of the community and developers involved in these open source projects, as well as members of Embarcadero and Idera’s Product Management. A great opportunity to see behind the scenes and help shape the future of Embarcadero’s Open Source projects.
Replay and more: https://blogs.embarcadero.com/pytorch-for-delphi-with-the-python-data-sciences-libraries/
The next installment of the Embarcadero Open Source Live Stream takes a look at the Delphi side of the Python Ecosystem with the new Python Data Sciences Libraries and related projects that make it super easy write Delphi code against Python libraries and easily deploy on Windows, Linux, MacOS, and Android. Specific examples with the Python Natural Language Toolkit and PyTorch, the library that powers projects like Tesla Autopilot, Uber's Pyro, Hugging Face's Transformers.
This is part of a series of regular live streams discussing the latest in Embarcadero open source projects. Hosted by Jim McKeeth and joined by members of the community and developers involved in these open source projects, as well as members of Embarcadero and Idera’s Product Management. A great opportunity to see behind the scenes and help shape the future of Embarcadero’s Open Source projects.
Introduction to Python GUI development with Delphi for Python - Part 1: Del...Embarcadero Technologies
Learn how Embarcadero’s newly released free Python modules bring the power and flexibility of Delphi’s GUI frameworks to Python. VCL and FireMonkey (FMX) are mature GUI libraries. VCL is focused on native Windows development, while FireMonkey brings a powerful flexible GUI framework to Windows, Linux, macOS, and even Android. This webinar will introduce you to these new free Python modules and how you can use them to build graphical users interfaces with Python. Part 2 will show you how to target Android GUI applications with Python!
So you have an existing PHP application and would like to spice it up with a rich and attractive front-end. Next to Adobe Flex, you can also choose Silverlight as a solution. This session shows you around in Silverlight and shows that PHP and Silverlight can go together easily.
Caching Patterns for lazy devs for lazy loading - Luigi Fugaro VDTJAN23Luigi Fugaro
ABSTRACT:
Always running the same queries over and over... and waiting seconds after seconds, minutes after minutes.
It's not about being lazy, a dev first of all is a person with immense patience.
Patience doesn't last forever, at some point, it expires, you don't have it anymore. Exactly like data in a cache.
But the cache can be configured to retain data as long as you want. But, what about your patience? Still wanna be slow? Stressed about slowness?
Start caching your queries.
Start caching your web API call.
Start caching anything you need, just for the sake of getting it back at the speed of light.
That's the purpose of a cache. Retrieve your data instantly.
But retrieving data from the cache is just one side of the coin, what happens when you flip it?
Well, you need a mechanism to load, to feed your cache, and that's what you will discover in this presentation.
Best practices, patterns, and anti-patterns to load your cache, using Redis Stack as distributed cache and Spring Data as your Swiss army knife.
You will also learn how to distribute your cached data and get them updated automatically.
PITCH
Nowadays, retrieving data in real-time it's a must for any business application, and a caching platform is the only solution available.
Everyone knows what a cache is, but only a few know how to use it properly.
Even fewer know what a distributed cache can do.
Leveraging Spring Data and Redis Stack, I'll show how to properly implement the most common caching patterns and avoid anti-patterns.
DITA and Localization: Bringing the Best TogetherLavaCon
By Dominique Trouche, WhP
You have switched to DITA and your first localisation project is coming up. Ask your LSP whether it can manage DITA content. If the answer is, "DITA is simple; it’s just another XML", you might have to teach your LSP what DITA is and how to deal with it (in addition to training your staff).
At first glance, DITA adds complexity to localisation: extensive reuse, multiplication of files, numerous cross references, conditional text, and specialisation, among other things. It also provides features, such as UIcontrol, key term index, and the Open tool kit, which optimise localization.
As customers' content needs mature, DITA localisation paves the way for multilingual dynamic publishing and convergence of DITA outputs, with Marketing and Training.
In this presentation, you will learn how to piggy-back localisation onto your CMS, and how your content management teams will benefit from it, both for their morale and your bottom line.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
Generative AI Deep Dive: Advancing from Proof of Concept to ProductionAggregage
Join Maher Hanafi, VP of Engineering at Betterworks, in this new session where he'll share a practical framework to transform Gen AI prototypes into impactful products! He'll delve into the complexities of data collection and management, model selection and optimization, and ensuring security, scalability, and responsible use.
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Why You Should Replace Windows 11 with Nitrux Linux 3.5.0 for enhanced perfor...SOFTTECHHUB
The choice of an operating system plays a pivotal role in shaping our computing experience. For decades, Microsoft's Windows has dominated the market, offering a familiar and widely adopted platform for personal and professional use. However, as technological advancements continue to push the boundaries of innovation, alternative operating systems have emerged, challenging the status quo and offering users a fresh perspective on computing.
One such alternative that has garnered significant attention and acclaim is Nitrux Linux 3.5.0, a sleek, powerful, and user-friendly Linux distribution that promises to redefine the way we interact with our devices. With its focus on performance, security, and customization, Nitrux Linux presents a compelling case for those seeking to break free from the constraints of proprietary software and embrace the freedom and flexibility of open-source computing.
Observability Concepts EVERY Developer Should Know -- DeveloperWeek Europe.pdfPaige Cruz
Monitoring and observability aren’t traditionally found in software curriculums and many of us cobble this knowledge together from whatever vendor or ecosystem we were first introduced to and whatever is a part of your current company’s observability stack.
While the dev and ops silo continues to crumble….many organizations still relegate monitoring & observability as the purview of ops, infra and SRE teams. This is a mistake - achieving a highly observable system requires collaboration up and down the stack.
I, a former op, would like to extend an invitation to all application developers to join the observability party will share these foundational concepts to build on:
Maruthi Prithivirajan, Head of ASEAN & IN Solution Architecture, Neo4j
Get an inside look at the latest Neo4j innovations that enable relationship-driven intelligence at scale. Learn more about the newest cloud integrations and product enhancements that make Neo4j an essential choice for developers building apps with interconnected data and generative AI.
Communications Mining Series - Zero to Hero - Session 1DianaGray10
This session provides introduction to UiPath Communication Mining, importance and platform overview. You will acquire a good understand of the phases in Communication Mining as we go over the platform with you. Topics covered:
• Communication Mining Overview
• Why is it important?
• How can it help today’s business and the benefits
• Phases in Communication Mining
• Demo on Platform overview
• Q/A
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
A tale of scale & speed: How the US Navy is enabling software delivery from l...sonjaschweigert1
Rapid and secure feature delivery is a goal across every application team and every branch of the DoD. The Navy’s DevSecOps platform, Party Barge, has achieved:
- Reduction in onboarding time from 5 weeks to 1 day
- Improved developer experience and productivity through actionable findings and reduction of false positives
- Maintenance of superior security standards and inherent policy enforcement with Authorization to Operate (ATO)
Development teams can ship efficiently and ensure applications are cyber ready for Navy Authorizing Officials (AOs). In this webinar, Sigma Defense and Anchore will give attendees a look behind the scenes and demo secure pipeline automation and security artifacts that speed up application ATO and time to production.
We will cover:
- How to remove silos in DevSecOps
- How to build efficient development pipeline roles and component templates
- How to deliver security artifacts that matter for ATO’s (SBOMs, vulnerability reports, and policy evidence)
- How to streamline operations with automated policy checks on container images
GraphSummit Singapore | The Future of Agility: Supercharging Digital Transfor...Neo4j
Leonard Jayamohan, Partner & Generative AI Lead, Deloitte
This keynote will reveal how Deloitte leverages Neo4j’s graph power for groundbreaking digital twin solutions, achieving a staggering 100x performance boost. Discover the essential role knowledge graphs play in successful generative AI implementations. Plus, get an exclusive look at an innovative Neo4j + Generative AI solution Deloitte is developing in-house.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
3. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“BTW, the auth style I was trying to articulate in my
REST talk was WSSE Username Token, not OAuth. I
couldn't remember its name. :-) #dpc”
ramsey (Ben Ramsey)
3
9. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Wishing all #ibuildings #dpc attendees a great
evening and hope to see you all again tomorrow.”
BillStegers (Bill Stegers)
9
10. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Rating talks I attended on http://joind.in/event/view/
21 #dpc”
janl (Jan Lehnardt)
10
14. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Sitting in front of a window at the security session at
#dpc now very very aware of shoulder surfing”
relaxnow (relaxnow)
14
16. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“At the SPL session, the SPL Array wrapper is actually
faster than PHP's array functions. #DPC”
sandervdv (Sander van der Vliet)
16
20. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“"The back button wasn't ours, we've got to give it
back." -- @preinheimer on Ajax apps. #dpc”
janl (Jan Lehnardt)
20
21. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Ibuildings talk about the architecture of nu.nl was a
great ending; static files was the way to go, but
Varnish and ESI were new to me. #dpc”
lifeforms (Walter Hop)
21
27. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Experiencing severe slide envy from the
presentations I've seen so far. How can a speaker
with no graphical ability raise her game? #dpc”
lornajane (Lorna Mitchell)
27
29. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc can someone bring scott a new battery for his
mic? his is running out (@calevans, @ijansch?) (via
@preinheimer)”
janl (Jan Lehnardt)
29
30. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Due to 'issues' back home I am obliged leave the
#dpc early today :( and head back home. Hopefully I
can return tomorrow.”
BillStegers (Bill Stegers)
30
34. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“So to conclude my last tweet: everyone at #dpc,
please tweet as much about new, cool & innovating
features!”
juriansluiman (Jurian Sluiman)
34
35. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Anyone who thought UTF8 is boring hasn't heard
@jrf_nl talk. #dpc”
rickmb (Rick Buitenman)
35
37. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“PHP SDK for WIndows Azure has now full table
support! (except for batches) -
http://phpazure.codeplex.com #azure #php #dpc”
maartenballiauw (Maarten Balliauw)
37
39. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Looking forward to learning some new PHP at #dpc
today and shaking hands with all the PHP guru's in the
next 3 day!”
tomschenkenberg (Tom M.
Schenkenberg)
39
40. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Heading downtown with @a, @h, and @derickr.
#dpc”
s_bergmann (Sebastian Bergmann)
40
46. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Looking forward to @ianbarber talk about
http://bit.ly/4u78t in 30 mins #dpc”
relaxnow (relaxnow)
46
47. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc now even more speakers are joining in on the
audience of @jrf_nl this is becoming nearly
ridiculous :)”
fruitl00p (Robin Speekenbrink)
47
49. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“i'm really wondering why i'm not at #dpc today,
today would have been perfectly doable. #fail,
#mudbrain”
andriesss (Andries Seutens)
49
50. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Attending @jrf_nl 's UTF-8 talk at #dpc. Hoping to
get some tips I can pull into areas of #zf.”
weierophinney (weierophinney)
50
52. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“arrived safe and sound back in the hotel after dinner
with @maartenballiauw, @jkeppens, james and kevin
#dpc”
DragonBe (DragonBe)
52
53. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“OH re bug fixing: "it was doing what I told it to do,
not what I wanted it to do" "yeah just like a man"
#dpc”
johannacherry (johannacherry)
53
59. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“guys from #react, try to find us :) #dpc”
davidkuridza (david kuridza)
59
60. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Security Crash Course is nice, he shows all the major
current problems... I was hoping for something more
obscure though ;) #dpc”
relaxnow (relaxnow)
60
61. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“very interesting discussion with @RussMonkey about
social behavior on development forums #dpc”
weble (weble)
61
62. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Keynote speech by @a was awesome. Next up is
@preimheimer #dpc”
harrieverveer (harrieverveer)
62
64. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“listening to@DragonBe about SPL at #dpc . Really
need to use SPL more instead of reinventing the
wheel.”
rickmb (Rick Buitenman)
64
68. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Interesting alternative DB solutions for specific / high
performance niches, food for thought #dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
68
70. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“There's questions, there's too many questions, and
there's obnoxious. We're almost at the latter.. #dpc”
miljar (Tom Van Herreweghe)
70
71. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Getting ready to get to the RAI conference centre for
the last day of #dpc goodness”
felixdv (Felix De Vliegher)
71
73. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Now waiting for Eli's talk to begin. Just finished
lunch. They mysteriously put some peppers on all
sandwiches. Pity. #dpc”
jelrikvh (Jelrik van Hal)
73
75. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“ooohh, daring. @dustinwhittle relies on the wifi
#dpc”
skoop (Stefan)
75
76. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Off for another day at #dpc Torn between Making the
Most of HTTP or Trees in the Database, but I think the
latter wins out.”
rosstuck (rosstuck)
76
78. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“For those at the Dutch PHP Conference, don't forget
to give those speakers feedback on Joind.in!
http://joind.in/event/dpc09 #dpc”
enygma (enygma)
78
82. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Kind of claimed the DNS for the #dpc network via
www.opendns.com. Try http://timetable for the #dpc
time table!”
maartenballiauw (Maarten Balliauw)
82
95. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc promising title 'Keeping Web's Lean and Mean'
not really impressed with the content. was hoping for
best practice approach prog tips.”
bwaine (Ben Waine)
95
101. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“on to day2 of #dpc we're still going strong, lets see
what this day will bring (except for hangovers etc)”
fruitl00p (Robin Speekenbrink)
101
105. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“At the office I avoid mini-Mars, Twix, etc. At a
conference such as #DPC it's hard to say no. "It's like
being on holiday" as someone said.”
Conortje (Conor)
105
106. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“finally in Amsterdam. See you tomorrow! #dpc”
milesich (Martin Milesich)
106
120. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Listening to some couchDb talk #dpc”
Freeaqingme (Dolf Schimmel)
120
121. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Brilliant, Stefan talking about XSS attacks on bank
transfers via a paper form #dpc”
ianbarber (Ian Barber)
121
122. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Now in @janl's CouchDB talk. He mentioned my
REST talk, as well as @a's & @ScottMac's talks, as
being on the same "track" as his. :-) #dpc”
ramsey (Ben Ramsey)
122
123. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Sitting behind @DragonBe who is sitting in front of
@jrf_nl ... or is he sitting in front of me? #DPC”
Conortje (Conor)
123
130. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Opted out of the motorcycle trip to the #dpc. Now in
the car with DJ making our way through traffic to the
Rai for tutorial day.”
BillStegers (Bill Stegers)
130
131. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“"i couldn't find a picture of a greek man with a
goldfish on his head" @ianbarber at #dpc”
ijansch (Ivo Jansch)
131
133. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Even taking the traffic jams into account, I heavily
underestimated Dutch traffic today. Going to be later
than expected. #dpc”
felixdv (Felix De Vliegher)
133
135. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“http://twitpic.com/79va4 - #dpc drinks in coke
machine at foyer-level are past expiration date (31
mei 2009)”
jarown (jarown)
135
136. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“lot of macs around here at #dpc after this session a
short break. Than we announce the winners of the
php on windows competition.”
mahoekst (Matthijs Hoekstra)
136
137. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“In Amsterdam! At Stefan Esser's talk on security at
#dpc http://twitpic.com/73u09”
johannacherry (johannacherry)
137
139. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Taking risks... Installing add-ons for Visual Studio
while our demo is in 4 hours... #dpc”
maartenballiauw (Maarten Balliauw)
139
140. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Winding down after day 1 of #dpc.. ZF talk was nice.
Funny: our in-house app framework is eerily similar to
ZF even without exposure to it.”
lifeforms (Walter Hop)
140
142. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc idea for next year: have time and space for
'show and tell' .. no pre fab presentations, but use
cases and room for showing off :)”
fruitl00p (Robin Speekenbrink)
142
146. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Enjoying watching @weierophinney do a bit of ZF
project leading in between just teaching it at #dpc”
lornajane (Lorna Mitchell)
146
152. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“On our way to #dpc. ETA: just in time for the
opening keynote”
schmkr (Alwin Schoemaker)
152
153. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Arrived at #DPC ... a few minutes late. Coffee is luke
warm. Yuk! Don't they know how to make coffee?”
Conortje (Conor)
153
159. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Room for @a 's talk on distributed systems with php
crowded. Think it's full, now. #dpc”
jelrikvh (Jelrik van Hal)
159
160. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Excellent day at #dpc, followed by an outstanding
evening. Thanks to @weierophinney for insisting I
leave the bar at a sane time!”
akrabat (Rob Allen)
160
161. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“the keynote of @a was awesome, good humor and
clear overview. #dpc”
NickBelhomme (Nick Belhomme)
161
163. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“watching @eliw talk about code and release
management #dpc”
NickBelhomme (Nick Belhomme)
163
164. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Sitting at #dpc, reading about Yii framework. Saw
first couple releases, but it looks much better now.
Nothing amazing but very pragmatic.”
rosstuck (rosstuck)
164
166. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Aaahw... Sad bunny @ Paul Reinheimer #dpc”
zoefff (Sander van Leeuwen)
166
167. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“On my way home from the #dpc social, didn't expect
to be home by midnight. Had a great day thanks to all
the wonderful people!”
mvriel (Mike van Riel)
167
168. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc attendees please use parking p7/pcongress
today, there's a long trafficjam in front of the other
parking. Help spread the word.”
ijansch (Ivo Jansch)
168
169. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Presentation on dbus was great. Really need to try
playing with it soon. #dpc”
harrieverveer (harrieverveer)
169
170. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Wish I was at #dpc right now though!”
lukebarton (Luke Barton)
170
172. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Working on PHP SDK for Azure at a PHP conference...
What a coincidence! #azure #php #dpc”
maartenballiauw (Maarten Balliauw)
172
173. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“jlapoutreCouchDB definitely worth a close look, best
of all, it's an Apache Project
http://couchdb.apache.org/ (APL license) #dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
173
177. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“"how many of you have a twitter account (80%
hands raised) - I expected everybody" Dustin Whittle
#dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
177
182. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Keynote speech finished. Now in "Keeping web apps
lean and mean" by Robert Brouwer/Oracle. #dpc”
jelrikvh (Jelrik van Hal)
182
184. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Liked the code examples at silverlight presentation.
Nice peek into the basic concepts :) #dpc”
zoefff (Sander van Leeuwen)
184
185. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc attending postcouch,rabocouch, abn amro
couch uhm I mean couchDb...”
evertjes (Evert Harmeling)
185
190. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc arrived at the venue (same as last year)”
_md (Marcello Duarte)
190
191. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Were you in my caching presentation? Please leave
some feedback at http://joind.in/talk/view/579 #dpc”
akrabat (Rob Allen)
191
192. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Wishing I'd had more time for slide prep for #dpc -
but ready for my "Contribute!" talk after lunch. Come
heckle, one and all!”
weierophinney (weierophinney)
192
196. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc one member of @freshheads is in the
train,meets the other two in den bosch, hopefully...
Coffee where are you...?”
evertjes (Evert Harmeling)
196
199. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc Lorenzo just hit the interesting part: nested
interval modals... Nice!”
fruitl00p (Robin Speekenbrink)
199
200. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Enjoying @EliW's talk, he really knows how to retain
attention and bring good content #dpc”
mvriel (Mike van Riel)
200
201. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“sitting in @eliW talk on scalability of web apps. Very
interesting, good consepts. Exactly the level of detail
required. #dpc”
bwaine (Ben Waine)
201
203. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“OH in @jrf_nl's talk: "If we're all sitting in England
and we're all English but then @h shows up..." (re:
need for unicode support) #dpc”
ramsey (Ben Ramsey)
203
205. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc Ian Barber is a university lecturer in disguise.
Loving his talk on Document Classification.”
paulwander (paulwander)
205
206. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Oh by the way, anyone else thinks the coffee at #dpc
comes straight from the Amstel river?!”
Intrepidity (Bart Guliker)
206
210. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Hmm, I show up 11 mins late and the 45 min
keynote was over already... #dpc”
derickr (Derick Rethans)
210
211. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Wondering when the speaker at Advanced CouchDB
will pass out due to lack of oxygen!! (hyper hyper)
#dpc”
kingofphp (Jaap Hubert)
211
213. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Gerard's weblog over #dpc:
http://drm.tweakblogs.net”
jellejan (Jelle-Jan van Veelen)
213
214. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Almost at the #dpc venue again. Had a great evening
and now hoping for some interesting sessions.”
DLMax (Max Westen)
214
215. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Second video blog is online. Having a great time here
at #dpc ! http://vimeo.com/5123172”
bwaine (Ben Waine)
215
216. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Dustin Whittle kicking off with 'Building a platform
from open source at Yahoo!' #dpc”
Dynom (Mark van der Velden)
216
222. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Guess you need to be pragmatic for authenticated
access with REST. Sounds a bit like dogma rules in
cinema... #dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
222
225. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“New blog post: Being Frank: William Kilbride talks
#DPC and #DPTP http://bit.ly/ykhzz (via
@digitalarchives)”
FOTiE (FOTE a ULCC event)
225
226. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc hotel wifi is teh suck, email ports blocked, no
pings, connection drops all over the place.”
janl (Jan Lehnardt)
226
227. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Nice talk by @ianbarber explains how Marek van der
Jagt was traced back to being an alias for Arnon
Grunberg (document classification #dpc)”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
227
231. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“I never used xdebug or something similar before..
but now will definitely..Very useful.. ! THanks
@akrabat #dpc”
MissYeh (Kana Yeh)
231
237. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc huh what no tech details?”
ijansch (Ivo Jansch)
237
238. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Zend Framework security could have gone much
more in depth. Didn't leave the surface. Pity #dpc”
jelrikvh (Jelrik van Hal)
238
244. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Waiting in the foyer for the keynote to start #dpc”
DLMax (Max Westen)
244
245. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Let’s get ready to @raaaaaamsey! #dpc”
janl (Jan Lehnardt)
245
246. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Reguliere expressies, wie krijgt daar nou geen harde
pl@&&3r van? #dpc http://twitpic.com/7446h”
veug (veug)
246
247. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“I enjoyed the keynote, actually, but I don't think
europeans have the same nostalgic history with Digg.
#dpc”
rosstuck (rosstuck)
247
249. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Weer up & running bij #dpc. Een PHP conferentie
waarbij iedereen online is, is geen moment om de
DNS te slopen :P”
jellejan (Jelle-Jan van Veelen)
249
254. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“SPL talk was enlightening. Will be using it to optimize
webapps and OOP usage from now on :) #dpc”
Intrepidity (Bart Guliker)
254
259. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Lekkere dag, ondanks dat @schmkr en @wpsruijt bij
#dpc zitten. Zon schijnt, muziek staat hard en vette
Yunoo functionaliteit in wording.”
mdekuijper (Martijn de Kuijper)
259
261. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“In de trein thv Bussum, op weg naar de #dpc!”
veug (veug)
261
262. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Cryptic: "This tweet will show on the slides" #dpc
^_^”
Dynom (Mark van der Velden)
262
263. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Op weg naar #dpc. Eindelijk Eindhoven voorbij. Op
naar de volgende file. Verw. aankomsttijd: 10:53”
dannypeeters (Danny Peeters)
263
265. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Will cycle to #DPC today - no excuse to use public
transport. Anyway, I need - and miss - the exercise.”
Conortje (Conor)
265
271. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“now in rob's talk about caching. Thanks everyone for
the great feedback and twitter flood about my talk!
#dpc”
jrf_nl (Juliette)
271
272. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Very interesting hints in @eliw talk! Fluent great
speaker at #dpc”
NickBelhomme (Nick Belhomme)
272
274. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“"even if you use a single database server, write your
code as if you use master/slave" - (@eliw) #dpc”
skoop (Stefan)
274
275. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc Day 0 has begun. Follow all the twitter
goodness of #dpc at http://twitter.bivings.com/dpc/
#php”
dpcon (Dutch PHP Conference)
275
276. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“YQL "select * from internet"
http://developer.yahoo.com/yql/console/ #dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
276
278. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc is finally here... the caching for cache tutorial
seems promising... hoping for the best :)”
fruitl00p (Robin Speekenbrink)
278
286. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc: @weierophinney admitting the REST server of
ZF and evangelizing exposing APIs for your apps,
neat!”
relaxnow (relaxnow)
286
302. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Excellent session this morning from @EliW. Gave me
ideas for adjusting some of my code.. #dpc”
miljar (Tom Van Herreweghe)
302
303. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Just heard a really interesting presentation on
memcache, mogilefs and gearman by @a on #dpc”
mvmaasakkers (mvmaasakkers)
303
305. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc - general Q: Is it true that memcached is really
only more useful if one has clusters?”
MissYeh (Kana Yeh)
305
306. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“YQL evolved from Y!Pipes... so I was proven right,
finally! http://bit.ly/KPXX2 #dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
306
320. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc has happy hour started yet? The first few
"tasted for more"* literal anglo-dutch... smaakt dus
naar meer”
fruitl00p (Robin Speekenbrink)
320
321. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Matthew Weier O'Phinney's Contribute! talk starts.
Maybe I get motivated to contribute some #zf
components relaxing on my todo list. #dpc”
raphaelstolt (Raphael Stolt)
321
323. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“The djanga products are awesome : gearman &
memcached. Thanks to @a for the excellent
presentation at #dpc”
ThijsFeryn (Thijs Feryn)
323
324. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“And the winner of most words per minute during a
#dpc talk is..... @janl ! (Great talk BTW)”
rickmb (Rick Buitenman)
324
326. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Not sure I like that, maybe acceptable if data loss is
not very important (best effort) or conflicts seldom
happen? CouchDB #dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
326
328. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Interesting facts: 14 out of to 20 most used
languages don't use latin script #utf8 #dpc”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
328
338. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Cool that @preinheimers is using a lot of examples
from the adult web industry they do have all the easy
and hard problems first #dpc”
bramveen (Bram Veenhof)
338
340. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Looks like I WILL get a chance to go to the "php on
embedded devices" session as it was moved to 12:00.
#dpc”
jkeppens (Jeroen Keppens)
340
341. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“I can't sleep after playing around with couchDB. If
my idea works out, this is going to be mind blowing
for #IDG! Thanks @janl! #dpc”
svdgraaf (Sander van de Graaf)
341
342. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“stuffing some richard cheese on my ipod for a easy
listening ride to #dpc”
MichielRoding (Michiel Roding)
342
346. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Just arrived at AMS for the annual #dpc. Now
heading to the hotel before re-exploring this awesome
city, breakfast & hunting new sneakers.”
raphaelstolt (Raphael Stolt)
346
347. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“You can already start voting for our session at
#dpc :-) http://joind.in/590”
maartenballiauw (Maarten Balliauw)
347
352. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Seems @h is really pimping Zend Server CE, Zend
Optimizer+, & Zend Data Cache in his session to talk
me into giving him Zend Studio. #dpc”
EliW (EliW)
352
356. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“There's a lot of Twitter love for @ramsey's "Grokking
the REST Architectural Style" presentation at #dpc,
check it out at http://is.gd/ZNFv”
AnthonySterling (Anthony Sterling)
356
358. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“In @a's presentation on "all the little pieces" of
distributed #php applications. #dpc”
s_bergmann (Sebastian Bergmann)
358
360. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Ordering some extra beers from publicly available
silverlight demo. Cheers! #dpc”
zoefff (Sander van Leeuwen)
360
361. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Waiting for the train, attending #dpc today!”
ivarvermeulen (Ivar Vermeulen)
361
362. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc tomorrow 6.50 the train... hope the coffee is
better then it was today. Quote: Coffee is luke warm.
Don't they know how to make coffee?”
evertjes (Evert Harmeling)
362
372. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc looking forward to day 2”
paulwander (paulwander)
372
373. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Sorry for running out of time and skipping slides
#dpc! Up now at http://tr.im/ogZ8. Please rate the
talk at http://joind.in/talk/view/589.”
a (Andrei Zmievski)
373
375. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Redis's developer is @antirez and he hangs out and
answers questions a lot on Hacker News. Nice guy!
(via @pierrefar) #dpc”
mathieuk (Mathieu Kooiman)
375
376. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Now in @eliw 's talk on code/release management.
#dpc”
jelrikvh (Jelrik van Hal)
376
379. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Heading out to #dpc having a huge headache,
probably due to the short amount of sleep ;)”
svdgraaf (Sander van de Graaf)
379
383. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Javascript talk wasn't that good.. I was hoping he
would go a little deeper into the matter #dpc”
Intrepidity (Bart Guliker)
383
385. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“99% of the people in @eliw's scalability talk use
mysql #dpc”
skoop (Stefan)
385
386. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“"with load isolation you can target where you need
improvements" .. Really enjoying @EliW's talk #dpc”
mathieuk (Mathieu Kooiman)
386
388. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc keynote about to start. Go Cal!! Figured out my
schedule for today.”
bramveen (Bram Veenhof)
388
389. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Uploaded your #dpc slides to SlideShare? Add them
to the http://tinyurl.com/dpc09slides group!”
s_bergmann (Sebastian Bergmann)
389
390. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc zo nu echt officiee dronken .. tot zo . . .”
the_jinx (Anne Jan Brouwer)
390
396. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc is slowly filling up with people, getting a coffee
and noticing the night before it seems ;-)”
Dynom (Mark van der Velden)
396
398. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Ready for the 2nd conference day, it will be as great
as yesterday #dpc”
jserpieters (Jeroen Serpieters)
398
399. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Приехал с Dutch PHP Conference 2009 #dpc day 2.
Интересные доклады от ведущих пэхапистов мира.
Рад поставить г... http://plurk.com/p/10fs9u”
M4rkK1d (M4rkK1d)
399
401. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“It's still early, only had 2 coffee, trying to stay
awake... Need more caffeine... :P #dpc”
svdgraaf (Sander van de Graaf)
401
420. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Oh no, the gf of my #dpc buddy is in hospital... :
( Hope they're okay”
lifeforms (Walter Hop)
420
421. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Having Indonesian dinner at Djago with lots of @'s.
#dpc”
derickr (Derick Rethans)
421
422. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Alternative databases by @scottmac is about to start.
#dpc”
rickmb (Rick Buitenman)
422
423. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Arrived in Amsterdam (sleepy), trying to figure out
the best tram/bus to #dpc tomorrow.”
hvdklauw (Harro van der Klauw)
423
427. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Andrei's @a talk "all the little pieces" at #dpc is fully
packed! more chairs needed!”
NickBelhomme (Nick Belhomme)
427
434. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“#dpc LOL Lorenzo is now really baffling me! Funny
stuff Last day, last session and then we get this! Nice!
i just went cross eyed!”
fruitl00p (Robin Speekenbrink)
434
435. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Keynote #dpc lacked some depth, slightly
disappointed just like the rest of the audience
concluding from lack of Q&A”
jlapoutre (Johannes la Poutre)
435
438. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“Hiding out in the upstairs lounge at #dpc, looking at
an interesting #zf bug, and talking with great
attendees.”
weierophinney (weierophinney)
438
439. Dutch PHP Conference 2009
“I just love @preinheimer's pimp suit! #dpc”
chwenz (chwenz)
439