OSCON '07 Wrapup
by Cal Evans (editor) |
1 comment | Saturday, July 28, 2007
The echoes from the last OSCON parties haven’t even stopped reverberating though the halls as the next convention moves in. The vendors are all long gone and the attendees are all shoved in tiny seats on their express flight back to the real world. Let’s take a quick look over our shoulder at the party that was OSCON ‘07 before answering the call of the road and heading off to the next event.
P-A-R-T-Y at OSCON!
by Cal Evans (editor) |
0 comments | Monday, July 16, 2007
Zend and MySQL are getting together to throw a party at OSCON and you are invited! Come join us at the Doubletree Hotel (5 minute walk from the convention center)for drinks and snacks.
Program Unveiled and Registration Opens for the 2007 O'Reilly Open Source Convention
by Cal Evans (editor) |
1 comment | Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Registration is now open for OSCON, the O’Reilly Open Source Convention. This year’s program will examine how open technologies are making breakthroughs in the mainstream IT community, and delve into the advances on the open source horizon.
OSCON Registration Now Open
by Cal Evans (editor) |
0 comments | Friday, April 13, 2007
Elizabeth Naramore recently noted over at php|arc that OSCON’s registration is now open. This year, as in years past, OSCON will be held in Portland, OR between July 23rd and July 27th.
30 Minutes With Wez Furlong
by Cal Evans (editor) |
0 comments | Friday, November 3, 2006
This past year at OSCON I interviewed a lot of people, I mean a lot. I’ve still got more to come after this one. The fun part about the whole OSCON interview series was that almost one half of the interviews I did worked at OmniTI. Here now is my interview with Wez Furlong.
30 Minutes with Jeremy Johnstone
by Cal Evans (editor) |
1 comment | Thursday, October 19, 2006
I’ll have to admit that when I sat down to interview Jeremy Johnstone at OSCON I didn’t know who he was or anything about him. Most of the other interviews I at least knew who they were and what they had done with/for PHP. I had nothing on Jeremy, all I knew was that he was speaking at OSCON and he worked at Yahoo. As it turns out, it was a very interesting interview. Not for the normal reasons though. If you want more, you’ll have to come inside and read the interview.
30 Minutes with Theo Schlossnagle
by Cal Evans (editor) |
3 comments | Monday, September 25, 2006
This is another in a series of interviews I’ve been conducting as I travel to different conferences. Most of the people I get the chance to interview are directly involved with PHP in some way. This interview is a bit different. Theo Schlossnagle is the founder of OmniTI, one of the premier PHP consulting companies in the world. OmniTI consults with companies all around the globe on issues ranging from architecture to security.
Sometimes It's Not the Post, It's the Conversation.
by Cal Evans (editor) |
5 comments | Sunday, August 13, 2006
Theo Schlossnagle presented “Why PHP Sucks” at OSCON, Chris Shiflett blogged it recently, everybody ponied up an opinion.
An Interview With George Schlossnagle
by Cal Evans (editor) |
4 comments | Thursday, August 10, 2006
George Schlossnagle’s un-official PHP Trading card describes him like this:
George Schlossnagle builds high performance email systems at OmniTI, Inc. He’s also a frequent contributor to PHP and has years of hands-on experience in building large-scale PHP sites and applications.At OSCON06, I sat down and talked to him about email, PHP and performance. Read on to find out what he had to say.
30 Minutes with Adam Trachtenberg
by Cal Evans (editor) |
3 comments | Monday, August 7, 2006
This is another installment in the series of interviews I conducted at OSCON 2006. This one is with Adam Trachtenberg of ebay’s Web Services Department. It covers a variety of topics including his introduction into PHP, how he came to work at ebay, upgrading to PHP 5 and some forward lookng topics. Adam is the senior manager of Platform Evangelism at eBay, where he preaches the gospel of the eBay platform to developers and businessmen around the globe. Click the magic [ more ] button to be transported to Portland Oregon for 30 minutes with Adam Tracthenberg.
