Greetings,

Has the time been selected? I'm sorry if I missed it. Could someone please repost it? If not, how about Monday or Thursday (both days after 5 pm would work for me). By the way, there is another conference concurrently at San Francisco - Oreilly's Where 2.0, which is about location-enabled technologies (gps, google maps, mobiles, etc). They have a component, which is open to the public. It's the Where Fair, on Wednesday 29th from 7:30pm to 10:00pm. I don't think you have to register or anything - this part is open to the public.
Here's the URL and some info:

=======================================
General Conference Info
----------------------------------------------------------
http://conferences.oreillynet.com/where/
Location-aware technologies combined with mapping and other data are poised to create a whole new class of web apps and services. Maps are becoming an interface, helping us to visualize and access a variety of data. Location is fertile ground for hackers and researchers who mash up Google Maps with Craigslist or plug restaurant info into dashboard navigation. Call centers, insurance agencies, transportation companies, and retailers are finding unconventional internal uses for location technologies too.

But where is location-based technology leading us in the larger sense? And where's the business model beef? The first Where 2.0 Conference brings together the people <http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/39/speakers.html>, projects <http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/where2005/view/e_sess/7098>, and issues <http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/39/program.html> leading the charge into this technological frontier. Join us to debate and discuss what's viable now, and what's lurking just below the radar.

===============================
The Where Fair
-----------------------------------------------
http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/where2005/view/e_sess/7098
The Where Fair is a science fair-style event that gives participants a first-hand look at just a few of the intriguing location-aware technologies lurking just below the radar. Fair-goers can discuss the ideas behind the demos with the creators, and learn how these unconventional new technologies can be adapted into existing business strategies. Where Fair projects are being selected from research, academia, and yet-to-be-discovered entrepreneurs. The Where Fair complements the conference's exhibit hall, which will showcase state-of-the-art systems, apps, and services in the location space.


Cheers
Dmitry

Tom wrote:

+1 and just looked at the schedule:

Tuesday evening is not good as it overlaps with the open JCP evening which goes on till 9pm.

Monday and Wednesday are some receptions / bashes (which I personally wouldn't mind skipping), and Thursday seems open, so perhaps Thursday?


PS: I have a Pavilion pass for Monday, so if you still need help at the Apache booth for velocity/harmony that day, let me know.

Geir Magnusson Jr. wrote:

Not yet, but we still should certainly do it.

As a default, the Thirsty Bear is a great venue because of the "architectural discussion support products" created there on site and made available for purchase :)

What times are good for people?


On Jun 21, 2005, at 7:54 AM, Joel Neely wrote:

There was some talk earlier about a Harmony conversation outside the
official J1 program.
Has anything firmed up?

-jn-

On 6/10/05, Geir Magnusson Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

All,

The ASF will have a booth at JavaOne this year...






Reply via email to