On 09/12/2016 04:26 PM, Stefan Eissing wrote:
> Unfortunately, I will not be able to make it to Seville. If I can
> help in regard to presenting what is new in Apache HTTP/2 by
> answering questions or creating slides, pls let me know.
Sure I will... Basically I need to add what is new since last
Unfortunately, I will not be able to make it to Seville. If I can help in
regard to presenting what is new in Apache HTTP/2 by answering questions or
creating slides, pls let me know.
Cheers, Stefan
> Am 12.09.2016 um 14:28 schrieb jean-frederic clere :
>
> On 08/30/2016
On Sep 12, 2016 7:28 AM, "jean-frederic clere" wrote:
>
> On 08/30/2016 03:34 PM, Rich Bowen wrote:
> > As you know, the CFP for ApacheCon closes in less than 2 weeks. It would
> > be awesome if we could pull together an httpd track, highlighting that
> > httpd is still the
On 08/30/2016 03:34 PM, Rich Bowen wrote:
> As you know, the CFP for ApacheCon closes in less than 2 weeks. It would
> be awesome if we could pull together an httpd track, highlighting that
> httpd is still the flagship of the ASF, and is still exciting, relevant,
> and alive. The last few
On Tue, Aug 30, 2016 at 8:34 AM, Rich Bowen wrote:
>
> To this end, we've started to put together a proposed list of talks that
> we'd like to see people submit, in the hopes that we end up with 2 days
> - a user track, and a developer track - of httpd content.
>
>
Last chance. CFP closes tonight.
On Sep 6, 2016 09:59, "Luca Toscano" wrote:
>
>
> 2016-08-30 15:34 GMT+02:00 Rich Bowen :
>
>> As you know, the CFP for ApacheCon closes in less than 2 weeks. It would
>> be awesome if we could pull together an httpd
2016-08-30 15:34 GMT+02:00 Rich Bowen :
> As you know, the CFP for ApacheCon closes in less than 2 weeks. It would
> be awesome if we could pull together an httpd track, highlighting that
> httpd is still the flagship of the ASF, and is still exciting, relevant,
> and alive.
As you know, the CFP for ApacheCon closes in less than 2 weeks. It would
be awesome if we could pull together an httpd track, highlighting that
httpd is still the flagship of the ASF, and is still exciting, relevant,
and alive. The last few ApacheCons, we haven't managed to muster a
track, or even