Jerry Gulla
RWX / CDX
Fort Lauderdale · December 3 - 6, 2013
Senior Development Manager at Sonos
Jerry Gulla a senior development manager at Sonos, helping to fulfill their mission to “fill every home with music.” Previously we was the Architect for SaveLocal.com from Constant Contact - Massachusetts‘ largest SaaS company. He fell in love with hacking both hardware and software more than 20 years ago after getting his first computer, a TRS-80 Model I. He’s worked at companies large and small, including Sun/Javasoft, as well as several small startups. Jerry is passionate about technology and has developed software for everything from the simulator for the B-2 stealth bomber all the way to HTML5 applications for modern smartphones.
His latest interests brings him into the mobile web as well as the world of alternative languages on the JVM, where he’s leveraging the power of dynamic languages and modern frameworks to rapidly deliver new applications for both mobile devices and the desktop.
Presentations
Using Vagrant
Vagrant is “virtualized development made easy.” If you’re looking to lower development setup time, minimize manual configuration and setup and eliminate the “it works on my machine” excuse, Vagrant is for you.
Take control of your logs with Greylog2!
Has this ever happened to you? You hear about some problem on your production system, and have to troll though multiple logs on multiple machines to figure out what's going on? Well, no more. With Greylog2, you can “Manage your logs in the dark and have lasers going and make it look like you're from space.” Greylog2 is a powerful, open source solution that will help you avoid that painful search for events in your logs.
Stretch your site's usefulness with Elastic Search
Have you ever wanted (or needed!) to add search to your web site or application but thought it was too hard hard because you wanted things like scalability, fault tolerance and real-time search? Elastic Search may be just the ticket for you. It's Open Source, fast, scalable and easy to set up. Oh, and it's “cool, bonsai cool.”