Rocky Mountain Software Symposium - November 10 - 12, 2006 - No Fluff Just Stuff

Brian Goetz

Rocky Mountain Software Symposium

Denver · November 10 - 12, 2006

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Brian Goetz

Author of Java Concurrency in Practice

Brian Goetz has been a professional software developer for 20 years. He is the author of over 75 articles on software development, and his book, Java Concurrency In Practice, was published in May 2006 by Addison-Wesley. He serves on the JCP Expert Groups for JSRs 166 (concurrency utilities), 107 (caching), and 305 (annotations for safety analysis). He is a frequent presenter at JavaOne, OOPSLA, JavaPolis, SDWest, and the No Fluff Just Stuff Software Symposium Tour. Brian is a Sr. Staff Engineer at Sun Microsystems.

Presentations

Java Performance Myths

Performance myths about the Java platform abound, from the general “Java is slow”, to the more specific “reflection is slow”, “allocation is slow”, “synchronization is slow”, “garbage collection is slow”, etc. Many of these myths have their root in fact (in JDK 1.0, everything was slow); today, not only are many of these statements not true, but Java performance has surpassed that of C in many areas, such as memory management.

Squashing bugs with FindBugs

Does your program have bugs, despite unit tests, integration tests, and code reviews? You bet. Are you using static analysis as part of your QA process? If not, you're probably missing out on some bugs that can be caught before they bite your customers.

The Java Memory Model

What's the worst thing that can happen when you fail to synchronize in a concurrent Java program? Its probably worse than you think – modern shared-memory processors can do some pretty weird things when left to their own devices.

Introduction to Java threads

The Java language included support for threads and concurrency from day 1, but writing correct multithreaded programs is not easy. This session will cover the how and why of using threads in Java.

Structuring concurrent applications in JDK 5.0

JDK 5.0 is a huge step forward in developing concurrent Java classes and applications, providing a rich set of high-level concurrency building blocks.