JavaOne

JavaOne was an annual conference first organized in 1996 by Sun Microsystems to discuss Java technologies, primarily among Java developers. It was held in San Francisco, California, typically running from a Monday to Thursday in September or October. Technical sessions and Birds of a Feather (BOF) sessions on a variety of Java-related topics were held throughout the week.

Attendees at the 2004 JavaOne conference described their vision of the future of Java on a whiteboard.

In 1999, the conference played host to an event called the Hackathon, a challenge set by John Gage. Attendees were to write a program in Java for the new Palm V using the infrared port to communicate with other Palm users and register the device on the Internet.

During the 2008 conference, 70 Moscone Center staff members and three attendees were sickened by an outbreak of norovirus.[1]

After the acquisition of Sun by Oracle Corporation in 2010, the conference was held concurrently with Oracle OpenWorld. The conference was moved from Moscone Center to hotels on nearby Mason Street. In some years, one block of Mason was closed and covered with a tent, which formed part of the conference venue.

In April 2018, Oracle announced that the JavaOne conference would be discontinued, in favor of a more general programming conference called Oracle Code One.[2]

Show device

Java ring

Several of the conferences highlighted a hardware device, typically made available to attendees before it is sold to the general public, or at a steep discount:

  • 1998: Java ring
  • 1999: Palm V[3]
  • 2002: Sharp Zaurus[4]
  • 2004: Homepod, a wireless MP3 device from Gloolabs[5]
  • 2006: SavaJe Jasper S20 phone
  • 2007: RS Media programmable robot
  • 2008: Sentilla Perk Kit, Pulse Smartpen, Sony Ericsson K850i
  • 2009: HTC Diamond with JavaFX pre-installed

CommunityOne

From 2007 to 2009, an associated one-day event, CommunityOne, was held, for the broader free and open-source developer community.

In 2009, CommunityOne expanded to New York City (CommunityOne East, March 18–19) and to Oslo, Norway (CommunityOne North, April 15). The third annual CommunityOne in San Francisco took place from June 1–3, 2009, at Moscone Center.

Tracks included:

  • Cloud Platforms – Development and deployment in the cloud
  • Social and Collaborative Platforms – Social networks and Web 2.0 trends
  • RIAs and Scripting – Rich Internet Applications, scripting and tools
  • Web Platforms – Dynamic languages, databases, and Web servers
  • Server-side Platforms – SOA, tools, application servers, and databases
  • Mobile Development – Mobile platforms, devices, tools and application development
  • Operating Systems and Infrastructure – Performance, virtualization, and native development
  • Free and Open – Open-source projects, business models, and trends

CommunityOne was discontinued after the acquisition of Sun by Oracle.

gollark: <@175505406800560141> * potatos/potatOS/POTATos/PotatOS, not potat os
gollark: Yes, I saw.
gollark: Test.
gollark: Discord chat on what?
gollark: You should use the glorious code of this fork of ale's krist miner: https://pastebin.com/DKriPmPe

See also

References

  1. Gavin Clarke (May 10, 2008). "Sick of JavaOne? - You will be: Suspected Norovirus stalks halls". The Register.
  2. Stephen Chin (2018-04-19). "JavaOne Event Expands with More Tracks, Languages and Communities – and New Name". Oracle Developers Blog. Retrieved 2018-05-26. The JavaOne conference is expanding to create a new, bigger event ... We’re calling the new event Oracle Code One
  3. Aviram, Mariva H. (August 1, 1999). "JavaOne's Palm-sized winner". JavaWorld. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  4. JavaOne - Day3 - Wireless World
  5. "And the JavaOne 2004 "Official Show Device" is..." Archived from the original on 2017-08-07. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
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