Red Hat brings JUDCon to India

VARINDIA- INDIA'S FRONTLINE IT MAGAZINE

Red Hat has announced Asia Pacific's first JBoss Users and Developers Conference (JUDCon) is to be held Jan. 24-25, 2012 at the NIMHANS Convention Center in Bangalore, India. Red Hat has currently received over 700 registrations for the event and expects this number to exceed 800.

JUDCon 2012: India, a conference "by developers, for developers," will feature appearances and discussions by top open source developers from around the world, including renowned developers from India. Presentations will touch on a number of different topics, including mobile, cloud, and HTML5. There will also be demonstrations and discussions about several JBoss Community projects, including JBoss Application Server 7, as well as discussions about how these projects are incorporated into the enterprise-ready JBoss Enterprise Middleware.

"Many of the best open source developers are based in India and the surrounding regions. And we're thrilled to be able to bring one of the world's premier developer conferences directly to them. This is a fantastic opportunity for these developers to congregate, engage in lively discussions, and find out about the latest goings-on with the JBoss Community and the open source community in general," said Dr. Mark Little, Senior Director of Engineering, Middleware Business, Red Hat.

"The development community in India is expanding at an amazing rate and we're looking forward to giving that community a unique, hands-on opportunity to fully experience what's going on with open source middleware. I'm pleased that India was selected to host Asia Pacific's first JUDCon and I'm confident that India's software developers will benefit tremendously from the event," said Anuj Kumar, GM, India sub-continent, Red Hat.


For More Details See


www.varindia.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

N Chandrasekaran appointed chairman of Tata Sons

DoT Secretary hints at making Draft NTP 2018 available in public domain soon

Visa buys NFT based CryptoPunk and paid $150,000 in Etherium