JVM Language Summit — Agenda

The Summit will take place from July 29 to 31, 2013. Our three days will be divided as follows (talks are in yellow and workshops are in green).

Monday Tuesday Wednesday
8:30 Breakfast Breakfast Breakfast
8:45
9:00 Intro and Welcome Caspole:
Sumatra
Breslav:
Kotlin Reflection
9:15
9:30 Steele:
Keynote
9:45 Wuerthinger:
GPU Offload
Wimmer:
One VM to Rule Them All
10:00
10:15
10:30 Break Break Break
10:45
11:00 Phillips:
Scala War Stories
Rose:
Data Parallel
Cook:
Partial Evaluation
11:15
11:30
11:45 Phillips:
Scala Tactics,
Chan:
Metrics
Caspole & Rose:
Sumatra,
Cook:
Partial Evaluation
Breslav:
Kannotator,
Wimmer:
Ruby on Truffle
12:00
12:15
12:30
12:45 Lunch Lunch Lunch
13:00
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00 Szegedi:
Fitting Nashorn on JVM
Manson:
JVM at Google
Shipilev:
JVM Benchmarking
14:15
14:30
14:45 Vitek:
R in Java
Click:
Big Data
Kuksenko:
Lambda Performance
15:00
15:15
15:30 Break Break Break
15:45
16:00 Sciampacone:
Packed Objects in Java
Heidinga:
Bridge Methods
Lagergren:
Nashorn War Stories
16:15
16:30
16:45 Nutter:
Java Native Runtime
Smith:
Default Methods
Forax:
JSR 292 on Android
17:00
17:15
17:30 Rose:
Indy Support Group
Lightning Talks
17:45
18:00 Dinner
18:15
18:30
18:45

We expect all the talks to be deeply technical, given by designers and implementors to designers and implementors. We all speak Code here!

The talks, we hope and expect, will inform the audience, in detail, about the state of the art of language design and implementation on the JVM, and the present and future capabilities of the JVM itself. (Some will do so indirectly by discussing non-JVM technologies.) Beyond that, these talks will inspire us to work together with JVM-based technologies to build the next great software systems.

Notes on the Agenda

  • Talks will run in a single track, 45 minutes each (including questions).
  • Workshop sessions will run for 60 minutes, with two or more sessions in parallel. Workshops are scheduled so that informal discussions can carry on into the subsequent time slot.
  • As last year, light breakfast and lunch are served on site.
  • Two or three breakout rooms are available for workshops, quiet conversation, and ad hoc consultations.
Vitruvian Duke

For Speakers

The conference will be recorded professionally and posted on the internet. We encourage you to allow your talk (including audio and slides) to be recorded and posted. A speaker release form will be provided before the conference; if you do not wish your talk to be recorded, simply do not complete the release form. If you release our use of your written materials, we will put your talk’s PDF (or other presentation file) on the conference wiki, so that the other conference participants, and the rest of the world, can see it there.

Please send PDFs of your slides in advance to Brian Goetz, so that we can have them ready to project from our laptop. But, if you plan to present from your own machine, please make sure it can talk to a VGA connector. (Macs generally require an adapter to do this.) We will also supply a clip-on microphone.