wroc_love.rb

March 11-13th 2016
Wrocław Poland

We want to confront ideas

The main goal of the conference is very clear. We want to help Ruby professionals become better at what they do. Wroc_love.rb serves best to people who are already fluent with Ruby. The ideas presented at our conference are very advanced. They are meant to inspire the way we write code, the way we help our clients and users. It’s not uncommon for us to present you ideas that come from the Java and .NET worlds, we believe that their ideas can have a great influence on our community. There are good reasons, why our conference is called “the best Java conference in the Ruby world”.

Our goal is to ensure a good environment to learn and discuss. We love confronting ideas, even when it’s uncomfortable to the Ruby status-quo. We love experimenting with new formats of talks and discussions, like fights, fishbowls and crowd-moderated discussion panels. Everything that can inspire the Ruby programmers is more than welcome at our conference. Let us know, what you’d be interested in experimenting with!

Speakers

Elia Schito

Ruby hacker and one of the main Opal.rb contributors

Barbara Fusińska

Barbara is a software developer and mentor to inspiring developers. Working with a range of different companies, Barbara gained experience with team dynamics. This has lead to her strong belief in shaping a proper working environment. She trusts this allows high-functional teams to reach their full qualities. Alongside building passionate teams, Barbara enjoys collaborating around architectures.

Sebastian Sogamoso

Software developer at Ride

Wojciech Ziniewicz

Wojtek is a generalist and environment-oriented software developer. His team works on development of (probably) largest non-robotics, open source project implemented in ROS called Liquid Galaxy, which his company develops on behalf of Google.

Sander van der Burg

Sander van der Burg is a software engineer and researcher specialized in software deployment and configuration management. He is a contributor to the NixOS project since 2007 and the author of Disnix: a toolset for deploying service-oriented systems. In addition to deployment, he has a broad interest in anything software engineering related, such as programming languages, distributed systems and testing.

Kacper Walanus

Kacper graduated in philosophy. For him programming was a hobby, which turned out to be what he loves most. Works as a developer for six years now, currently for Oxford Valuation Partners. He likes teaching and has experience in passing knowledge. Functional programming, open source and SOLID principles fan.

Peter Bhat Harkins

Peter Bhat Harkins is a senior software developer at DevMynd in Chicago, IL. As a developer and contractor he has built and maintained dozens of websites, experimenting all the way. He tweets as @pushcx and blogs at https://valent.io.

Robert Pankowecki

Robert is an experienced Ruby developer who had sucessfully deployed variety of Rails applications. He worked on distributed applications using EventMachine and ZeromMQ. Loves using open-source solutions on daily basis and contributed to number of them. His priority is to deliver applications meeting bussines requirements that are profoundly well tested.

Andrzej Krzywda

Chess player. Guru of Rails Refactoring. Writer and Ruby teacher at the University of Wrocław.

Oskar Szrajer

Oskar is a Ruby developer and martial arts expert from Gdynia, Poland. Owner of Gotar company and co-Owner of Ragnarson. Freelancer. Creator of TRUG. He is Aikido & Ju-jutsu instructor, having his own dojo in Gdynia. Currently sandan (3rd dan) in Aikikai Aikido & shodan (1st dan) in Hakko den shin Ryu Ju-Jutsu.

Agenda

  • 10:00
  • 10:15
  • 10:30
  • 10:45
  • 11:00
  • 11:15
  • 11:30
  • 11:45
  • 12:00
  • 12:15
  • 12:30
  • 12:45
  • 13:00
  • 13:15
  • 13:30
  • 13:45
  • 14:00
  • 14:15
  • 14:30
  • 14:45
  • 15:00
  • 15:15
  • 15:30
  • 15:45
  • 16:00
  • 16:15
  • 16:30
  • 16:45
  • 17:00
  • 17:15
  • 17:30
  • 17:45
  • 18:00
  • 18:15
  • 18:30
  • 18:45
  • 19:00
  • 19:15
  • 19:30
  • 19:45
  • 20:00
  • 20:15
  • 20:30
  • 20:45
  • 21:00
  • 21:15
  • 21:30
  • 21:45
  • 22:00
  • 22:15
  • 22:30
  • 22:45
  • 23:00
  • 23:15
  • 23:30
  • Friday
    • 11:00 React/Redux/Rails workshops
    • 17:00 From Rails legacy to DDD - Andrzej Krzywda
    • 18:00 Opal.rb - Elia Schito
    • 19:00 Lightning talks
    • 21:00 Party at Złoty Pies
  • Saturday
    • 11:00 The R language - Barbara Fusińska
    • 12:00 The Saga Pattern - Robert Pankowecki
    • 13:00 Lunch time
    • 14:30 Ruby and code editors - panel/fight
    • 16:00 The NixOS project and deploying systems declaratively - Sander van der Burg
    • 17:00 ROS - ecosystem for things - Wojciech Ziniewicz
    • 18:00 Lightning talks
    • 21:00 Party at Złoty Pies
  • Sunday
    • 11:00 1 year with ROM on production - Oskar Szrajer
    • 12:00 Consumer Driven Contracts in Ruby on Rails - Kacper Walanus
    • 13:00 Lunch time
    • 14:30 Panel - Rails deployment
    • 16:00 Lessons of Liskov - Peter Bhat Harkins
    • 17:00 When making money becomes a headache. Dealing with payments. - Sebastian Sogamoso
    • 18:00 Lightning talks
    • 21:00 Party at Bierhalle

Supporters

Arkency Anixe Daftcode Scrivito Selleo Tooploox Appstery Ragnarson Monterail iRonin Ride JetBrains NetGuru

Partners

University of Wrocław Pragmatic Programmer

Twitter

Inspiration and Safety

Conferences are not only about listening. Most of the value comes from talking to each other. Our mission is to create an inspiring, thoughtful, creative and safe space to everyone involved. The venue is known to be of good quality - it’s a University of Wroclaw building. It has many ways to ensure safety of all the people inside like monitoring and special security people. It is needless to say that this conference is a place for good people, only. Good people respect each other, are nice to each other, smile, and make everyone (without exceptions) feel comfortable.

We have special phone number, if you need any help, call us:

Support phone number: +48 518 137 213

Conference Code of Conduct

All attendees, speakers, sponsors and volunteers at our conference are required to agree with the following code of conduct. Organisers will enforce this code throughout the event. We are expecting cooperation from all participants to help ensuring a safe environment for everybody.

Need Help? As part of our goal, we’re dedicated to react to all situations that we’ll be notified, ideally directly to us.

There will be a special team of volunteers who will be visible during the conference (If you want to join the team, please let us know). Student volunteers are here to help find your way around and resolve any problem.

Quick Version

Our conference is dedicated to providing a harassment-free conference experience for everyone, regardless of gender, age, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, or religion (or lack thereof). We do not tolerate harassment of conference participants in any form. Sexual language and imagery is not appropriate for any conference venue, including talks, workshops, parties, Twitter and other online media. Conference participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled from the conference without a refund at the discretion of the conference organisers.

The Less Quick Version

Harassment includes offensive verbal comments related to gender, age, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, religion, sexual images in public spaces, deliberate intimidation, stalking, following, harassing photography or recording, sustained disruption of talks or other events, inappropriate physical contact, and unwelcome sexual attention. Participants asked to stop any harassing behavior are expected to comply immediately.

Sponsors are also subject to the anti-harassment policy. In particular, sponsors should not use sexualised images, activities, or other material. Booth staff (including volunteers) should not use sexualised clothing/uniforms/costumes, or otherwise create a sexualised environment.

If a participant engages in harassing behavior, the conference organisers may take any action they deem appropriate, including warning the offender or expulsion from the conference with no refund.

If you are being harassed, notice that someone else is being harassed, or have any other concerns, please contact a member of conference staff immediately.

Conference staff will be happy to help participants contact hotel/venue security or local law enforcement, provide escorts, or otherwise assist those experiencing harassment to feel safe for the duration of the conference. We value your attendance and participation.

We expect participants to follow these rules at conference and workshop venues and conference-related social events.

Original source and credit: http://2012.jsconf.us/#/about & The Ada Initiative
This Code of Conduct is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License