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Author Archives: Steven Byrnes

Clojure Conj Recap

20 Wednesday Nov 2013

Posted by Steven Byrnes in Conferences

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Carin Meier, clojure, conj, Tim Ewald

George Washington Masonic Memorial

Unfortunately, I was only able to attend 2 of the 3 days of the Conj. But, as with the previous year, I enjoyed myself immensely. When you get a bunch of bright people together, the quality of talks, and the individual conversations, are great.

There was a good mixture of theory and practice talks. I would hesitate to call them themes, but several talks touched on contract-like things, both internal to a program, and external to a program. (Specifically, for web services and Datomic databases.) I quite liked the 2 talks that bookended the second day: Carin Meier’s talk about speech acts, which involved a demo of a talking computer and a Parrot drone, and Tim Ewald’s talk on hand tools, which taught me more about wood working than I ever expected at a programming conference. But that’s how the Conj rolls.

In the Unsessions Thursday night, I went to 3 very applied talks. 2 dealt with JVM and Clojure performance. The other was by the maintainers of Immutant, which is a pretty awesome Clojure app server. If you need such a thing, I can’t recommend it highly enough.

It’s unfortunate that I needed to leave early, but the conversations I had with @ohpauleez, @jensmithco, @dougselph, @tcrawley, @webyrd and many others were, as always, great.

I look forward to next year, and maybe I’ll even make it to Clojure West this year.

Intro to Cascalog Talk

29 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Steven Byrnes in Presentations

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big data, cascalog, clojure, presentations

Note: this talk was back in November 2012.  Since I’m rebooting the blog, and moving platforms, I’m just re-entering this item.

I gave an introduction to Cascalog talk at the Clojure Houston User Group a few months ago. Nothing earth shattering, but some of my meeting notes and other interesting links are available in Github.

An interesting item I ran across was a blog post comparing several languages you can use to write MapReduce jobs: Looking for a map reduce language.

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