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Unsessions
This wiki page is for suggestions for Strange Loop 2014 "Unsessions". We work hard at Strange Loop to put on a great program but sometimes there are topics that just don't make it to the schedule. During the conference we'll have several rooms reserved for sessions planned by YOU.
- When: Thursday Sept 18th, 7-10 pm (in 60 min slots)
- Where: Union Station DoubleTree, rooms below
- Equipment: A projector and mic will be available in each of the provided rooms. You supply the brainssss.
Please don't add any more talks or change room/time assignments. The schedule is also available on the main web site and will be available in the mobile app.
### Logic/Declarative Programming Birds Of a Feather (BOF)- Hosted by: Anne Ogborn ( , )
- Description: Whether you're a core.logician, a Prologer, or CELF-less, whether Mercury, Oz, or Excel is your language of choice, whether you're an academic or an industry programmer, we'll happily wave our arms at each other and enjoy the rare (for most of us) company of other logic programmers.!
- Scheduled: New York Central, 8-9 pm
- Interest:
- Hosted by: Ken Sipe ( , )
- Description: The death of the fail whale at twitter was Apache Mesos. The secret weapon of Google was the Google borg. The latest release of Apache Mesos has first class support for Docker. Ken has been working with some of the highest scale companies in Silicon Valley using Mesos and will be discussing and demonstrating how to build for elastic scale. He will end with a discussion on learnings from Google regarding their decade of lessons learned using linux containers and how that is integrated into their project Kubernetes.
- Scheduled: Illinois Central, 8-9 pm
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Interest:
- Ken Sipe ( , )
- Steven Borrelli ( , )
- Ryan Fowler ( , [![Twitter: @fowlafowla] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/fowlafowla) )
- Francisco Souza ( , [![Twitter: @franciscosouza] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/franciscosouza) )
- Brian Hicks ( , )
- Joe Athman ( , )
- James Carr ( , )
- Bill Bejeck ( , [![Twitter: @bbejeck] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/bbejeck) )
- Josh Mize ( , )
- Joe Zulli ( , )
- Sam Stokes ( , )
- Brandon Hudgeons ( , )
- Suresh Mandava ( , [](https://twitter.com/Suresh Mandava) )
- Daniel Yokomizo ( , )
- Mark Mandel ( , )
- Katie Miller ( , )
- David Joyner ( , )
- Joel Potischman ( , )
- Morten Hindsholm ( , )
- Ben Mabey ( , )
- Hosted by: Phil Freeman ( , )
- Description: This will be an informal introduction to programming for the web using the PureScript programming language. Feel free to bring along a laptop and follow along. If there's interest, this might turn into a discussion of the language, and altJS more generally.
- Scheduled: Frisco Burlington, 8-9 pm
- Interest:
- Bill Bejeck ( , [![Twitter: @bbejeck] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/bbejeck) )
- Aaron VonderHaar ( , [![Twitter: @avh4] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/avh4) )
- Joe Zulli ( , )
- Sam Stokes ( , )
- Daniel Yokomizo ( , )
- Antony Courtney ( , )
- Dan Hable ( , )
- Sean Corfield ( , [![Twitter: @seancorfield] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/seancorfield) )
- Hosted by: Steven Borrelli ( , )
- Description: We'll have two members of the CoreOS team in town to discuss CoreOS and Docker. The architectural patterns of a large scale platform are changing. Dedicated VMs and configuration management tools are being replaced by containerization and new service management technologies like systemd. This presentation will give an overview of CoreOS' key technologies, including etcd, fleet, and docker. Come and learn how to use these new technologies to build performant, reliable, large distributed systems.
- Scheduled: Illinois Central, 9-10 pm
-
Interest:
- Brian Hicks ( , )
- Mark Allen ( , )
- Francisco Souza ( , [![Twitter: @franciscosouza] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/franciscosouza) )
- Ken Sipe ( , )
- James Carr ( , )
- Bill Bejeck ( , [![Twitter: @bbejeck] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/bbejeck) )
- Josh Mize ( , )
- Sam Stokes ( , )
- Suresh Mandava ( , [](https://twitter.com/Suresh Mandava) )
- Andrea Magnorsky( , )
- Daniel Yokomizo ( , )
- Mark Mandel ( , )
- David Joyner ( , )
- Joel Potischman ( , )
- Ben Mabey ( , )
- Hosted by: Jim Duey ( , )
- Description: How to fully leverage Functional Programming through various forms of composition, both functions and data. With examples from a Clojure-to-C compiler that I'm building. Discussion about how break problems down with an eye towards composing a solution that is correct by design.
- Scheduled: New York Central, 9-10 pm
- Interest:
- Hosted by: Tony Blank ( , )
- Description: I'm a developer evangelist for Context.IO, an email data API. There's been a lot of action in the email API space with some competition entering the space. I want to talk about why you'd want to build an app on top of email, how you'd do it without an API, and give an overview of all the API options out there, to give you a head start!
- Scheduled: Frisco/Burlington, 7-8 pm
- Interest:
- Jim Duey ( , )
- Brandon Hudgeons ( , )
- Hosted by: Leo Meyerovich ( , )
-
Description:
The gulf between D3 and Excel on a laptop vs. the possibilities we envision in movies like Minority Report is huge. However, maybe not for long. A wave of data viz platforms is emerging that is taking advantage of shifts in hardware and software. Please bring/share your favorite examples, like:
- Render Farms and Streaming: at Graphistry, we build web-based interactions with magnitudes bigger datasets by running in GPU clusters and streaming into the browser, real-time.
- 3D Peripherals: Oculus, LeapMotion, and ideas like holographic projections are bringing 3d/physical views interactions into the home.
- Machine Learning: Ayasdi is effectively an interface to machine learning algorithms, and smart visualizations of big data sets use techniques like clustering.
- Composition and Programming: Tableau pioneered the relational view of data visualization and systems like D3, Vega, and dataflow programming connect them to concepts in programming languages. Furthermore, at last year's Strange Loop, I showed examples of how program synthesis can change how we approach each programming task.
- Scheduled: Frisco/Burlington, 9-10 pm
- Interest:
- Aaron VonderHaar ( , [![Twitter: @avh4] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/avh4) )
- Josh Mize ( , )
- Sam Stokes ( , )
- Brandon Hudgeons ( , )
- Scott Vokes ( , )
- Zach Tellman ( , )
- Nathan Stien ( )
- Antony Courtney ( , )
- Ben Mabey ( , )
- Tom Hickey ( , )
- Gabriel Horner ( , )
- Hosted by: Eleanor McHugh ( , )
- Description: An informal session on programming in Go for those who're Go-curious but not yet had an opportunity to play as well as those who've already been bitten by the bug. Bring your laptop if you fancy hacking and questions if you want to pick brains in a friendly, supportive environment.
- Scheduled: New York Central, 7-8 pm
- Interest:
- Bill Bejeck ( , [![Twitter: @bbejeck] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/bbejeck) )
- Francisco Souza ( , [![Twitter: @franciscosouza] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/franciscosouza) )
- Sean Corfield ( , [![Twitter: @seancorfield] twitter-logo](https://twitter.com/seancorfield) )
- Suresh Mandava ( , [](https://twitter.com/Suresh Mandava) )
- Kim Walta ( , )
- John Watson ( , )
- Hosted by: Scott Feeney ( , )
-
Description: Pioneered by Haskell's QuickCheck, this approach to testing involves writing properties and letting the computer generate test cases to try to find a counterexample.
- My background: I wrote gentest, an implementation for JavaScript. I can speak to the challenges of designing a property-specifying DSL for JavaScript, and building shrinkable, composable generators in a dynamic language (using lazy trees, a technique borrowed from Clojure's test.check). I'm also happy to introduce generative testing with simple examples, for those who haven't seen it before.
- What I haven't done (yet) is use generative testing on production code. If you have, please come and share your experiences and we'll discuss!
- Scheduled: Illinois Central, 7-8 pm
-
Interest:
- Sean Cribbs ( , )
- Marc Saegesser ( , )
- Scott Vokes ( , )
- Danielle Sucher ( , )
- Zach Tellman ( , )
- Andrea Magnorsky( , )
- Donald Ball ( , )
- Kelsey Gilmore-Innis ( , )
- David Joyner ( , )
- Leo Cassarani ( , )
- Kamal Marhubi ( , )
- Dan Hable ( , )
- Ben Mabey ( , )
- Tom Hickey ( , )
- Daemian Mack ( , )
- Gabriel Horner ( , )
- Hosted by: Michael Fogus ( , )
- Description: Zendo is a game of inductive logic. One person plays the universe and creates a "rule of nature" that dictates the layout of tiny installments of crystalline pyramids. The other players then construct their own arrangements in hopes of learning which follow the rule (marked in white) and which do not (marked in black). Gradually the very rule is uncovered by the players in a cooperative realization of truth.
For example, the rule that dictates the following arrangements is No two pieces can touch.
This session will involve a discussion of the rules of Zendo and the forming of play groups. Many Looney Pyramids will be provided, but if you have your own then please consider bringing them. Zendo can be played with almost anything, including: Lego, playing cards, stones, a whiteboard, pictures of cats, etc.
- Scheduled: Jeffersonian, 9-10 pm
- Interest:
- Hosted by: Brandon Hudgeons ( , )
- Description: The folks at typelevel.scala are creating "a conservative fork of the Typesafe Scala compiler, with a focus on meeting the needs of the part of the Scala community which has coalesced around the Typelevel stack." Blog post is here. Members of the typelevel.scala team will be at StrangeLoop, so we'll get a chance to discuss the motivation and mechanics of the effort, and perhaps even address a few of the pull requests that have already been submitted. Note: Members of the typelevel.scala team, please feel free to replace the host and edit this description!
- Scheduled: Jeffersonian, 8-9 pm
- Interest:
- Brandon Hudgeons ( , )
- Brian McKenna ( , )
- Marc Saegesser ( , )
- Rob Norris ( , )