DevBreak21

Web Name: DevBreak21

WebSite: http://www.devbreak.io

ID:273806

Keywords:

Description:


Based on the current situation, we have decided to postpone DevBreak to September 8-9th. Same venue, same format, more fun.
8-9SEPTEMBER2021

The ultimate
tech festival

Get tickets1000 attendees gather to speak aboutGet tickets2 Days (Wednesday-Thursday)
40+ Conferences and WorkshopsChâteau de Farcheville

Route de Farcheville, 91880 Bouville

Drop us a line:
melanie@devbreak.io

DevBreak is a 2-day tech festival
for you and your team to:

Get inspired
by talks

Attend the conference to discuss the past, present and future of tech with 40+ international speakers

Discover our speakers

Get skilled-up
in workshops

Join any of our 10+
workshops - or create
your own

Check out the workshops

Get away
from the city

It was good enough for a French king:
join the festival atmosphere at
Château de Farcheville!

Flashback to DevBreak19

DevBreak is safe and accessible:

Sanitary passport required

Bring a proof of complete vaccination or a PRC/Antigen negative test made <72h prior to DevBreakFace masks will be mandatory during the conferences and in outdoor spaces

Accessibility

Live closed captioning of every talkAccess to people with limited mobility

Free babysitting service

Available to every speaker and attendee - subject to previous registrationContact Melanie for details: melanie@devbreak.io

Subscribe to our news and updates

Subscribe

Get inspired

We built 3 conference tracks to discuss the past, present and future of tech with 40+ international speakers.

Dev

Life

Management, ethics and the impact of tech - take a step back on the high-level drivers and influence of today's tech industry.

See our speakers

Dev

News

What’s in store? Get the breaking news and disruptive thinking in the tech world now - and what it means for the future.

See our speakers

Dev

World

How to optimise for a secure, high performing network: delve into the technical challenges that developers are currently facing.

See our speakers

Get inspired

We built 3 conference tracks to discuss the past, present and future of tech with 40+ international speakers.

Dev

Life

Management, ethics and the impact of tech - take a step back on the high-level drivers and influence of today's tech industry.

See our speakers

Dev

News

What’s in store? Get the breaking news and disruptive thinking in the tech world now - and what it means for the future.

Check out our speakers

Dev

World

How to optimise for a secure, high performing network: delve into the technical challenges that developers are currently facing.

See our speakers

Get skilled-up

Pick the workshops
to hone your skills.

Here are some workshops from the previous edition:•"Build a production-ready PWA with Angular and Firebase"•"Etheureum & smart contracts: From zero to hero"•"In deep with Elixir - by discovering & doing it!"WORKSHOP TBA >WORKSHOP TBA

Get away from the city

Check out the previous
DevBreak

"I think the event is great. I like being in the countryside and the atmosphere here.”

Håkon Wium LieCSS Inventor

DevBreak19 Videos

25 Years of PHP

Rasmus LerdorfInventor of PHP

Why CSS was invented

Hakon Wium LieCreator of CSS

On the Code of Data Science

Gael VaroquauxMachine Learning

25 Years of PHP

Rasmus LerdorfInventor of PHP

How a software engineer brought diversity in tech to the center stage

Tracy Chou & Amit AharoniFounder - Block Party & Co-founder - talent.io

Practical considerations over routing algorithms on the example of OpenStreetMap data

Agata MigoslkaSoftware Engineer - Freelancer

On the Code of Data Science

Gael VaroquauxMachine Learning

Continuous Delivery

Frederic RivainCTO - Dashlane

A conversation between old manufacturing machines, craftsmanship and new technology

Lisa LangFounder & Inventor - TPH

How to make Loveliness an HTML Treasure Hunt

Bruce LawsonWeb Developer

Fury road to a worldwide API

Sylvain UtardVP of Engineering - Algolia

Review Code like a bestselling Book

Sarah WachsFrontend Engineer

Navigating the Hype Driven Frontend Development World Without Going Insane

KitzeWeb developer

How The Guardian migrated to the cloud a retrospective

Mariot ChauvinHead of Engineering

"Agile sucks" or does it?

Jean-Pierre LambertCreator of Scrum

Continuous reteaming Adopt self-selection and start moving people to the work!

Julien Lavigne du CadetEngineering Manager

Preparing for a future microservices journey

Susanne KaiserIndependent Tech Consultant

DevBreak19 - 2-day Tech Festival

Jonathan AzoulayTalent.io

Speakers

Jean-Baptiste Kempf

PresidentVideoLAN

Jean-Baptiste Kempf

PresidentVideoLAN

Ron Garan

AstronautNASA

Ron Garan

AstronautNASA

Christian Kroll

FounderECOSIA

Christian Kroll

FounderECOSIA

Kitze

FounderSizzy

Kitze

FounderSizzy

Roy Derks

Leading the Engineering TeamsVandebron

Roy Derks

Leading the Engineering TeamsVandebron

Javi Velasco

API Engineering LeadVercel

Javi Velasco

API Engineering LeadVercel

Connor Leahy

Founding member of EleutherAIEleutherAI

Connor Leahy

Founding member of EleutherAIEleutherAI

Ben Ford

Tech Partner @ The PioneersThe Pioneers

Ben Ford

Tech Partner @ The PioneersThe Pioneers

Sébastien Besnier

Software Engineer @ DeepgramDeepgram

Sébastien Besnier

Software Engineer @ DeepgramDeepgram

Jessy Hanzo

Software Engineer Airbus

Jessy Hanzo

Software Engineer Airbus

Frédéric Barthelet

Frédéric BartheletTheodo GROUP

Frédéric Barthelet

Frédéric BartheletTheodo GROUP

Clément Stenac

CTO & co-founderDataiku

Clément Stenac

CTO & co-founderDataiku

Cate Huston

Engineering Director DuckDuckGo

Cate Huston

Engineering Director DuckDuckGo

Benjamin Combourieu

Tech Leadtalent.io

Benjamin Combourieu

Tech Leadtalent.io

Joschi Kuphal

Founder & CAOTollwerk

Joschi Kuphal

Founder & CAOTollwerk

Erin Doyle

Senior Full Stack DeveloperTheory and Principle

Erin Doyle

Senior Full Stack DeveloperTheory and Principle

Arnaud Pichery

VP EngineeringDataiku

Arnaud Pichery

VP EngineeringDataiku

Fabien Salicis

Co-FounderOpenWork

Fabien Salicis

Co-FounderOpenWork

Pierre-Henri Chuet

Fighter PilotMACH 3 MANAGEMENT

Pierre-Henri Chuet

Fighter PilotMACH 3 MANAGEMENT

Sam Bellen

Senior Developer Advocate Engineerauth0

Sam Bellen

Senior Developer Advocate Engineerauth0

Mathis Raibaud

Audio DeveloperMWM

Mathis Raibaud

Audio DeveloperMWM

Lea Verou

TAG, W3C CSS Working Group, MIT CSAILW3C

Lea Verou

TAG, W3C CSS Working Group, MIT CSAILW3C

Chris Lilley

Technical Director at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)W3C

Chris Lilley

Technical Director at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)W3C

Hugo Morosini

Lead-Front End EngineerLedger

Hugo Morosini

Lead-Front End EngineerLedger

Pierre Pollastri

Software ArchitectLedger

Pierre Pollastri

Software ArchitectLedger

Mohamed Brahim

Chief Technology OfficerProfile Pensions.

Mohamed Brahim

Chief Technology OfficerProfile Pensions.

Katrina Lodgie

MC

Katrina Lodgie

MC

Anastasia Dedyukhina

FounderConsciously Digital

Anastasia Dedyukhina

FounderConsciously Digital

StuFF mc

Apple TechnologistDeepUp

StuFF mc

Apple TechnologistDeepUp

Pierre Clisson

Co-founderTIMEFLUX

Pierre Clisson

Co-founderTIMEFLUX

Tim Benniks

Principal developer advocateUniform

Tim Benniks

Principal developer advocateUniform

Aurore Malherbes

CTOPADOK

Aurore Malherbes

CTOPADOK

Thomas Hézard

Lead Audio ScientistMWM

Thomas Hézard

Lead Audio ScientistMWM

Milos Marinković

Engineering ManagerDelivery Hero

Milos Marinković

Engineering ManagerDelivery Hero

Yacine Badiss

Lead Dev APILedger

Yacine Badiss

Lead Dev APILedger

Clare Sudbery

Lead Engineer at Made TechMade Tech

Clare Sudbery

Lead Engineer at Made TechMade Tech

Renaud Allioux

Co-founder & CTOPreligens

Renaud Allioux

Co-founder & CTOPreligens

Alex Fedorov

Head of EngineeringRIDE Capital

Alex Fedorov

Head of EngineeringRIDE Capital

Sebastien Stormacq

Developer AdvocateAWS

Sebastien Stormacq

Developer AdvocateAWS

Adam Tornhill

FounderCodeScene

Adam Tornhill

FounderCodeSceneShow more speakersShow less speakersMore speakers to come...

Call for speakers!

Would you like to recommend someone, or would you like to be a speaker?

Apply as a speaker

Agenda

This agenda is still subject to changes

Day 1Day 2DevWorldDevLife & NewsDevLab09:0010:10

Welcome Announcement

DevBreak doors opening, breakfast served and welcome announcement!

10:1010:45

The Orbital Perspective

Humanity faces an unprecedent crisis that threatens all life of Earth. Desert storm fighter pilot and NASA astronaut Ron Garan will address this head-on in his keynote: The Orbital Perspective. Ron will take us on an extraordinary journey through outer space and inner space. From this perspective, Ron will map out a viable path forward - to solve our crisis, we need a giant leap in humanity's evolutionary process, and we must embrace the true nature of our interdependence with this fragile planet and all life within its biosphere. Ron will show us how to discover our purpose, detoxify our divisive culture and become a "white blood cell" in a growing immune response to heal our world. Ron will present a blueprint to build a restorative and positive future for all.

Ron GaranNASA10:5011:35

Ever heard of VideoLAN? Maybe not. But I bet you do know VLC and its little orange cone.

Jean-Baptiste Kempf is a French computer engineer and entrepreneur. Major contributor to the VideoLAN project and the VLC software, he’s one of the Open Source leading figures. He advocates for a free Internet. Multi-skilled, technical and straightforward, Jean-Baptiste loves to shake things up, to challenge established things and never misses a chance to speak his mind. He'll tell you the tale of VLC, the most downloaded French software."

Jean-Baptiste KempfVideoLAN11:4012:25

Writing code for humans

As programmers, we tend to brush away usability as something that designers should worry about. However, every time we write code that will be used by others — or ourselves in the future! — we are creating a UI. A UI whose usability can be vastly improved by the very same UX principles that are used to improve visual interfaces. In this light-hearted talk you will learn how to think to make your APIs easy to learn and fast to use. Its takeaways are distilled from Lea’s experience reviewing proposals for Web APIs as a W3C TAG member, as well as creating & managing dozens of successful open source projects for over a decade with thousands of merged pull requests.

Lea VerouW3C12:2514:00

Lunch Break!

Bon appétit ! If you have some time, discover the activities we have for you...

14:0014:45

Building Privacy Into iOS and macOS Apps

A lot of time Privacy of my data as a user is not a priority for Developers. Whether it’s my calendar, my contacts, my location, I want as a user to be able to use an app without all of those attacks in my privacy. I want to summarize some things an iOS developer should do to ensure the most critical user can still use my app in some regards, and not just say “I need all your information”. This is the beauty of iOS, being able to fine grain (although not enough) so let’s do this all together, as a beautiful community concerned by Privacy. We’ll review some very old APIs and focus on the last changes in iOS.

StuFF mcDeepUp14:5015:35

The Modern DXP - How Jamstack will change the world

This talk showcases the Digital Experience Platform of the future. I will outline how we used to build DXP's and what needs to change to modernize them. We are ready to take on (and out-perform) the status quo in enterprise software. We can now build global scale platforms and e-commerce sites with the tools we love: Jamstack, Vue.js, React, CDN edge, serverless and more. The old school dusty enterprise software that has historically been used to shape your online shopping experience is no more. The time is now for Jamstack!

Tim BenniksUniform15:4016:25

SaaS Rebels - An Explanation on Why "on-premises" is Still Alive and Here to Stay

"What do you mean, you’re not a SaaS company? I don’t get it.”It’s not too much to say that the world moved to SaaS, or at least software companies did. It would make no sense today to create an “on-premises” startup for technical or business purposes.Despite this transition, we cannot deny that the “on-premises” is still alive and forecasted to stay. Moving to SaaS can be a tough decision for large companies, especially for technical, security, and political reasons. Naturally, these same reasons represent a great opportunity for “on-premises” startups.Of course, there are good reasons for moving to SaaS, which means it can be very challenging if you decide not to. However, this is what Dataiku did. During this talk, we will discuss the reasons why software companies can choose “on-premises” deployment, how they can deploy it, what obstacles they may face, and how Dataiku tackled these challenges.

Arnaud PicheryDataiku16:2517:00

Afternoon Break

Grab a coffee, a snack and discover what DevBreak has to offer!

17:0017:45

Fullstack Functional Programming without Monads

Sébastien will present how to improve software maintainability, security and readability by applying the fundamental idea of "Functional Programming". Examples will cover all the modern web application spectrum from front-end code to database design.

Sébastien BesnierDeepgram17:5018:35

State machines with Kotlin Flow

If we look at Finite State Machines (FSM), we can find a number of examples everywhere in the world that surrounds us. There are vending machines, subway entrance turnstiles, heating systems, self-driving cars, elevators, etc., but also many, many cases of UI frameworks like Android's UI lifecycle (arguably a finite state machine). The concept of FSM and its mathematical computational model are very interesting to implement in many programming languages. With Kotlin's recent investment in asynchronous programming tools, it seemed like a good time to look into it.

Milos MarinkovićDelivery Hero18:3519:15

How a tech startup planted (almost) 100 million trees

The search engine Ecosia is not only the biggest European search engine but also one of the biggest tree planting organizations on the planet. Ecosia's founder Christian will tell you more about his unusual company. He will also explain why technology won't solve climate change, and why he decided to give his company to a foundation instead of selling it for many millions.

Christian KrollECOSIA19:1501:00

Time to party!

End of Day 1 conferences. It's now time to network, enjoy some time with your team around DevBreak activities and have fun at the party!

09:0010:10

Welcome Announcement

DevBreak doors opening, breakfast served and welcome announcement!

10:1010:45

The Orbital Perspective

Humanity faces an unprecedent crisis that threatens all life of Earth. Desert storm fighter pilot and NASA astronaut Ron Garan will address this head-on in his keynote: The Orbital Perspective. Ron will take us on an extraordinary journey through outer space and inner space. From this perspective, Ron will map out a viable path forward - to solve our crisis, we need a giant leap in humanity's evolutionary process, and we must embrace the true nature of our interdependence with this fragile planet and all life within its biosphere. Ron will show us how to discover our purpose, detoxify our divisive culture and become a "white blood cell" in a growing immune response to heal our world. Ron will present a blueprint to build a restorative and positive future for all.

Ron GaranNASA10:5011:35

Prioritizing Technical Debt as if Time and Money Matters

Prioritizing technical debt is a hard problem as modern systems might have millions of lines of code and multiple development teams — no one has a holistic overview. In addition, there's always a trade-off between improving existing code versus adding new features so we need to use our time wisely. What if we could mine the collective intelligence of all contributing programmers and start making decisions based on information from how the organization actually works with the code? In this presentation, you'll see how easily obtained version-control data uncovers the behavior and patterns of the development organization. This language-neutral approach lets you prioritize the parts of your system that benefit the most from improvements so that you can balance short- and long-term goals guided by data. The specific examples are from real-world codebases like Android, the Linux Kernel, .Net Core Runtime and more. This new perspective on software development will change how you view code.

Adam TornhillCodeScene11:4012:25

How to build, manage and retain a killer team in Deep Learning

With close to 60 data scientists and deep learning engineers (an the same amount of developer), preligens own one of the largest Deep Learning team in France. Since our founding 5 year ago, we learnt what to do (and not do) to build a tiers 1 team in AI and Deep Learning, how to retain talent and how to grow them. In this talk we will share some experience and feedback whereas they are tech or managerial and maybe help you navigate in the complexity of the AI talent world.

Renaud AlliouxPreligens12:3014:00

Lunch Break!

Bon appétit ! If you have some time, discover the activities we have for you...

14:0014:45

Mind hygiene: taking care of your brain in the age of digital distraction

This is an interactive neuroscience-based talk on how technology changes our behaviour and affects our health, thinking, decision-making and creativity if we don’t manage it properly. Dr Anastasia Dedyukhina will share practical tips on how to take charge of technology, and not allow it drive your agenda or thinking. She will also discuss social responsibility of developers.

Anastasia DedyukhinaConsciously Digital14:5015:35

At the crossroad of Crypto and Security: A dev insider view

By now, everyone has heard of cryptocurrencies and, by extension, of blockchains. In some shape or another, they have been a topic of discussion for the last ten years. Whether they are seen as the future of payment or a scam following the many security breaches, cryptocurrencies are shaking things up and cannot be ignored. But what does it look like from the inside? How is your everyday-normal-dev navigating these ever changing topics? Join us for a glimpse of the beautiful world of hardware security at the service of cryptocurrencies, and how it makes our day-to-day as developers at Ledger both exciting, and surprisingly complex.

Yacine BadissLedger15:4016:25

The abstractions of leadership

Bio: Ben's been a technologist for 15 years after teaching himself how to code on an amphibious assault ship in 2003 while he was serving in the Royal Marine Commandos. Since then he's been a hands on functional programmer and leader of tech teams in industries from finance to start ups.

Ben FordThe Pioneers16:2517:00

Afternoon Break

Grab a coffee, a snack and discover what DevBreak has to offer!

17:0017:45

Remote Teams - How to hire and manage a remote team, the challenges and advantages of a global workforce

17:5018:30

Large Language Models and the Future of AI

In recent years, new large self-supervised language models, such as GPT3, have taken the world by storm. These models represent a new paradigm in how to build and use AI and open up swathes of new powerful applications. What makes these new models different, and what does the future hold? What potential, and what risks, does this technology bring?

Connor LeahyEleutherAI18:3019:15

How a tech startup planted (almost) 100 million trees Christian Kroll

The search engine Ecosia is not only the biggest European search engine but also one of the biggest tree planting organizations on the planet. Ecosia's founder Christian will tell you more about his unusual company. He will also explain why technology won't solve climate change, and why he decided to give his company to a foundation instead of selling it for many millions.

Christian KrollECOSIA19:1502:00

Time to party!

End of Day 1 conferences. It's now time to network, enjoy some time with your team around DevBreak activities and have fun at the party!

09:0010:10

Welcome Announcement

DevBreak doors opening, breakfast served and welcome announcement!

No items found.10:1510:45

The Orbital Perspective

Humanity faces an unprecedent crisis that threatens all life of Earth. Desert storm fighter pilot and NASA astronaut Ron Garan will address this head-on in his keynote: The Orbital Perspective. Ron will take us on an extraordinary journey through outer space and inner space. From this perspective, Ron will map out a viable path forward - to solve our crisis, we need a giant leap in humanity's evolutionary process, and we must embrace the true nature of our interdependence with this fragile planet and all life within its biosphere. Ron will show us how to discover our purpose, detoxify our divisive culture and become a "white blood cell" in a growing immune response to heal our world. Ron will present a blueprint to build a restorative and positive future for all.

Ron GaranNASANo items found.12:3014:00

Lunch Break!

Bon appétit! You also have some time to try out the activities we've prepared for you!

No items found.14:0016:00

Build Brain-Computer Interfaces with Timeflux

Timeflux is a free and open-source framework for the acquisition and real-time processing of biosignals. Use it to bootstrap your research, build brain-computer interfaces, closed-loopbiofeedback applications, interactive installations, and more. Written in Python, it works onLinux, MacOS and Windows. Made for researchers and hackers alike.

Pierre ClissonTIMEFLUXNo items found.17:0019:00

Introduction to audio programming

Audio and music are everywhere in our everyday life: at home, at work, when we go shopping, in our cars etc. The vast majority of the apps on our mobile devices use audio in some way, and yet, most of us programmers are not aware of the ins and outs of audio programming. In this workshop, we will introduce you to the challenges audio programmers face daily.The objective of the workshop will be to code simple audio applications in C/C++ to play around with sound, music and audio effects

Mathis RaibaudMWMThomas HézardMWM18:0518:10

Closing Speech

No items found.18:30

End of DevBreak

You still have some time to grab a coffee before leaving DevBreak! Buses start leaving at 18h30

No items found.DevWorldDevLife & NewsDevLab09:0010:00

Welcome Announcement

DevBreak doors opening, breakfast served and welcome announcement!

10:0510:50

There and Back Again - a Web Tale

The core technologies of the Web: HTML, CSS, SVG and the DOM APIs always have a hot new thing, something coming soon that will change everything. That is as true today as it was 20 years ago. But sometimes, these hot things look sort of familiar. And other times, a particular technology takes decades to finally become mainstream and reliable. Why is that, and are we condemned to reinvent the wheel constantly? Drawing on his role as W3C Strategy Specialist on the Core Web, as well as two decades of Web standardization experience, Chris Lilley will take us on a tour of the past, present and future of the core Web Platform.

Chris LilleyW3C10:5511:35

Building an OpenAPI from Typescript

The web is built on top of RESTful APIs. The way we build Apps usually involves consuming a RESTful API that we communicate with over HTTP. We design contracts for those APIs to define the way they work and, to have a formal spec for them, the Swagger IDL was proposed back in 2011 to become the OpenAPI Spec in 2016. At Vercel we love NodeJS and we built almost every service in our system on top of it. We felt the need of having a spec for our API but of course, we never wanted to write it manually. There is almost no support to auto-generate an OpenAPI Spec in the NodeJS ecosystem but since the wide adoption of static typing, it became possible to write a generator for this purpose. In this talk, we will explore the reasoning behind having an OpenAPI Spec at Vercel and what are exactly the problems it solves. We will see how we built a static analyser tool that allowed us to infer a Spec from the implementation of our APIs and how we integrated it using Vercel in our workflow to get alerted on API changes.

Javi VelascoVercel11:4012:25

Design patterns for application resiliency

We have traditionally built robust architectures by trying to avoid mistakes or failures in production, or by testing parts of the system in isolation. However, modern techniques take a very different approach: embracing failure instead of trying to avoid it. Resilient architectures enhance observability, leverage well-known patterns such as graceful degradation, timeouts and circuit breakers but also new patterns like cell-based architecture and shuffle sharding.In this session, will review the most useful patterns for building resilient software systems and especially show the audience how they can benefit from the patterns.

Sebastien StormacqAWS12:3014:00

Lunch Break!

Bon appétit! You still have some free time to check out the activities we've prepared for you!

14:0014:45

Learnings of an event-based serverless application to broadcast real-time traffic alerts

RATPDev runs multiple transit networks worldwide. They are in need for a single solution to allow transit operators to easily broadcast traffic alerts over multiple communication channels (Twitter, Facebook, email, SMS, Google Maps…). Unpredictability and high throughput make it a perfect fit for a serverless architecture. In this talk, I’ll share my personal experience during the development of this application, the challenges I faced when understanding serverless paradigms compared to a classic infrastructure. I’ll also go in details on the implementation of this application using an Event Sourcing architecture implementation with AWS using DynamoDB and EventBridge.

Frédéric BartheletTheodo GROUP14:5015:35

No way, JOSE!

Is your first thought when thinking about cryptography, “nope, that’s not for me!”? There’s no need to. When explained with simple examples, you can see the basics are not that complicated. The JavaScript Object Signing and Encryption, or JOSE for short is a framework that helps us deal with encryption. It describes ways to securely transfer data either signed (JWS) or encrypted (JWE). Let’s take a leap of faith and explore the wonderful world of cryptography together, shall we?In this talk, I will try to explain the basics of encryption and hashing through simple examples. We’ll look into how the JOSE standard can help us with encrypted content on the web using JSON Web Encryption (JWE) and JSON Web Keys (JWK). The audience does not need any specific knowledge about cryptography as this talk will go through the basics. Some JavaScript knowledge can be useful but not necessary as code examples will be simple and explained.

15:4016:25

Mobile Development, what’s wrong with you ?

You may often wonder which technology is better for your mobile customer needs. You are right, there is plenty of amazing solutions: programming languages, frameworks, best practices, design patterns… Finding the right solution can often lead you to huge headaches and it won't get any easier. So what is the future of mobile development? On which framework should you invest? What are the most used tools? What is the most appreciated solution in developer communities? Actually, these questions are not what you're really supposed to dig into.

Jessy HanzoAirbus16:3017:15

But... you're not Facebook

Stop solving solved or non existent problems. You're not dealing with the same issues that Facebook is dealing with.

KitzeSizzy17:2018:05

The importance of Web Accessibility

This will be a Q and A panel hosted by Joschi Kuphal and joined by Erin Doyle and Molly Watt to discuss the What, Why and Who of Accessibility.They'll cover why it's important and how you can get started tomorrow making an impact towards making the web more accessible for all.

18:0518:10

Closing Speech

18:15

End of DevBreak

09:0010:10

Welcome Announcement

DevBreak doors opening, breakfast served and welcome announcement!

10:0510:50

There and Back Again - a Web Tale

The core technologies of the Web: HTML, CSS, SVG and the DOM APIs always have a hot new thing, something coming soon that will change everything. That is as true today as it was 20 years ago. But sometimes, these hot things look sort of familiar. And other times, a particular technology takes decades to finally become mainstream and reliable. Why is that, and are we condemned to reinvent the wheel constantly? Drawing on his role as W3C Strategy Specialist on the Core Web, as well as two decades of Web standardization experience, Chris Lilley will take us on a tour of the past, present and future of the core Web Platform.

Chris LilleyW3C10:5511:35

Let's Stop Making Each Other Feel Stupid

We work in an industry where we judge one another constantly for being stupid. And yet, there are a million different paths through software development. The skills we don’t need now are necessarily forgotten, or delegated to someone else. And that’s fine. Instead of judging people for their ignorance, let’s help them to feel excited about all the new things they’ll discover. Instead of saying “For God’s sake, you don’t know that?” let’s say “Fantastic! Lucky you. You get to learn something. What can I do to help?”

Clare SudberyMade Tech11:4012:25

The culture of process

If we call developers “resources”, they get to call managers (us!) “overhead”. But managers are overhead, and bad process is a tax on efficiency (and effectiveness). When process is good, it is indistinguishable from culture. Let’s talk about a different mindset to process - process as a tool for creating change.

Cate HustonDuckDuckGo12:3014:00

Lunch Break!

Bon appétit! You didn't have time to try some activity out yesterday? You still have some time!

14:0014:45

Fearless Deploys on Friday Evening. Wait; what?!

Do you know how some software development teams are afraid to deploy their code to production, and they have to “pray” after each release that it has not so many and not so critical bugs? Do you know how some business owners are embarrassed to enter the new market because the software their teams produce is so unstable that it’s frantically just a joke?In this talk, you’ll learn how to properly apply practices such as TDD, continuous refactoring, integration, and delivery, get and give feedback on the code, and how you can deploy on Friday evening without fear of being called by your angry CTO to fix broken software over the weekend.

Alex FedorovRIDE Capital14:5015:35

Beyond the cockpit

When you accept the responsibility of leading a pair of Rafale over enemy territory, no excuses are accepted in the debriefing room. During the flight you must be all you can be. But in a work environment where you are over saturated with information, how do you perform efficiently individually and as a team ? It took the aviation community decades to develop our current methods. They have been proven in combat. They have saved lives. The best part ? They work beyond the cockpit. In our exponential world, learn how to stay "ahead of the aircraft", follow, lead and win.

Pierre-Henri ChuetMACH 3 MANAGEMENT15:4016:25

Developer and Companies, Work Anywhere, Be Protected

The World of work has completely changed with Internet. As a company, you can now work with a freelance on the other side of the globe. As a developper Freelance, based in France for instance, you now receive all the offers from the other countries. You want to invoice and you also want to get social protection. You don’t want to spent more then 5 to 10 minutes managing that and you want to have proper payslip, retirement pension, insurances, fiscal and social charges, etc.You are moving to see the client ? Are you covered ? How can you set up the Commercial and Social protection you need, and start working with your client that called you half an hour ago ? Discover a new way to manage all this, as fast as you and your client need it. We spent 10 years trying to eliminate all the points that prevent companies to work with freelances. We want to create a new workstyle that is called OpenWork. And we want to share that with you through this conference.

Fabien SalicisOpenWork16:3017:15

Cracking the hiring process - Demystifying developer hiring best practices

I’m both a Software Engineer and a Hiring Manager. And as such, I know what it’s like to make a hiring decision based on a couple of hours of interview with a person in front of me. In this talk, I will share the insights I’ve gathered through hundreds of interviews on how you can both design delightful hiring processes for developers and better approach interviewing as a Tech person. This presentation is valuable for hiring managers seeking to improve their recruitment process, but also for developers curious about getting involved in hiring their future teammates or simply understanding what goes on behind the scenes.

Benjamin Combourieutalent.io17:2018:05

The importance of Web Accessibility

This will be a Q and A panel hosted by Joschi Kuphal and joined by Erin Doyle and Molly Watt to discuss the What, Why and Who of Accessibility. They'll cover why it's important and how you can get started tomorrow making an impact towards making the web more accessible for all.

18:0518:10

Closing Speech

18:30

End of DevBreak

You still have some time to grab a coffee before leaving DevBreak! Buses start leaving at 18h30

09:0010:10

Welcome Announcement

DevBreak doors opening, breakfast served and welcome announcement!

10:0510:50

There and Back Again - a Web Tale

The core technologies of the Web: HTML, CSS, SVG and the DOM APIs always have a hot new thing, something coming soon that will change everything. That is as true today as it was 20 years ago. But sometimes, these hot things look sort of familiar. And other times, a particular technology takes decades to finally become mainstream and reliable. Why is that, and are we condemned to reinvent the wheel constantly? Drawing on his role as W3C Strategy Specialist on the Core Web, as well as two decades of Web standardization experience, Chris Lilley will take us on a tour of the past, present and future of the core Web Platform.

Chris LilleyW3C10:4513:45

Crypto Rules Everything Around Me!

Curious about that Web3 decentralization stuff this one friend won't stop talking about ? You’re in luck ! The Ledger team welcomes you to a brand new workshop where they’ll try their best teaching you what are the differences between centralized and decentralized web development, and why it matters. We'll start with a brief history lesson of how we went from Web1 to Web3 through Web2, followed by a simple introduction to the Ethereum network and how it can be used as a backend, along with its strengths and weaknesses. By the end of the session, you will have learnt how to interact with smart contracts and build your own decentralized application frontend (DApp) from A-to-Z.You will get to face off with other attendees and the winners will leave with shiny Ledger gifts, so don’t hesitate to come and join us at the workshop!

12:3014:00

Lunch Break!

Bon appétit! You still have some time to try out some activities you missed yesterday!

14:0016:30

Getting started with GraphQL

Interested in learning GraphQL? Or having a hard time to get started? Perfect! In this one-day hands-on workshop you'll learn how to setup and use GraphQL in your next JavaScript project. This workshop consists of two parts: First you'll learn how to use a GraphQL server with Apollo Server and play around with the endpoint using GraphQLi. After the "backend" part is covered, you'll create a frontend application using React and Apollo that can extract and mutate data using GraphQL easily.

Roy DerksVandebron16:0017:30

How to deploy a sample app with Kubernetes?

You are a Developer interested in knowing more about Kubernetes? Come and see how to deploy a PHP app on Kubernetes! Aurore Malherbes, CTO of Padok, will introduce you to the infrastructure and functioning of Kubernetes, a technology that is becoming a standard. On the agenda: - a detailed step-by-step process to deploy a GuestBook on Kubernetes.- pair programming with Aurore to help you- working in Scrum to discover the methodology

Aurore MalherbesPADOK17:2018:05

The importance of Web Accessibility

This will be a Q and A panel hosted by Joschi Kuphal and joined by Erin Doyle and Molly Watt to discuss the What, Why and Who of Accessibility. They'll cover why it's important and how you can get started tomorrow making an impact towards making the web more accessible for all.

18:0518:10

Closing Speech

18:30

End of DevBreak

You still have some time to grab a coffee before leaving DevBreak! Buses start leaving at 18h30

This agenda is still subject to changes

Call for speakers is now closed, but...

...the DevBreak experience is not
limited to our main event!

We have booked all our speaking slots thanks to you! However, we created Before DevBreak, a series of online talks where inspiring tech leads share stories on how their companies overcame technical challenges.

Our first guests will be Dashlane’s VP of Engineering and vandebron’s Engineering Team Lead. If you want to tell your story to our community of 100,000+ tech experts, just click the button below!

Learn more

Our Platinum sponsors

Music World Media

Our Gold partner

No items found.

Our Silver sponsors

Our Bronze sponsors

Media partner

Our partners

Become a partner

Download brochure

Tickets

1-5
Passes

Standard Pass

€375

excl. VATFull access to public DevBreak
talks and workshopsFestival ActivitiesAccess to Sport &
Wellbeing AreasFood & Drink3 drinks at the Dev PartyBus shuttle from Paris to the Event includedGet tickets

6+
Passes

Standard Pass

€350

excl. VATFull access to public DevBreak
talks and workshopsFestival ActivitiesAccess to Sport &
Wellbeing AreasFood & Drink3 drinks at the Dev PartyBus shuttle from Paris to the Event includedGet tickets

Please see our updated terms and conditions here

DevBreak 21

DROP US A LINE

Navigation

HomeSpeakersTicketsHow to get there?SponsorsCode of ConductContactsTerms & ConditionsBefore DevBreakFollow usBuy
your
ticketsOK

TAGS:

<<< Thank you for your visit >>>

Websites to related :

ads

Hot Websites