I would like to invite everyone to a couple of developer-oriented workshops about the tools in the newest Drools and jBPM
releases (6 series). The main idea of these workshops is to introduce
developers to the new set of features and tooling provided by the
projects.
Michael Anstis and Mauricio Salatino (Salaboy) will be showing how to configure
and set up your working environment to work, customize and contribute to
these projects.
We will be trying to cover the following topics:
-
General Overview about the tools
-
Distributions and Modules
-
Technology Stack
-
How to setup your working environment
-
How to extend/customize the tooling
They actually released a teaser example as well, a process used to manage requirements in a sprint:
If you are brave enough and want to know the low level technical details of the tooling, please bring your laptop and be prepared to download the code and compile it in your own environment. We will assist you in the process and give you all the pointers to fix issues or provide new features.
If you are brave enough and want to know the low level technical details of the tooling, please bring your laptop and be prepared to download the code and compile it in your own environment. We will assist you in the process and give you all the pointers to fix issues or provide new features.
Michael will be in charge of the Drools Side of the
platform and Salaboy will be in charge of the BPM side of the
tooling. If you are planning to start using these tools, we encourage
you to attend to see the new features and get a high level overview
about all the new things that are coming with the new version.
The place and the coffee will be sponsored by Plug Tree and the workshops will take place on the 23rd and 24th of October at No. 1 Poultry, London, EC2R 8JR From 3pm to 5pm+.
Seats are very limited, and because the workshops are for free
you will need to get in touch with us (salaboy at redhat dot com) if
you are planning to attend. We will probably send you details of what
you need to download before coming to the workshop so as not to depend
on the local internet connection.
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