Submitted by Larry Cafiero on Sun, 2013-02-24 13:53
SCALE 11X attendees voted on their favorite Saturday exhibitors in six different categories, and exhibitors went all out to impress.
The envelope, please . . .
The winners of the SCALE 11X Exhibitor Contest are:
Favorite Clothing Item: Puppet Labs
Most Interesting Swag: HP
Strangest Swag: Zenoss
Most Useful Swag: Silicon Mechanics
Most Passionate .Org: BeagleBoard/PandaBoard
Most Memorable Booth: LinuxChix
Honorable mentions go to: Fedora, RackSpace, O’Reilly Media, Linux Astronomy, OpenStack, M-Go, EFF, So Cal Python.
LinuxChix had the most votes overall, by a good margin. Silicon Mechanics had the most votes in a single category. The SCALE 11X T-shirts scored high in Favorite Clothing Item category.
This year, to my great surprise, Zend has invited me to reprise the presentation I gave at ZendCon as a webinar. I am thrilled to have this opportunity although the thought of addressing an international audience is, frankly speaking, a bit daunting. But, sometimes a grrl just has to do, what a grrl has to do!
WEBINAR: The Truth About Lambdas and Closures in PHP March 29, 2012: 9am PDT
One of PHP 5.3′s terrific features is the ability to use lambdas, a feature which will surely relegate PHP 5.0′s lambda-style in the guise of create_function() to the dust-bin of cyberspace. This presentation will focus on what exactly lambdas are as well as the difference between a lambda and a closure, or whether there is any given their implementation in PHP. In addition, we’ll have a look at improvements pertaining to closures in PHP 5.4. Far greater emphasis is on live code demonstrations as well as in-depth discussion about the code.
Presenters: Sharon Lee Levy & Kevin Schroeder
You may find that my presentation deviates from the dry fare that typically characterizes technical talks. My methods may be unconventional, but hopefully will aid in clarifying the subject of anonymous functions in PHP and at the same time, pique the interests of everyone, including women and girls so they may explore PHP and computer programming. Read the rest of this entry »