O'Reilly
July 11, 2002

Building the Future at the First O'Reilly Mac OS X Conference

Sebastopol, CA--Registration is open for the first-ever O'Reilly Mac OS X Conference. Designed to foster discovery and community between Mac OS X users and groups just coming aboard this state-of-the-art operating system, the conference takes place at the Westin Santa Clara in Santa Clara, CA from September 30 to October 3, 2002.

"Apple has made a bold move to build the future into the platform," notes Tim O'Reilly, founder and president of O'Reilly & Associates. "Mac OS X offers a rich, powerful environment, and serious users are looking to wring everything they can out of it." Conference Program Chair Rael Dornfest concurs, "Old Mac hands have as much to learn as Unix users. As a result, the demand for information about using and developing on Mac OS X is intense."

Tailored to developers, users, and technical staff--Apple faithful, *nix converts, and Java programmers alike--the conference promises an in-depth tour of all things Mac OS X. Sessions and tutorials address questions many developers are wrestling with: How does such a wide variety of technologies, such as open source scripting, web services, wireless, biological computing, and multimedia, fit into the Mac OS X landscape? How can greater productivity be leveraged from this completely rebuilt operating system? What are the most efficient-- and cool--development tools and resources for Mac OS X?

Tutorials on web objects, Cocoa, wireless, AppleScript, and the terminal.app, led by the likes of mmalcolm Crawford, James Duncan Davidson, Rob Flickenger, Sal Soghoian, Chris Stone, and Dan Sugalski, fill the first day of the conference. Three days of conference sessions follow, organized into six tracks: Mac OS X in the Large, Servers and Networking, Development, Unix, iApps, and Hardware. Some of the specific sessions that chart the new territory of Mac OS X are:

Other sessions cover migration issues, Project Builder, Java-based IDEs, databases, and languages.

Featured speakers in the O'Reilly Mac OS X Conference include: James Gosling, Sun's co-inventor of Java, and a recent Mac convert; David Pogue, best-selling author of "Mac OS X: The Missing Manual" and the "New York Times" technology columnist; Darwin developer Wilfredo Sanchez Vega; Jordan Hubbard, Apple's manager of BSD technologies; Adam Engst, editor of TidBITS; Tim O'Reilly, CEO and founder, O'Reilly & Associates; journalist Leander Kahney; brian d foy, publisher of "The Perl Review"; and Cory Doctorow, co-founder of OpenCola and co-editor of the weblog Boing Boing.

"Mac OS X is one of the most exciting things happening in the industry today," concludes Tim O'Reilly. "We're putting together a conference that features the many traditions and technologies that come together in this new crossroads. One of the most exciting things about conferences is the opportunity for people to meet and share ideas and knowledge face to face. The O'Reilly Mac OS X Conference is designed to let Unix people and Mac people learn from each other, and to let both learn from the people who're pushing the envelope."

Exhibition and Sponsorship

If you are interested in sponsoring or exhibiting at the conference, contact Andrew Calvo at 707-827-7176, or andrewc@oreilly.com.

Additional Resources

About O'Reilly

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