JSFoo 2017

JSFoo is a conference about JavaScript and everything related.

About the conference: JSFoo is a JavaScript conference hosted by HasGeek.

Theme this year: The broad theme this year is going to be Building Reliable Web Apps. Please refer to the Topics section below for the subject of talks and workshops we are looking for.

##Format
We are inviting proposals for:
Full-length 40 minute talks.
Crisp 15 minute talks.
Sponsored sessions, of 15 minutes and 40 minutes duration (limited slots available; subject to editorial scrutiny and approval).
Hands-on Workshop sessions, 3 and 6 hour duration.

##Selection process
Proposals will be filtered and shortlisted by an Editorial Panel. Please make sure to add links to videos / slide decks when submitting proposals. This will help us understand your speaking experience and delivery style. Blurbs or blog posts covering the relevance of a particular problem statement and how it is tackled will help the Editorial Panel better judge your proposals. We might contact you to ask if you’d like to repost your content on the official conference blog.

We expect you to submit an outline of your proposed talk – either in the form of a mind map or a text document or draft slides within two weeks of submitting your proposal.

Selection Process Flowchart

You can check back on this page for the status of your proposal. We will notify you if we either move your proposal to the next round or if we reject it. Selected speakers must participate in one or two rounds of rehearsals before the conference. This is mandatory and helps you to prepare well for the conference.

A speaker is NOT confirmed a slot unless we explicitly mention so in an email or over any other medium of communication.

There is only one speaker per session. Entry is free for selected speakers. As our budget is limited, we prefer speakers from locations closer home, but will do our best to cover for anyone exceptional. HasGeek provides these limited grants where applicable: two international travel and accommodation grants, three domestic travel and accommodation grants. Grants are limited and made available to speakers delivering full sessions (40 minutes or longer). Speaker travel grants will be given in order of preference to students, women, persons of non-binary genders, and individuals for Asia and Africa first.

##Topics
Updated (19 April 2017): We are currently looking for talks in the following topics:

Testing: Testing tools and strategies; test driven development and testing culture; continuous integration and testing workflows; and case studies around testing your application.

Performance optimization: Performance analysis tools and techniques; best practices for building performant applications; browser, NodeJS, and framework internals; network protocols; and performance case studies.

Debugging: Tools for locating and fixing bugs in JavaScript applications; real world post-mortems of bugs that affected your organization; and using telemetry for debugging.

Immutability, type checking, and alternative programming languages: Alternatives to vanilla JavaScript; functional programming and immutability; types and type systems; and real-world case studies of introducing alternative programming languages and tools in your organization.

Build tooling: Build tools and automation, including task runners, linters, JavaScript bundlers, CSS pre- and post-processors, continuous integration tools, static analysis tools, and optimization tools.

Crash and performance monitoring: Monitoring applications for crashes and performance issues while in production.

##Commitment to open source
HasGeek believes in open source as the binding force of our community. If you are describing a codebase for developers to work with, we’d like for it to be available under a permissive open source licence. If your software is commercially licensed or available under a combination of commercial and restrictive open source licences (such as the various forms of the GPL), please consider picking up a sponsorship. We recognise that there are valid reasons for commercial licensing, but ask that you support us in return for giving you an audience. Your session will be marked on the schedule as a “sponsored session”.

##Important dates
Deadline for submitting proposals: 15 June 2017

**Conference dates: ** 15–16 September 2017

##Contact
For more information about speaking proposals, tickets and sponsorships, contact info@hasgeek.com or call +91 76763 32020.

Note: We aren’t accepting any new talks.

Hosted by

JSFoo is a forum for discussing UI engineering; fullstack development; web applications engineering, performance, security and design; accessibility; and latest developments in #JavaScript. Follow JSFoo on Twitter more

Dilpreet Singh

@geekyd

Building web apps using Ember Js

Submitted May 18, 2017

The web is moving forward with an exceptional speed, with all kinds of application from simple note taking applications to social networks. While starting a project we must make some crucial decisions about the architecture of the project, front-end & back-end frameworks etc. These decisions can be both a head start or a blocker depending upon the choice made and as the size of the project increases it gets hard to maintain the large code base.

With Ember we can stop worrying about the decisions and start with the code. Ember is fantastic for all kinds of frontend projects, but its sweet spot are medium/large real-world applications.
Its philosophy is reflected in phrases such as “Built for productivity”, “Don’t reinvent the wheel” and “Don’t waste time making trivial choices”.

In this session we will be getting started with Ember & go through its framework.

Outline

The talk will be divided into sections:

  1. Introduction to ember.
  2. Digging deep into ember.
  3. Coding your first ember app.

####Introduction to ember.

  1. Going through the ember framework.
  2. Installing and creating a sample ember application.

####Digging deep into ember.

  1. Getting started with Routes & controllers.
  2. Handlebar templates for HTML views.
  3. Ember components for modular design.
  4. Testing components in ember.
  5. Ember data the backbone of your app.

####Coding your first ember app.
We will be creating a todo-list application to demonstrate all the features of Ember.

Requirements

A laptop with Node Js & chrome.

Speaker bio

I’m a computer science graduate, working with open source communities accross the globe.I’ve previously worked with start-up and helping them create cutting edge applications, like live vehicle tracking systems, routing engines etc. I’m also a GSOC 2017 student with FOSSASIA.

Slides

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1n6Fezoc2v0S0On_E0OB8JCzT-j54CB0mbcLlmSjJ8Xs/edit?usp=sharing

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Hosted by

JSFoo is a forum for discussing UI engineering; fullstack development; web applications engineering, performance, security and design; accessibility; and latest developments in #JavaScript. Follow JSFoo on Twitter more