CFP for Community Over Code NA (Denver) 2024 Performance Engineering Track
The CFP For Community Over Code NA (Denver) 2024 is open until 1 April (no joke), so there's still time to submit a talk proposal for the Performance Engineering track: https://communityovercode.org/call-for-presentations/
This will be the 6th time for the track, the 4th is in the EU in June (CFP here) (schedule here) and the 5th is in July in China (see CFP here - still open). Roger Abelenda and I are co-chairing this event, thanks to Stefan Vodita for co-chairing the 2024 EU event and Yu Xiao for co-chairing the 2024 Community over Code Asian track.
As usual, we are interested in submissions about all things Performance Engineering related applied to Apache technologies and projects (or Apache technologies for Performance Engineering applied more widely). I'm particularly interested in anything related to open source Performance Engineering - there must be some potentially useful theory and engineering practices that work best if the source code is available - we had some good ones last year in Halifax (review here). And anything from an Apache Incubator project would be most welcome - we have a growing list of projects/technologies that have appeared in the track, but no Incubator projects - yet!
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The Train (from Wikipedia):
The City of Denver was a streamlined passenger train operated by the Union Pacific Railroad between Chicago, Illinois, and Denver, Colorado. It operated between 1936 and 1971. From 1936–1955 the Chicago and North Western Railway handled the train east of Omaha, Nebraska; the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (the "Milwaukee Road") handled it thereafter. The train was the fastest long-distance train in the United States when it debuted in 1936, covering 1,048 miles (1,687?km) in 16 hours.