[nycphp-announce] nyphp at Sun's CommunityOne, Yasca Static Code Analysis, Zend Framework Circa 2009
New York PHP
hostmaster at nyphp.com
Tue Feb 17 10:31:59 EST 2009
NYPHP at Sun's CommunityOne East
--------------------------------
All,
Sun's CommunityOne conference is coming up and there a number of very
interesting and relevant talks on PHP, MySQL, Web 2.0, etc.
I'll be speaking on "MySQL and PHP - State of the Union" so I'll see you
there - and best of all, it's FREE.
Announcement is below, as well as the session schedule:
Sessions:
http://developers.sun.com/events/communityone/2009/east/sessions.jsp
Join us March 18-19 at CommunityOne East in New York City for two jam-packed
days of education, innovation, and exchange. Evaluate dozens of open-source
projects powering leading Web companies, transforming enterprise IT, and
enabling next-generation computing. Main conference is free, but space is
limited. Register today!
http://developers.sun.com/events/communityone/index.jsp?cid=CE9MTE28
I'll see you there, and at the Feb. NYPHP meeting at IBM (details below).
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Hans Zaunere / Managing Member / New York PHP
February General Meeting:
Yasca Static Code Analysis and the Zend Framework Circa 2009
------------------------------------------------------------
When: Tuesday, February 24th at 6:30pm sharp (4th Tuesday of every month)
Where: IBM, 590 Madison Avenue, Room 1219 (12th Floor)
RSVP: http://www.nyphp.org/rsvp.php
Thanks to Hallmark Holiday Valentines Day, February is all about love. First
up, we all love good solid code. So we're pleased to have Michael Scovetta
talk on Yasca and static source code analysis. Next, PHP developers love
their frameworks and this month NYPHP is pleased to have expert and ZCE Alan
Seiden talk tech about peace, love, and the Zend Framework.
Yasca - An Open Framework for Automated Source Code Analysis
Over the past few years, commercial static analysis tools have matured
considerably, now generally providing high-quality results along with
features that large enterprises require. On the open-source front, tools
including PMD and FindBugs offer good results against Java and C/C++ code,
but few other high-quality tools exist. Yasca was created to aggregate the
results of other open-source tools and to provide a framework for quickly
adding new patterns to scan. It focuses issues related to security,
performance, and bad practices within C/C++, Java, PHP, HTML/CSS,
JavaScript, COBOL, and other languages.
Michael Scovetta recently joined CA as a Principal IT Security Engineer,
prior to which he worked for Cigital as a senior consultant and UBS
Financial Services as an Information Security Analyst. He has various roles
at these organizations including that of a developer, architect, security
evangelist, penetration tester, security architect. Michael holds a CISSP
certification, a M.Eng. in Computer Science from Cornell University and a
B.S. in Computer Science and Mathematics from Hofstra University. His
personal site is http://www.scovettalabs.com and he is on LinkedIn.
Zend Framework Circa 2009
The Zend Framework is known for its flexibility, corporate-friendly
licensing, and compatibility with diverse platforms and database systems.
This technical presentation by Alan Seiden, a Zend Certified Engineer for
Zend Framework, offers guidance for prospective and current users.
Developers planning a project will discover what ZF can offer. More
experienced users will learn about ZF's recent time saving enhancements.
A leader in developing PHP-based web applications on IBM i (System i, i5,
iSeries, AS/400), Alan has written many articles on the subject. He served
as a consultant for the IBM manual Zend Core for i5/OS. He is senior
developer and technical lead at Strategic Business Systems in northern New
Jersey. Alan's blog: http://www.alanseiden.com/
Thank you to IBM for providing a great presentation space in Midtown
Manhattan. As a service to our community, New York PHP Community meetings
are always free and open to the public.
Come prepared with a business card to enter book and software raffles.
When: Tuesday, February 24th at 6:30pm sharp (4th Tuesday of every month)
Where: IBM, 590 Madison Avenue, Room 1219 (12th Floor)
RSVP: http://www.nyphp.org/rsvp.php
You must RSVP within 30 days of the meeting you attend - that means RSVP
now!
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New York PHP User Group Community
http://www.nyphp.org
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