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DominoPoint conference approaches 500 attendees

Tags: Travel DominoPoint

I'm honored to be presenting this Friday, 10 October, in Milano at the annual conference of the Italian Lotus users group, DominoPoint.  The free "DominoPoint Day 2" (the second annual event) has about 500 attendees signed up, which makes this event as large as any other conference in Europe this year.  In fact, perhaps second only to Lotusphere I think.  The dedicated DominoPoint organizers (Daniele Grillo, Claudio Meregalli, and Giuseppe Grasso) are following the ILUG model, whereby the sponsors pay most of the costs (IBM helps, too), and the delegates pay no fee to attend.  This approach has proven big attendance numbers at ILUG, UKLUG, and other events.
A picture named M2

This will be exciting for me personally, because Italy is my favorite country to visit.  Where else can you find the convergence of music, art, religion, architecture, archeology, geography, cuisine, and more, all in such a small area?

I've been to Italy a bunch of times, totaling probably 5 months of my life.  I speak enough tourist Italian to get around, but certainly not in a business context.  I think I'll be the only native English speaker at the conference, and the only presentation in English.  In fact, I'll be the only person at the event who does not understand Italian very well.  But that's part of the fun!


My topic is Fixing Application Performance Problems...

Does your database become very slow in production with more documents and more users? You will learn to prevent, identify, and fix the most common performance problems right in the design of your applications! Over 40 Notes and Web performance tips cover formulas, LotusScript, agents, views, forms, images, DB properties, security, CSS, JavaScript, GZip, and even a few server settings every developer should know.  Learn how to trace slow performance in existing applications, including an open source tool to reveal what Notes is waiting for when you see the yellow lightning symbol.  Emphasis is placed on balancing performance, maintainability and functionality.

Comments

Gravatar Image1 -
Welcome Jamie!


Gravatar Image2 - Jamie, we really have great fun with you. A very special thanks for coming!

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