Environments for Humans
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JavaScript Summit 2013 logo

The 5th Annual Live, Online JavaScript & jQuery Conference

In-kind Sponsors


Environments for Humans brings together some of the Web's most notable experts in JavaScript and jQuery for an all-new, three-day online conference, the JavaScript Summit 2013! Bring the experts to your desktop November 19-November 21, 2013 from 9AM to 4PM (CT).

Don't miss this great event and purchase your tickets now!

Day 1 \\ November 19, 2013 \\ 9AM to 4PM CT

(Schedule subject to change)

JavaScript for Designers 9am CT

by Val Head, Web Designer and Consultant
Session information coming soon.

About Val Head

Val Head is a designer obsessed with type and code. She speaks internationally at conferences and leads workshops on web design and creative coding. Every year she bring a swarm of web designers to Pittsburgh for Web Design Day, the conference she co-founded. She is the managing editor of CreativeJS.com and the author of the upcoming Pocket Guide to CSS Animations from Five Simple Steps. Val tweets too much, occasionally dribbbles, and blogs somewhat consistently.

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Bootstrap vs Foundation 10am CT

by Jen Kramer, Technology Instructor

Twitter Bootstrap and Zurb Foundation are the most popular responsive design frameworks today. As with most technology, although they look very similar on the surface, they're designed with different applications and target audiences in mind. Get a quick overview of Bootstrap and Foundation, learn how to customize these for your applications, and figure out which is right for your next project.

About Jen Kramer

For over thirteen years, Jen Kramer has been educating clients, colleagues, friends and graduate students about the meaning of a quality website.

Jen is a lynda.com author with twelve published titles, including the popular Responsive Design with Joomla, Joomla! 3 Essential Training, and Up and Running with Bootstrap. She's also authored two books.

Jen currently offers web design and development and internet marketing courses through Harvard Extension, Community College of Vermont, the Center for Digital Imaging Arts at Boston University, and National University.

Jen earned a BS in biology at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and an MS in Internet Strategy Management at the Marlboro College Graduate School.

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How HTML5 Makes Windows Suck Less 11am CT

by Brandon Satrom, Product Manager for Kendo UI

The web is pervasive. On devices, the web has proliferated, with frameworks like PhoneGap enabling developers to craft hybrid mobile apps using web technologies.

The only question is, should you?

About Brandon Satrom

Brandon Satrom is Product Manager for Kendo UI and is based in Austin, TX.

A unapologetic lover of the open web, Brandon loves to talk about HTML, JavaScript, CSS, open source and whatever new shiny tool or technology has distracted him from that other thing he was working on. Brandon has spoken at several regional and national events, and he loves hanging out with and learning from other passionate developers, both online and in person.

He also loves writing and, in addition to having several articles featured in publications like MSDN Magazine and .net Magazine, he's hard at work on a book ("Building Metro Style Apps for Windows 8 in JavaScript") with Chris Sells, slated for release Summer 2012.

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Mobile Web Development with Backbone.js 1pm CT

by Nick Gauthier, Web Freelancer and Consultant

Mobile web use is absolutely exploding, and there are a number of interesting constraints that high latency, low CPU, low bandwidth devices place on a web site.

We're going to explore best practices for developing mobile web apps with Backbone.js, CoffeeScript, Jasmine, and more.

About Nick Gauthier

Nick Gauthier is a web freelancer, consultant, and trainer specializing in Ruby on Rails, JavaScript (especially Backbone.js and jQuery), and PostgreSQL. In 2011 he co-wrote Recipes with Backbone with Chris Strom and in 2012 he wrote Mobile Web Patterns with Backbone.js.

Nick has spoken at a bunch of Ruby and Open-Source conferences including RailsConf, WindyCityRuby, GoRuCo, Ruby Hoedown, Lone Star Ruby Conf, and RubyNation, and he's always interested in speaking about web development, Ruby, Rails, JavaScript, Backbone, and other topics.

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Day 2 \\ November 21, 2013 \\ 9AM to 4PM CT

(Schedule subject to change)

Angry Birds of Modern JS Development 9am CT

by Elijah Manor, Trainer and Senior Architect at appendTo

Presented by Elijah Manor, Angry Birds uncovers concepts of modern JavaScript development. Each bird represents an area of JavaScript along with its strengths.

About Elijah Manor

Elijah Manor is a Christian and a family man. He develops at appendTo as a Trainer and Senior Architect providing corporate jQuery support, training, and consulting. He is a Microsoft Regional Director, ASP.NET MVP, and ASPInsider specializing in front-end development. He enjoys blogging at http://elijahmanor.com and tweeting (@elijahmanor) about the things he learns.

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Building Foursquare in 40 Minutes 10am CT

by Tim Anglade, Head of Developer Programs for Apigee
Session information coming soon.

About Tim Anglade

Tim Anglade is Head of Developer Programs for Apigee, the API company. In previous lives he was the CTO of a small startup, a graduate school lecturer, and an invited expert at the W3C. He enjoys long walks on the beach and hates writing about himself in the third person.

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HTML5 APIs 11am CT

by Estelle Weyl, Author of HTML5 and CSS3 in the Real World

With HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript, you can create web applications that work on all devices. Modern browsers are capable of running your web apps. No need to learn OS specific programming languages.

In this session, we look (and learn) some of the native HTML5 related JavaScript API that make your browser the most powerful piece of software on your device.

About Estelle Weyl

Estelle Weyl started her professional life in architecture, then managed teen health programs.

In 2000, she took the natural step of becoming a web standardista. She has consulted for Kodakgallery, Yahoo! and Apple, among others.

Estelle shares esoteric tidbits learned while programming CSS, JavaScript and XHTML in her blog at http://evotech.net/blog and provides tutorials and detailed grids of CSS3 and HTML5 browser support in her blog at standardista.com.

She is the author of HTML5, CSS3, and JavaScript for Mobile and HTML5 and CSS3 for the Real World. While not coding, she works in construction, de-hippifying her 1960?s throwback abode.

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TBA 1pm CT

by Rebecca Murphey, Senior JavaScript Engineer at Bocoup
Session information coming soon.

About Rebecca Murphey

Rebecca has been using technology to deliver information, in one form or another, for more than a decade, with a career that started in print and transitioned to the web. Through it all, she has always been on the lookout for the smartest way to get a job done; these days that means harnessing HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to create web applications. she has worked with a wide range of web-related tools?Unix systems, PHP, MySQL, Apache, Django?but her geeky passion is building browser-centric, JavaScript-rich experiences that adhere to best practices and emphasize modular, reusable, maintainable code.

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Grunt 2pm CT

by Ben Alman, Front-end Developer
Session information coming soon.

About Ben Alman

"Cowboy" Ben Alman currently works at Bocoup as Director of Training and Pluginization, where I am responsible for the development of beginner and advanced JavaScript, jQuery and HTML5 training curricula.

In addition to my training and client work at Bocoup, I write articles and give presentations advocating JavaScript and jQuery code organization techniques and best practices.

When he's not creating a new plugin (or writing articles on creating plugins), Ben can be found in the official jQuery IRC channel, helping newbies learn how to $('body').append('hello world').

In addition to web development, Ben is an avid photographer and funk bass player, and can be seen taking photos and playing around the greater Boston, MA area.

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Day 3 \\ November 21, 2013 \\ 9AM to 4PM CT

(Schedule subject to change)

Create.js 9am CT

by Henri Bergius, Hacker
Session information coming soon.

About Henri Bergius

Henri Bergius is an occasional adventurer working at Nemein Berlin on linked data, content repositories and free software.

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ChromeApps with AngularJS and Node 10am CT

by Aaron Frost, Open Web Strategist and Author at Domo, Inc.

Building your apps for Chrome is the most reliable way to build high-speed, cross-platform desktop apps. ChromeApps, when combined with AngularJS and Nodejs, is the ultimate development stack.

ATTENTION: Be warned that things will get crazy in this presentation.

We will have security staff present to ensure the safety of the audience

About Aaron Frost

I've spent the last several years swimming (at times sinking) in the Open Web waters. Finding JS and CSS/HTML was the best thing that could have happened to me. By day I am an evangelist of the Open Web, helping our team of over 800 developers acclimate to the open web. By night I am working with O'Reilly Media and Steve Olson, and we are writing the book 'JS.Next: ES6', which should be out around May, 2013. Additionally I work on several small projects for myself, and one with my identical twin brother. Peppered in between working hours, I enjoy being married to a wonderful wife, and being the dad of three amazing monsters. And when the world is white and frozen, you will find me atop the mountain ice fishing.

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Prototyping à la Node with Express 11am CT

by Pam Selle, Professional Developer

In this talk, Pam Selle will demonstrate a simple method of rapid prototyping and idea validation.

You'll learn how to use Express.js for rapid prototyping, leverage user testing to validate designs and interactions, and get it all up and running on the web quickly and easily.

And we'll do it in JavaScript!

About Pam Selle

Pam Selle is a professional developer in Philadelphia, PA. She currently works as a news applications developer and community evangelist for AxisPhilly, an investigative news organization, building software driven by data and built for readers. She was previously at Paperless Post, working on the UI layer and the mobile web application.

Pam is a champion of web standards, an enthusiastic JavaScripter, and a defender of users. She has spoken at local user groups and regional and national conferences on HTML5, CSS, Sass, and JavaScript. She has taught students JavaScript, HTML/CSS, Python, Ruby, and more as an instructor for GirlDevelopIT and other organizations.

She also consults on projects that have ranged from small business websites to writing curricula or serving as an interim IT director. If you?d like to contact her about a project, use the contact form on this site.

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Avoiding Callback Hell By Using Async.js 1pm CT

by Constantine Cois, PhD Software Engineer

Managing complex nested callbacks in JavaScript is a challenging problem.

In this talk, Cois presentts Async.js, a module that provides powerful tools to address this issue, in both Node.js and the browser.

About Constantine Cois

I'm Constantine Aaron Cois, a software engineer in Pittsburgh, PA. I have an M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh, where my work was in algorithm and software development for medical image analysis. I'm currently leading a team of software developers for CERT at the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute. I'm also an adjunct professor at Carnegie Mellon University

I consider myself a polyglot programmer, working with technologies such as Python, Django, Redis, MongoDB, Node.js, C#, .NET MVC, Java, Ruby on Rails, Android, and more on a regular basis. I'm interested in software development, tech and many other geeky things.

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Circus Tricks with AngularJS 2pm CT

by Lukas Ruebbelke, Author of AngularJS in Action

AngularJS is a powerful front-end JavaScript framework that comes with an entire arsenal for building modern web applications. We are going to explore some of the fun things you can do with AngularJS all while making it appear like sleight of hand. Real ringmaster stuff here, folks!

About Lukas Ruebbelke

Information coming soon. ×

About the JavaScript Summit 2013

JavaScript permeates every corner of the Web, with 99% of site visitors using JavaScript-enabled browser. JavaScript's power and flexibility make it easier to add dynamic interactive features, animation and personalization to almost any layout, and popular frameworks make it even easier to implement on your sites and apps than ever before.

Join some of the Web's most experienced JavaScript professionals as they share experiences culled from working on sites big and small. Get the tips and techniques that use frameworks to their fullest. Learn from the pros how to tackle Javascript difficulties head-on with proven methods in use by some of the most popular sites on the Web.

Why attend the online conference?
  • Attending a conference online means no travel hassle!
  • Bring the experts live to your desktop!
  • Time spent on the road is better spent instead in the office or with family, friends!
  • Sessions are developed to dive deeper into the material!
  • Ask questions directly to the speakers!
  • Can't make it the day of the conference? Watch the recordings whenever you want!
Testimonials from
Attendees
This conference was a load of fun. I loved the instant feedback from the speakers and the atmosphere.


John-David Dalton
Web Application Developer
& Web Performance Summit Attendee

I love these online conferences. It's convenient and you can still learn a lot from the comfort of your home or at work.


Candi Ligutan
5by5.tv Producer

An absolutely fantastic event. Well done—will definitely be back for more!


Russ Weakley
Chair of Web Standards Group
& CSS Summit Attendee

I can honestly say I've learned more attending E4H's virtual summits than I've learned attending real life conferences.


Glenda Sims
Senior Accessibility Consultant at Deque Systems, Inc
& Accessibility Summit Attendee

Satisfaction Guaranteed 100%

Buy Tickets

HOW IT WORKS

Once you are registered, you will receive a follow-up email to confirm your reservation. Later on, as the event draws near, you will receive a more detailed message, with the full schedule and other helpful information to help you take full advantage of your conference-going experience and plan your day.

On the day of the conference, you will receive an email invitation about 45 minutes before everything starts. Click on the enclosed link to sign in and enter the virtual meeting space. Once you are signed in, you'll be able to see and hear the presentations as they happen, ask questions as needed and chat with the other attendees if you like!

Technical Specifications: to attend The Summit, you will need a modern web browser (Firefox 1.5, IE 6 & Safari 2 or newer, for example) and a recent version of the Adobe Flash Player. Follow this link to run our system diagnostic (opens in a new window). It will let you know right away which plug-ins, if any, you will need to update before the event.

Still have questions? Drop us a line or contact us at [email protected] if there's anything else you'd like to know.