Borland®
Shop
Products Downloads Services Support Partners News & Events Company Community
2004 Borland Conference September 11-15, 2004 San Jose California

MY SCHEDULE

PRECONFERENCE TUTORIALS

DEFINE
CaliberRM
DESIGN
Together
DEVELOP
C++Builder
C#Builder
Delphi
JBuilder
TEST
Optimizeit
DEPLOY
Borland Enterprise Server
Janeva
VisiBroker
InterBase/JDataStore
MANAGE
StarTeam

INTEREST AREAS
ALM, Methods, and Process
Architecture, Models, and Patterns
J2EE™
Microsoft® .NET Framework
Service-oriented Architectures
Best Practices
User Experience
Emerging Technologies
Testing and Quality
Programming
Mobile
People, Teams, and Management
Platforms
Security

COMPLETE SESSION LIST
COMPLETE SCHEDULE
SPEAKERS

 CONFERENCE SPEAKER: Richard Gronback — Borland

Legend

Occasionally changes occur in speakers, sessions and times. Please make sure to update your conference plans.


1104  PANEL: Meet the Together Team  New Session
Together
Type: Panel Discussion. Level: All.
This is your opportunity to interact with the managers and architects of the Together product group. Hear future product plans, ask about the challenges of building an MDA product, and find out how Together is specified, designed, and developed.
Prerequisites: None.
1104 Tuesday, September 14, 2004 — 8:00pm - 9:00pm
Room: A7

3130  Model Validation: Applying Audits and Metrics to UML Models
Together Architecture, Models, and Patterns Best Practices Testing and Quality
Type: Regular Session. Level: Intermediate.
Applying static analysis to UML models can reveal potential errors and poor design characteristics, similarly to what is done today with source code. Learn how to streamline design reviews and improve quality with model-level audits and metrics.
Prerequisites: Some UML modeling experience.
3130 Tuesday, September 14, 2004 — 1:30pm - 2:45pm
Room: A6

3146  Modeling BPEL4WS
Together Architecture, Models, and Patterns Service-oriented Architectures Emerging Technologies
Type: Regular Session. Level: Intermediate.
How does Model-Driven Architecture (MDA) relate to Business Process Modeling (BPM)? This session explores how these modeling technologies and their underlying languages relate today and how they will likely be used in the future.
Prerequisites: Basic understanding of UML, MDA, and BPM.
3146 Monday, September 13, 2004 — 10:00am - 11:15am
Room: A6


Legend

All speakers, programs, and descriptions subject to change.
 
Site Map Search Contact