Selenium Conference 2011

Posted by: Matt Stine on 01/05/2011

I completed an interest survey for a potential Selenium-focused conference several weeks ago, and I’m excited to let you know that the “powers that be” have decided that the conference is going to happen! I have already submitted my “Executable Specifications: Automating Your Requirements Document with Geb and Spock” talk as a potential session. Whether it makes the conference program or not, I plan on attending the event. Here are the details:

Selenium Conference 2011

Join members of the growing Selenium community for 3 jam-packed days of talks, workshops, lightning talks, and hack sessions. Hear speakers from around the world talk about the present and future of automated testing, share ideas with fellow Selenium developers, including Core Committers, and take part in shaping the future success of the Selenium project.

When: April 4-6, 2011 Where: Marines’ Memorial Club & Hotel, 609 Sutter St, San Francisco, CA 94102 USA Register now to be a speaker or sponsor. More details: http://www.seleniumconf.com/


About Matt Stine

Matt Stine

Matt Stine is an Enterprise Java/Cloud consultant based in Memphis, TN. He is a twelve year veteran of the enterprise software and web development industries, with experience spanning the healthcare, biomedical research, e-commerce, and retail store domains.

Matt has spoken at conferences ranging from JavaOne to CodeMash and has published several articles for Agile Zone, GroovyMag and NFJS the Magazine, as well as the Selenium 2.0 DZone Refcard. Matt is also the founder of the Memphis/Mid-South Java User Group.

His current areas of interest include lean/agile software development, software architecture, mobile application development and functional languages.

More About Matt »

NFJS, the Magazine

May Issue Now Available
  • On the road to learning

    by Raju Gandhi
  • Refactoring to Modularity

    by Kirk Knoernschild
  • RESTful Groovy

    by Kenneth Kousen
  • Getting Started with D3.js

    by Brian Sletten
Learn More »