Software Developers Eliminate Build Bottlenecks: A Conversation with David Rubenstein Editor SD Times & John Ousterhout, CEO and Founder of Electric Cloud & Creator of Tcl.WHAT: In almost all software development organizations slow builds delay time to market, hamper developer productivity and reduce product quality. Join John Ousterhout (person) John Ousterhout - /oh'st*r-howt/ John K. Ousterhout, the designer of Tcl and Tk, and founder of Scriptics. See also: Ousterhout's dichotomy. E-mail: john.ousterhout@scriptics.com. , CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. and founder of Electric Cloud Electric Cloud, Inc. is a privately held software corporation specializing in high-performance software build tools. Electric Cloud is based in Mountain View, California and currently offers two products. & creator of Tcl and David Rubenstein David Rubenstein is the co-founder of The Carlyle Group, an American private equity firm. Rubenstein grew up in Baltimore, and graduated from the Baltimore City College and then from Duke University magna cum laude in 1970. , Editor of SD Times, discussing techniques to increase the speed of software builds by 10-20x. Electric Cloud's software solution transforms commodity servers into high speed build clusters. John Ousterhout will feature case studies to show how Electric Cloud's distributed build technology is finally helping developer-centric organizations meet the continuous build imperative. WHEN: October 19, 2004, 11 a.m. Pacific Time/ 2 p.m. Eastern Time (for one hour) HOW: Online registration available at: http://sdtimes.unisfair.com WHO: John Ousterhout is Founder and CEO of Electric Cloud, Inc. He is also the creator of the Tcl scripting language and is well known for his work in distributed operating systems, high performance file systems, and user interfaces. Prior to Electric Cloud, John was Founder and CEO of Scriptics Corporation (acquired by Interwoven in·ter·weave v. in·ter·wove , in·ter·wo·ven , inter·weav·ing, inter·weaves v.tr. 1. To weave together. 2. To blend together; intermix. v.intr. (IWOV), Distinguished Engineer at Sun Microsystems (SUNW SUNW Sun Microsystems, Inc (former stock symbol; now JAVA) SUNW Stanford University Network Workstation (Sun Microsystems, Inc) ), and Professor of Computer Science at U.C. Berkeley. David Rubenstein brings more 25 years of newspaper experience to his role as editor of SD Times. He has covered a number of software development issues in his five years at the helm, and writes a regular column that examines the development industry as a whole. |
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