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Virtualization Conference & Expo 2007 West
| Join Us at the Santa Clara Convention Center, CA - Nov. 3 |
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The iPhone Can Play...Can It Also Work?
The answer to that question is a resounding 'Yes!' The iPhone is on course to be the most adopted enterprise device of 2009. From a starting-point of just over 500 when it was first launched, Apple's App Store has over 25,000 applications available and downloads have surpassed 1 billion.
The next iPhone Developer Summit is being held at the Santa Clara Convention Center on November 3, 2009, co-located with the 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo.
The groundbreaking Summit is chaired by the Editor of iPhone Developer's Magazine, Ian Thain.
At iPhone Developer Summit, delegates will hear from industry experts about what makes the iPhone a great business phone. Technical sessions will explore a world of web development opportunities on the iPhone including building social applications, and developing high-quality, iPhone-style web-based GUIs for your applications.
Additionally, expert faculty speakers will help delegates learn about when to use the iPhone SDK and when to develop web applications. |
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Letter from the Technical Chair
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 Enterprise iPhone in Silicon Valley!
"With the iPhone more than earning its place in the consumer market, it is now being adopted by enterprises. In fact, many believe that the iPhone will be the most adopted enterprise
device in 2009. So the next time you see the hottest device around, it may be in the hands of colleagues or competitors, giving them the edge over you! This adoption is being driven
by such factors as the multitude of general applications available via Apple’s iTunes AppStore. But ask yourself....What do I need to know for wide-scale enterprise adoption?
Come join us at the next iPhone Developer Summit on November 3, 2009, in Santa Clara, CA - either as a delegate, a sponsor, an exhibitor, or a speaker. I look forward to meeting you there!"
About the iPhone Developer Summit Chair:
Ian Thain is Senior Technical Evangelist at Sybase Inc, where he works on the Sybase Unwired Platform (SUP). He is also Editor of iPhone Developer's Magazine. Thain is an expert technologist has been involved in Enterprise Mobility from 2003 and in his customer facing role, he is very involved with the design, production and testing of Enterprise class UnWired Solutions that have been implemented using Sybase's UnWired tools for Sybase customers around the globe. |
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New York Sessions in June 2009 Included...
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Break The Mold - iPhone for the Mobile Enterprise
Business users are actively embracing Apple’s iPhone and bringing it into the enterprise - both through the back door and the front door. iPhone developers have a significant opportunity to help businesses gain a competitive advantage by empowering workers with a true mobile office – secure email, mobilized business processes, and seamless access to back-end enterprise systems. In order to achieve this vision and help companies truly realize the power of the iPhone in the enterprise, a mobile infrastructure is needed that enables enterprises to move away from single ‘one-off’ applications to a more strategic mobile platform.
Speaker Bio:
Senthil Krishnapillai is director of product management at Sybase iAnywhere. Senthil's mobile communications group, part of the Information Anywhere suite, is responsible for the designing and bringing future generation of Mobile collaboration products to the market. Senthil is experienced in managing enterprise products for worldwide markets and has successfully developed and marketed innovative products for the mobility market. He has more than 15 years experience in product management, product marketing and product development for mobile devices and smartphones with Sybase and Extended Systems and was the founder of Rand Software, a synchronization software company. He is a member of various consortia including OMA-DS and CTIA.
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Combining REST and Context for Killer iPhone Apps
With the advent of the multimodal nature of iPhone, it's possible to be connected anywhere and everywhere. But did you know that it's possible for your iPhone to provide context to RESTFUL web services to create the next generation of killer applications. We will look at using web services, cloud computing, and the sensors on the iPhone to create applications that exceed what could previously be done on mobile devices. With this architecture, the sky is truly the limit on the capabilities you can provide to the users of your application. We will create an application that can use RESTFUL web services in combination with the GPS sensor on the iPhone to create a context-aware chat client.
Speaker Bio:
Jason Christensen has over 15 years of industry experience providing technical direction in some of the world's largest companies. He regularly speaks at conferences regarding the use of advanced technology, and has worked as a technologist, lead-architect, and developer on high-profile, cutting edge projects throughout his career. He has been working on mobile, and mobile context-aware computing threads since 2004 and has developed on J2ME, Maemo, and iPhone platforms.
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Mastering View Controllers
In this session we take a detailed look at best practices for leveraging the various view controllers bundled with the iPhone SDK. We start off with a quick review of the critical role view controllers play in the development of iPhone applications then dive into best practices for integrating multiple different types of view controllers together to support specific application needs.
Speaker Bio:
Ernie Svehla, Chief Architect of IntelliObjects Inc., has been developing iPhone applications for the health care industry since the SDK's release. He has over 20 years experience in developing software products most recently in the web and mobile space.
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Push It Up! Implementing Apple's Push Notifications for Fun and Profit
Ever looked into Apple’s Push Notification? If you thought it was as a simple as flicking a switch, think again! In this session Joe Pezzillo will walk you through how and why to add push notifications to your application, what's required on the server side with plenty of working sample code and specific examples to guide you through every step of the process.
Speaker Bio:
Joe Pezzillo is the founder of Metafy LLC, a Boulder, Colorado based software boutique currently developing a suite of prototype iPhone applications for a Fortune 100 financial services company. In addition to pioneering work in internet radio and managing several startups, Joe spent three years as a researcher at the Apple Electronic Media Lab in the mid 90s. With Dan Burcaw he recently launched a joint venture called Push.io.
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Best Practices in Smartphone Business Apps Adam Blum - CEO, Rhomobile
– In this session attendees will learn just how easy it is to create robust enterprise applications for iPhone as well as all the major mobile platforms with Ruby and HTML in the cloud.
Design Patterns for Distributed Mobile Applications Jason Christensen - Proprietor, jasonc411.com – This session will look at patterns for consuming ReST based web-services, TCP stream based services, and Push notification from the iPhone.
Enabling Enterprise Mobility on the iPhone Senthil Krishnapillai - Director of Product Management, Sybase iAnywhere – This presentation will give enterprise developers a way to expand the iPhone's capabilities to include critical business processes and ERP workflow applications. We'll explore how to leverage a mobile platform to securely turn the iPhone into an enterprise-class computing device for today's mobile workforce.
Selling Products with StoreKit Ernie Svehla - Chief Architect, IntelliObject – In this session we present best practices for leveraging the StoreKit framework to sell products from within your iPhone application. We begin with a quick review of key components then present best practices for organizing your products, selecting a selling model, and implementing your approach.
Push It Up! Implementing Apple's Push Notifications for Fun and Profit Enabling Push in your app is just the start and this session will show you how to get your application up and running with Push Notifications in no time. Delegates will be walked through how and why to add push notifications to an application.
Key Steps to Developing VoIP-enabled Apps for the iPhone Jan Skoglund - Chief Researcher, Global IP Solutions (GIPS) – VoIP-enabled applications on the iPhone present a number of challenges to application developers. Trying to cobble a VoIP solution is likely to cause developers severe headaches, time delays and frustration. This session will discuss the four most challenging components to consider when working to ensure a quality VoIP application for the iPhone.
Rapid Application Delivery - Going Hybrid Lee Barney - Professor of Computer IT, Brigham young University – Using the standard UIWebView class in small or large ways in your application decreases the time to market for and the cost of your applications. Learn how and why to use it in your applications in any way from a simple display of easily formatted text using CSS to designing and building your installed application completely in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
MapKit Best Practices Ernie Svehla - Chief Architect, IntelliObject – In this session we present best practices for getting the most out of the MapKit framework within your iPhone application. We begin with a quick review of key components then present best practices for displaying map customizations and annotations specific to your applications needs.
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2008 West Coast Sessions Included...
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Creating On-Demand Enterprise Applications for the iPhone
The arrival of the iPhone has heralded a new era for Internet-enabled devices; however, the device wasn't designed with the enterprise user in mind. To be successful, enterprise apps need to be optimized for the user experience and fit business requirements. In this session, Dave Carroll will demonstrate how developers using a modern Model-View-Controller (MVC) development approach provided by the Force.com platform can shape the presentation of data to a specific context and use standard web development technologies—including HTML, and AJAX—to create on-demand enterprise applications. With these technologies developers can easily add the iPhone to provide mobile access to their enterprise.
Speaker Bio:
Dave Carroll is Principal Platform Evangelist at SalesForce.com. His focus is on growing the developer community and inspiring developers to think creatively about using various Web 2.0 technologies with the company’s Force.com on-demand platform and AppExchange marketplace.
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iPhone in Action: Web Development or SDK?
There are two distinct ways to develop applications for Apple's iPhone, the top tech gadget of the year. Programmers can choose to create optimized web applications using web languages, or to write native programs using the iPhone SDK. Rather than seeing this as an either-or proposition, developers should consider the choice a continuum and pick the right tool to create each individual program.
With iPhone web applications, programmers can enjoy all the advantages of the Internet, including ease of development and deployment, speed of updating, and off-line server access. Meanwhile, with iPhone native applications, programmers can immerse themselves in a sophisticated development environment, dig deep into an object-oriented language, and access the iPhone's built-in utilities, like its accelerometers and its GPS. This session will highlight the advantages and disadvantages of each style of programming and discuss ways to hybridize them, creating integrated projects that utilize the best of both worlds.
Speaker Bio:
Christopher Allen is one of the leaders of the iPhone developer community. He is the host of iPhoneWebDev.com, which is the largest independent community of iPhone-based web developers, and manages its mailing list. He is also one of the founders of iPhoneDevCamp and oversees its Hackathon, and is co-author of iPhone in Action:Introduction to Web and SDK Development . Christopher is a longtime technologist, and is also a leader in social software and was one of the authors of TLS, the next-generation SSL protocol.
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Understanding iPhone JavaScript Extensions
Apple has introduced a number of extensions to the JavaScript programming language to assist iPhone web developers. Including new fast lookup functions, native SVG graphics processing, CSS effects, database storage and full screen mode. These new functions will transform the way web and AJAX developers look at the iPhone for application development. This session introduces the JavaScript extensions, and shows practical examples of their usage.
Speaker Bio:
John Fronckowiak is the President of IDC Consulting, Inc., providing consulting and technical writing. He is also a Clinical Assistant Professor in Information Systems at the Adult Learning Program of Medaille College and is the author of several books and articles about iPhone development, programming, database design and development and networking. Fronckowiak has previously spoken at the Internet Commerce Expo in Boston, and the Conference on Instructional Technologies. In addition, he has over a decade of experience in the classroom as a college professor and runs dozens of training sessions for application developers.
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Scaling Web Apps to Meet the iPhone Challenge
Demystify what it takes to build a web application that can scale to the millions of users in the iPhone ecosystem. Learn about the need for pre-development architecture and the requirements for the deployment and ongoing maintenance environment for the applications. In this session we will discuss real-world examples of how good ideas can go completely wrong.
Speaker Bio:
Guy Naor is CTO of Morph Labs, Inc. A veteran of the technology world, building and implementing software solutions since 1981, in his most recent role he served as CTO of Famundo, a Web 2.0 start-up. Prior to that, he led the development of Goldmine software for four years and has served as an advisor and a consulting architect on a variety of Web 2.0 products.
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Mobile Collaboration Using the iPhone
The iPhone is a very successful mobile device. This session shows how to use it for business: How can I access my records? Where to manage accounts? How to deal with customer requests and other employees? The session will also includes development guidelines for your own enterprise mobile clients, mail support efficiency and case studies.
Speaker Bio:
Marcus Franz is Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer of BF Blogform Search GmbH, a company based in Berlin, Germany, with offices in Oslo, Norway, and Santa Monica, CA. Prior to this, he worked as an independent consultant and was a researcher at several universities.
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Social Computing: the iPhone as an Ideal Platform
Without a doubt, Social Computing is the preeminent phenomenon rising on the second wave of the web, and the iPhone will become one of the dominant clients for Social Computing in the mobile space.
Come to this talk and find out how ICEfaces delivers the goods today for development of web-based social computing applications. The open source ICEfaces project pioneered web-based real time collaboration, an essential capability for truly interactive Social Computing, and its server-centric architecture is well-suited to resource-constrained devices such as the iPhone. During this session you will see several live demos of collaborative applications running on the iPhone. You will gain an understanding of ICEfaces' server-centric architecture and understand how it is a natural way to deliver high-powered, but light-weight AJAX capabilities to your mobile applications. You will also learn how to leverage AJAX Push to make your applications truly collaborative, and prepare yourself to deliver on the promises of social computing.
Speaker Bio:
Steve Maryka is CTO at ICEsoft Technologies Inc., and leads the ICEfaces open source project. He has been involved in Java-based AJAX techniques since 2003 - a time before the term ?AJAX? was even coined. Prior to joining ICEsoft, Maryka was co-founder of AudeSi Technologies where he served as VP of Technology and led Java product development for Internet appliances. After AudeSi was acquired by Wind River Systems in 2000, he served as a Principle Technologist there until joining ICEsoft.
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Developing Open Source Mobile Messaging and Sync Apps for iPhone vs. Android
The iPhone and Google Android platform are undisputedly transforming the mobile industry by bringing smartphone capabilities to the masses. They are also making for enticing new mobile platforms for developing and deploying new types of mobile apps and services for mass market users. Yet, developing for them is not that easy.
This session will focus on our experience of developing open source-based mobile messaging and sync applications for both of these platforms. It will compare and contrast the platforms in terms of the development methods and tools required, and their strengths and weaknesses from a developer's perspective. The presentation will ashare lessons learned as well as tips and techniques for developing for both platforms.
Speaker Bio:
Stefano Fornari is co-founder, CTO and principal contributor of Funambol, the leading mobile open source project in the world, whose software has been downloaded more than 1.5 million times by 10,000 developers in 200 countries and is used by leading mobile operators and service providers. His most recent work includes developing for both the iPhone and Google's Android SDK. He holds a master's degree in computer science.
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AJAXWorld News Desk Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
What are the most burning AJAX, rich web applications, and Web 2.0 questions need to be answered in 2008?
Feb. 23, 2008 02:45 AM
Chris Schalk, developer evangelist for Google
1. How can I make AJAX applications that easily go offline? (i.e. can work easily and in a similar manner when not connected to the Internet.)
2. Am I better off using an AJAX framework, a toolkit or just coding my own Ajax/JavaScript and what are the scenarios that are best for one or another?
3. Will JavaScript 2.0 be a success, or a dud?
4. How do make a secure AJAX application? (or what are the best practices to mitigate security problems in AJAX applications?)
5. When will AJAX development finally be easy?
John Crupi, CTO of JackBe:
1. How significant is Enterprise Mashups to you (your customers)?
2. Is AJAX commoditized or will it be soon?
3. Will AJAX be standardized in the form of widget APIs or declarative markup?
4. Is AJAX being challenged by new innovations like Silverlight and JavaFX?
5. What's the biggest browser limitation to AJAX?
Joshua Gertzen, lead developer of the ThinWire AJAX Framework
1. What are some viable strategies for preforming unit/stress testing on an AJAX Application?
2. At what point do developers need to be concerned about client-side code exposing sensitive "how-to" code?
3. Writing complex UIs in JavaScript can lead to lots of client-side code, so how do you scale such a design to a very large application?
4. Do we really need JavaScript 2.0? Won't it be somewhat irrelevant by the time it becomes commonplace and thus usable?
5. Is AJAX about more than just web development? Should we be campaigning to replace all desktop apps with an AJAX equivalent?
Kevin Hakman, co-founder of TIBCO General Interface:
1. Will AJAX standards emerge and succeed? Where’s the potential value and to who?
2. What’s the difference between a mashup and a composite application?
3. On what timeline will AJAX skills become commoditized like HTML skills became?
4. What would you like to see in the next releases of IE, Safari, and Firefox.
5. Will Webkit dominate mobile devices, (aka is Opera still relevant?)
Andre Charland, co-founder of Nitobi
1. How do you select an AJAX framework?
2. How do you optimize AJAX and JavaScript UIs for performance with large amounts of data?
3. How should you handle web analytics and metrics for RIA sites?
4. How do you apply user interface patterns and user experience design
to your AJAX project?
5. What AJAX development tools are available for visual development,
testing and debugging today?
JOIN IN THE DISCUSSION: What would your questions be: please add them here.
Participants' Biographies in Brief:
Eric Miraglia, PhD, of Yahoo! is one of the world's leading experts on advanced JavaScript, and is a member of the Yahoo Presentation Platform Engineering team.
Doug Crockford, creator of the JSON data interchange format, is a developer who currently works for Yahoo!. He is known for his work in video game design, including the porting of Maniac Mansion. He maintains a website called Crockford's Wrrrld Wide Web devoted to language, technology, programming, and games. He's also the author of JSLint, the JavaScript Verifier.
Chris Schalk is developer evangelist for Google.
John Crupi is CTO of JackBe Corporation. As CTO he is entrusted with understanding market forces and business drivers to drive JackBe's technical vision and strategy.
Coach Wei is founder and CTO of Nexaweb (www.nexaweb.com), developers of the leading software platform for building and deploying Web 2.0 and AJAX applications.
Joshua Gertzen is lead developer of the ThinWire AJAX Framework.
Kevin Hakman is co-founder of TIBCO General Interface Enterprise AJAX Toolkit, and Director of Evangelism for TIBCO Software.
Andre Charland, co-founder of Nitobi., is also co-author of Enterprise AJAX (Prentice Hall).
About Jeremy GeelanJeremy Geelan is President of Cloud Expo, Inc. He is Conference Chair of the worldwide Cloud Expo series, of the Virtualization Conference series, and of the upcoming UlitzerLIVE! event. During his tenure with SYS-CON Media, he launched Cloud Computing Journal, Web 2.0 Journal, AJAX & RIA Journal and other leading SYS-CON titles. From 2000-6, as first editorial director and then group publisher of SYS-CON Media, he was responsible for the development of all new titles and i-technology portals for the firm. From 2006 to 2010, as Sr. VP of Editorial & Events, he had complete responsibility for the content of SYS-CON's events portfolio. He regularly represents SYS-CON Media & Events at conferences and trade shows, speaking to technology audiences both in North America and overseas. He is executive producer and presenter of "Power Panels with Jeremy Geelan" on SYS-CON.TV.
Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
#14 |
RIA News Desk commented on 23 Jan 2008
we would share with you what some of the world's leading rich Internet application pioneers are thinking
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#13 |
There's a growing impedance mismatch between the large scale providers of content and the consumers of that content as we build multiple messaging architectures. How realistically do we resolve this mismatch in such a way that we are able to preserve both flexibility (SOAP), simplicity (Atom) and brevity (JSON), and can we do so without sparking a religious war?
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#12 |
Crolly Darvo commented on 18 Dec 2007
Will the browsers development, unification and standardization give us more possibilities and freedom to sophisticate or simplify our interfaces & APIs?
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#11 |
Brett Green commented on 13 Dec 2007
Do you believe a shift back towards rich desktop apps, which are internet-enabled, will lead away from the need for AJAX-enabled web applications?
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#10 |
If you imagine the a URI is a handle to a given resource -- is the AJAX community pushing to retain the isomorphic relationship between the URI and a given state of a web application as it changes through AJAX interaction?
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Are off-line applications for web the right direction? Is Google Gears relevant when more and more devices has 24/7 Internet access?
Will web applications of the future be complex on client and lightweight on server side or rather the opposite? This is essential issue to me, as Tigermouse framework I develop favors the later approach.
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#8 |
Marcio commented on 11 Dec 2007
Other questions like: [1] ambiguity in AJAX toolkits, can I match them? how an aspect in Toolkit A can influence toolkit B? The namespaced Web apps becomes now important. It's the same that happened in Browser space, they were different, then become a bit shared, the AJAX toolkits work also may reach a convergence state as we have offline/online caching infra-structure with namespaced events - sandboxed apps in the same page but running each in a given scope.
I think the next stage promises good things for us and the current stage is a mess with good value under it. The exploration of the mashup stack and mashup infra for interoperability is an area to massage.
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WishList commented on 9 Dec 2007
If only AJAX could somehow bring us a spam-free internet, now THAT would be a rich future!
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#6 |
While Ajax represents the future, it looks like in Georgia they still have developers working in ColdFusion from Adobe - how come? Here's the link: http://www.dot.state.ga.us/
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IMHO commented on 9 Nov 2007
Development managers need to ask themselves at least these two questions before adopting AJAX on a project. First, will you make up for the time invested in adopting a new technology through increased development speed? And second, will AJAX allow you to offer a more useful application to your users?
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Ahmed ALEM commented on 7 Nov 2007
The answer is definitely: Java + XML + XSLT + a new ML, instead of: JavaScript + XML + HTML. But is there any project which take into account all these ideas? Are there any band of developers who are interested in re-inventing a better wheel?
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Answer commented on 7 Nov 2007
The next stage of AJAX is Comet.
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#2 |
It was inevitable that someone would use web 2.0 social aspects together with an AJAX interaction layer to create a next generation weblog. As usual it took a seventeen year old to do it. Logahead is everything I've been looking for recently in blogging software. It's PHP, MySQL, AJAX, and has several social features.
DEMO LINK: http://www.maxkiesler.com/index.php/designdemo/fullview/386/
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BeyondAJAX commented on 6 Nov 2007
The event-driven web is the most important step for a new Internet in recent years.
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| Sponsorship Opportunities |
| The iPhone Developer Summit delivers the #1 i-technology educational and networking opportunity of the year. |
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Who Should Attend? |
• Web programmers and Designers
• Architects
• Senior Developers
• Project Managers
• User Interface Architects
• Mobile Application Developers
• Strategic Decision-Makers
• Web Consultants
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SYS-CON EVENTS
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