Call for papers is open until January 14

We will be glad to see your proposals for JPoint 2025!

We will begin reviewing proposals received during the New Year’s holiday on January 9.

Personal account of the speaker

Instant access to all your proposals. You may track their workflow and edit them in your personal account.

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We are interested in the following topics

We are always very interested in talks about new trends and bleeding edge technologies. And if you have an interesting idea on a topic that is not on the list we will be happy to consider your proposal anyway!

  • VM/Runtime
    • JVM/JDK (Runtime, GC, JIT, OpenJDK, GraalVM, OpenJ9)
    • VM performance
    • OpenJDK projects (Valhalla, Panama, Leyden, Value Objects, Loom, CRaC, etc.)
  • Tooling/Frameworks
    • Frameworks (Hibernate, Helidon, Quarkus, Micronaut, Bazel etc.)
    • Developer tools (IDE, CLI, static code analysis)
    • Testing (Fuzzing, mutation testing, novel testing frameworks and approaches)
    • HTTP Servers (Apache Tomcat, Jetty, Undertow)
    • HTTP Clients (Feign, Retrofit, Apache HttpClient)
  • Architecture
    • Java projects architecture
    • High-performanced systems
    • Distributed systems
    • Reactive, event-driven
    • Cost optimization
  • Languages
    • Modern Java — Java platform new possibilities
    • JVM languages (Kotlin, Scala, Groovy, Clojure, etc.)
  • DevOps
    • Application performance and monitoring
    • Java applications life in clouds and containers
    • CI/CD for Java developers
    • Experience in maintenance and large systems management in Java
  • Spring
    • WebMVC, WebFlux
    • Security, Authorization Server
    • Boot, Cloud
    • Integration, Camel
    • Layered Testing, Testcontainers
    • Internals, Сustomization
  • Kotlin
    • Language and compiler (K2, compiler plugins, tooling, etc.)
    • Server side (KTor, Spring, Quarkus, Hexagon, Micronaut, Javalin, etc.)
    • Multiplatform (JVM, JS, Native, Wasm, Compose)
    • Libraries and frameworks (coroutines, serialisation, Kotlin for Data, Exposed, RSocket, etc.)
  • Other
    • Using ML and AI to develop Java applications
    • Java in IoT
    • Java Security
    • ML/DataScience
    • APIs and protocols: gRPC, RSocket, GraphQL
    • Java applications (Cassandra, Spark, Neo4j, NoSQL, etc.)

Don’t know what to talk about? We have some ideas!

Tailor-made talks

In addition to the general list of topics, we have prepared specific subjects. They may inspire you when making a proposal.

Archive

Check out what’s been happening at past JPoint conferences

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Submission process

  1. You submit a proposal

  2. +1-2 DAYS

    We contact you

  3. NOVEMBER 11

    We begin reviewing proposals

  4. +5 DAYS

    You discuss your content with your PC member

  5. CONVENIENT TIME FOR YOU

    You rehearse and prepare for your session

  6. JANUARY 14

    We close Call For Papers

  7. FEBRUARY 7

    We let you know about our final decision

  8. We help you get your content ready for production

  9. APRIL 3-4

    You give your session at the conference

Program committee

Each proposal will be examined by at least three reviewers from the Program Committee.

Selection process

  • Relevance

    You are going to discuss things that participants of the conference find useful not only yesterday but also today and in the future. In addition, the topic of your session matches the theme of the conference, and the content you are going to present matches the stated description.

  • Depth

    Your talk reveals the subject deeply and comprehensively. There is no need to talk about yet another Hello World (unless you think it’s a new, not widely known, but very promising technology).

  • Speaking experience

    If you have experience in speaking at conferences and meetups, this will be a great advantage. If this is your first presentation, be prepared to rehearse and practice.

  • Practical applicability

    The content is important from a practical point of view and you not only cover the existing problems / solutions, but also share your experience.

  • Expertise

    You have experience and have completed projects in the field in question. The topic of your presentation is sound. You have a good understanding of what you are talking about and have been involved in the implementation of the project you are describing.

  • Originality

    There is novelty in your session; the content either hasn’t been published before or presents a well-known topic / problem in a different light.

Additional information

  • If you are submitting on behalf of another person, please fill the form using the speaker’s contact information. You can leave your contacts in the last form field (the one which asks about a co-speaker or comments).

  • If you feel like you need help to prepare your session you can count on us: we can appoint a personal curator who will review your material and organize rehearsals.

  • Usually, we contact applicants within a week after the submission. If that hasn’t happened, feel free to contact us via email at program@jpoint.com. Also, don’t forget to read the speaker’s memo.