Lars,In addition to the Java User Groups previously mentioned, I am also in the process of kicking off a Silicon Valley JavaFX Users Group:
http://www.svjugfx.org/
This is a good opportunity to get in on the front-end of an exciting new technology as well as a new community forming right here in the Bay Area.
While I am waiting on some final confirmations before announcing the first event, I can tell you that I have some very good speakers lined up for the first few meetings, which will make the trek down the Peninsula worth it. :-)
Cheers, --Steve On 9/29/2009 4:10 PM, Van Riper wrote:
On Tue, Sep 29, 2009 at 2:33 PM, Brian Duff<[email protected]> wrote:You might be interested in the Silicon Valley Java User's Group: http://www.svjug.net/Actually, that group has been essentially absorbed into the Silicon Valley Web JUG. We have been holding joint meetings for the past two years that have been arranged solely by our Silicon Valley Web JUG. We meet at Google in Mountain View and the meetup site is: http://www.meetup.com/sv-web-jug We have Josh Bloch lined up to speak in October. There is also the Oakland Java SIG lead by Chris Richardson: http://www.ebig.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=Page.ViewPage&PageID=481 And the SDForum Java SIG that meets in Palo Alto: http://www.sdforum.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=Page.viewPage&pageId=626&parentID=483 Aleksandar Gargenta can also tell you about other Java related meetups in SF. You can contact him through his SF Java meetup site: http://www.sfjava.org/ Cheers, Van P.S. I would point you to our International JUG Map that has this same info, but, the KML map files are hosted on a java.net project that appears to be offline at the moment. When java.net is cooperating, you can lookup JUGs in a particular area anywhere in the world by zooming in on this map: http://tr.im/jugmap
-- --Steve blog: http://steveonjava.com/
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