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- Chris
Richardson, developer, architect and author, POJO in
Action
- Kito Mann,
developer, enterprise architect, author, Java Server
Faces in Action
- John Heintz, is a Principal Consultant with New Aspects of Software
- Max
Katz, senior systems engineer at Exadel, conducts
JSF training.
Chris
Richardson (chris@chrisrichardson.net)
is a developer and architect with over 20 years of experience.
He is the author of POJOs in Action, which describes
how to build enterprise Java applications with POJOs and lightweight
frameworks. Chris runs a consulting company that specializes
in helping companies build better software faster. He has
been a technical leader at Insignia, BEA, and elsewhere. Chris
has a computer science degree from the University of Cambridge
in England and lives in Oakland, CA. Website and blog:
www.chrisrichardson.net.
Kito
D. Mann is editor-in-chief of JSF Central (www.jsfcentral.com)
and the author of JavaServer Faces in Action (Manning).
He is a member of several Java Community Process expert groups
(including JSF and Portlets), and an internationally recognized
speaker. Kito is also the Principal Consultant at Virtua,
Inc., specializing in enterprise application architecture,
training, development, mentoring, and JSF product strategy.
He holds a BA in Computer Science from Johns Hopkins University.
John D. Heintz is a Principal Consultant with New Aspects of Software where he is responsible for finding the clean solutions to complex business and technology problems. In 12 years of professional work John has designed and built object, component, and aspect oriented systems in standalone and distributed environments. He holds a BS in EE from the University of Michigan.
Max
Katz is a senior systems engineer at Exadel, responsible
for technical support, training and customer care for the
Exadel product line. He also conducts online and onsite JavaServer
Faces training. With more than seven years of IT experience,
he brings a wide array of skills and experiences from his
technical and managerial positions. Mr. Katz holds a B.S.
in computer science from the University of California at Davis.
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