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{{short description|Former annual developer conference}}
__NOTOC__
[[Image:The Future of Java.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|Attendees at the 2004 JavaOne conference described their vision of the future of Java on a whiteboard.]]
 
'''JavaOne''' is an annual conference first organized in 1996 by [[Sun Microsystems]] to discuss [[Java (programming language)|Java]] technologies, primarily among Java developers. It was held in [[San Francisco, California]], typically running from a Monday to Thursday in summer months (early on) or in early fall months (later). Technical sessions and Birds of a Feather (BOF) sessions on a variety of Java-related topics were held throughout the week.
{{redirect|CommunityOne|the bank|CommunityOne Bank}}
'''JavaOne''' is an annual conference inaugurated in 1996 by [[Sun Microsystems]] to discuss [[Java (programming language)|Java]] technologies, primarily among Java developers. JavaOne is held in [[San Francisco, California]] typically running from Monday to Thursday. Technical sessions on a variety of topics are held during the day. In the evening, Birds of a Feather (BOF) sessions are held. BOF sessions allow people to focus in on a particular aspect of Java technology.
 
The show was very popular; for the 1999 edition, there were 20,000 attendees at the [[Moscone Center]].<ref name="iw-1999">{{cite news | url=https://www.infoworld.com/article/2076471/what-sun-won-t-tell-you-about-javaone.html | title=What Sun won't tell you about JavaOne | author-first=Mariva H. | author-last=Aviram | magazine=InfoWorld | date=August 20, 1999}}</ref>
Access to the technical sessions, keynote presentations, exhibits and BOF sessions requires a conference pass which usually costs between $1795 to $1995 USD.
 
For many years, the conference was hosted by Sun executive and Java evangelist [[John Gage]].<ref name="iw-1999"/>
In 1999, the conference played host to an event called the [[Hackathon]], a challenge set by [[John Gage]]. Attendees were to write a program in Java for the new [[Palm V]] using the infrared port to communicate with other Palm users and register the device on the Internet.
 
In 1999, the conference played host to an event called the [[Hackathon]], a challenge set by Gage. Attendees were to write a program in Java for the new [[Palm V]] using the infrared port to communicate with other Palm users and register the device on the Internet.
During the 2008 conference, 67 [[Moscone Center]] staff members and three attendees were sickened by an outbreak of [[norovirus]].<ref>{{cite news
| author = Jordan Robertson
| title = 70 people sickened during San Francisco conference
| url = http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D90IDMBG5&show_article=1
| work = AP
| publisher = breitbart.com
| date = May 9, 2008
| accessdate = 2008-05-11
}}</ref>
 
During the 2008 conference, seventy Moscone Center staff members and three attendees were sickened by an outbreak of [[norovirus]].<ref>{{cite news | author=Gavin Clarke | title =Sick of JavaOne? - You will be: Suspected Norovirus stalks halls | url=https://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/10/javaone_norovirus/ | publisher=[[The Register]] | date=May 10, 2008}}</ref>
JavaOne 2010, the first conference to be run after the acquisition of Sun by [[Oracle Corporation]], was held September 19–23, concurrently with [[Oracle OpenWorld]]. This was the first year that the conference was not held at Moscone Center, instead hosted at three hotels on nearby Mason Street, one block of which was closed and covered with a tent, which formed part of the conference venue. JavaOne 2011 was held October 2–6, in the same venue configuration as in 2010.
 
After the [[Sun acquisition by Oracle|acquisition of Sun by Oracle Corporation]] in 2010, the conference was held concurrently with Oracle OpenWorld. The conference was moved from Moscone Center to hotels on nearby Mason Street. In some years, one block of Mason was closed and covered with a tent, which formed part of the conference venue.
==CommunityOne==
In 2007, an associated one-day event, '''CommunityOne''', was initiated, for the broader free and open-source developer community. In 2008, the second annual CommunityOne event was held on May 5.
 
In April 2018, Oracle announced that the JavaOne conference would be discontinued, in favor of a more general programming conference called ''Oracle Code One''.<ref>{{cite web
In 2009, CommunityOne expanded to New York City (CommunityOne East, March 18–19) and to Oslo, Norway (CommunityOne North, April 15). The third annual CommunityOne in San Francisco took place from June 1–3, 2009, at Moscone Center.
|url = https://blogs.oracle.com/developers/javaone-event-expands-with-more-tracks-languages-and-communities-and-new-name
|title = JavaOne Event Expands with More Tracks, Languages and Communities – and New Name
|access-date = 2018-05-26
|author = Stephen Chin
|date = 2018-04-19
|publisher = Oracle Developers Blog
|quote = The JavaOne conference is expanding to create a new, bigger event ... We’re calling the new event Oracle Code One
}}</ref> The CodeOne conference ran for two years.
 
In March 2022, Oracle announced that JavaOne would return in October 2022,<ref>{{cite web
Tracks included:
|url = https://blogs.oracle.com/java/post/javaone-is-back
 
|title = JavaOne is Back!
* '''Cloud Platforms''' – Development and deployment in the cloud.
|access-date = 2022-03-22
* '''Social and Collaborative Platforms''' – Social networks and Web 2.0 trends.
|author = Sharat Chander
* '''RIAs and Scripting''' – Rich Internet Applications, scripting and tools.
|date = 2022-03-22
* '''Web Platforms''' – Dynamic languages, databases, and Web servers.
|publisher = Oracle Blog
* '''Server-side Platforms''' – SOA, tools, application servers, and databases.
|quote = JavaOne is part of the recently announced Oracle CloudWorld conference (October 16-20, 2022) in Las Vegas, Nevada.
* '''Mobile Development''' – Mobile platforms, devices, tools and application development.
}}</ref> reclaiming the position the now defunct CodeOne conference once occupied. The conference has moved to Las Vegas from its original ___location in San Francisco.
* '''Operating Systems and Infrastructure''' – Performance, virtualization, and native development.
* '''Free and Open''' – Open-source projects, business models, and trends.
 
As announced by Oracle in March 2024, JavaOne was held in March 2025, coinciding with Java's 30th birthday,<ref>{{cite web
CommunityOne was discontinued after the acquisition of Sun by Oracle.
|url = https://inside.java/2024/03/19/announcing-javaone-2025/
|title = JavaOne Returns to the San Francisco Bay Area!
|access-date = 2024-03-19
|author = Sharat Chander
|date = 2024-03-19
|publisher = Oracle/Inside Java
|quote = Java turns 30 years old next year! The anniversary is a significant milestone as the global developer ecosystem celebrates the continued success of Java and its community. We can’t think of a better way to honor this occasion than announcing the return of JavaOne to the San Francisco Bay Area on March 17-20, 2025.}}</ref> and the release of Java 24, at Oracle Headquarters in Redwood Shores, CA, moving back to (near) its original ___location in San Francisco.
 
==Show device==
[[ImageFile:Java Ring.jpg|thumb|Ring with embedded Java-programmable microprocessor, available at JavaOne 1998 ring]]
[[File:JavaOne backpack and phone case.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|JavaOne-branded backpack and case, given out at JavaOne 2001]]
Each year at the conference there is a hardware device highlighted, available to attendees, typically before sold to the general public or at a steep discount.
Several of the conferences highlighted a hardware device, typically made available to attendees before it is sold to the general public, or at a steep discount:
* 1998: [[Java ring]]
* 1999: [[Palm V]]<noinclude><ref>[http{{cite web |last1=Aviram |first1=Mariva H. |date=1999-08-01 |df=mdy|url=https://www.javaworldinfoworld.com/jw-08-1999article/2076473/jw-08-javaone-s-palm-sized-winner.html |title=JavaOne's Palm-sized winner |work=[[JavaWorld]] |access-date=2020-07-13}}</ref></noinclude>
* 2002: [[Sharp Zaurus]]<noinclude><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20180405214810/http://archive.oreilly.com/pub/post/javaone_day3_wireless_world.html JavaOne - Day3 - Wireless World]</ref></noinclude>
* 2000
* 2004: Homepod, a wireless MP3 device from Gloolabs<noinclude><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.javalobby.org/nl/archive/jlnews_20040622o.html |title=And the JavaOne 2004 "Official Show Device" is... |access-date=2008-03-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170807192910/http://www.javalobby.org/nl/archive/jlnews_20040622o.html |archive-date=2017-08-07 |url-status=usurped }}</ref></noinclude>
* 2001
* 2002: [[Sharp Zaurus]]<noinclude><ref>[http://www.oreillynet.com/onjava/blog/2002/03/javaone_day3_wireless_world.html JavaOne - Day3 - Wireless World]</ref></noinclude>
* 2003
* 2004: Homepod, a wireless MP3 device from Gloolabs<noinclude><ref>[http://www.javalobby.org/nl/archive/jlnews_20040622o.html And the JavaOne 2004 "Official Show Device" is... ]</ref></noinclude>
* 2005
* 2006: [[SavaJe]] Jasper S20 phone
* 2007: [[RS Media]] programmable robot
* 2008: [[Sentilla Perk Kit]], Pulse Smartpen, Sony Ericsson K850i
* 2009: [[HTC Diamond]] with [[JavaFX]] preinstalled?pre-installed
 
<noinclude>
==CommunityOne==
{{redirect|CommunityOne|the bank|CommunityOne Bank}}
From 2007 to 2009, an associated one-day event, '''CommunityOne''', was held, for the broader free and open-source developer community.
 
In 2009, CommunityOne expanded to New York City (CommunityOne East, March 18–19) and to Oslo, Norway (CommunityOne North, April 15). The third annual CommunityOne in San Francisco took place from June 1–3, 2009, at Moscone Center.
 
Tracks included:
 
* Cloud Platforms – Development and deployment in the cloud
* Social and Collaborative Platforms – Social networks and Web 2.0 trends
* RIAs and Scripting – Rich Internet Applications, scripting and tools
* Web Platforms – Dynamic languages, databases, and Web servers
* Server-side Platforms – SOA, tools, application servers, and databases
* Mobile Development – Mobile platforms, devices, tools and application development
* Operating Systems and Infrastructure – Performance, virtualization, and native development
* Free and Open – Open-source projects, business models, and trends
 
CommunityOne was discontinued after the [[Sun acquisition by Oracle|acquisition of Sun by Oracle]].
 
==See also==
{{Portal|JavaComputer programming}}
{{clear}}
 
==References==
[[Image:Oracle OpenWorld and JavaOne co-___location directional sign 2010.jpg|thumb|right|Directional sign on floor once JavaOne was co-located with Oracle OpenWorld in 2010]]
{{Reflist}}
 
==External links==
{{Commons category|JavaOne}}
*{{Official website}}
* [http://www.oracle.com/us/javaonedevelop/ JavaOne Web Site]
* [http://www.moscone.com/ Moscone Center]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090508135256/http://canoo.com/blog/category/javaone/ JavaOne 2009 Blog Coverage]
 
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