ReactEurope

July 02 & 03, 2015 — PARIS, FRANCE

July 02 & 03 PARIS, FRANCE

React Europe

About React.js

For more than a year now, React.js has changed the way we think about client-side applications through concepts such as the virtual dom, one-way data flow, immutable data structures and isomorphism.

ReactEurope is the occasion to meet the core team and other awesome members of the community to learn, socialize and have fun in the beautiful city of Paris with great food, entertainment, connectivity, prizes and more!

Join us at ReactEurope Conf to shape the future of client-side applications!

The Speakers

Christopher Chedeau

Christopher Chedeau

Frenchy Front-end Engineer at Facebook. Working on React and React Native.

Coming soon...

Cheng Lou

Cheng Lou

React core member. Currently working on animation-related problems.

I started making manual animation in Flash, and never really left in spirit.

Lee Byron

Lee Byron

Making things at Facebook since 2008: React, GraphQL, Immutable.js, Mobile, JavaScript.

I'm a designer, an artist, a biker, an overachiever and a dreamer. I'm always optimistically biting off more than I can chew and making the best of it. I aspire to create work which inspires and teaches while it entertains.

Nick Schrock

Nick Schrock

Facebook Engineer on Product Infrastructure: GraphQL co-creator, React fan boy.

Nick Schrock is a co-creator of GraphQL, and wrote the original version of Facebook's GraphQL engine. An original member of Facebook's Product Infrastructure team, Nick helped create the abstractions that power Facebooks's PHP data model, and built out the Facebook's iOS and Android tooling around GraphQL.

Dan Schafer

Dan Schafer

Software engineer at Facebook.

Dan Schafer is a co-creator of GraphQL, and designed the data model backing the original GraphQL API, which powered Facebook's news feed. He added GraphQL's support for writes, and has helped maintain Facebook's GraphQL engine and APIs for almost three years.

Joseph Savona

Joseph Savona

Software Engineer at Facebook, working on Relay and GraphQL.

Joseph is an architect of Relay and contributor to React Native. He was an early adopter of React, building what is likely the first React app to be installed at a correctional facility. His previous experience includes teaching ESL abroad, interaction design and prototyping, and web/native UI development.

Spencer Ahrens

Spencer Ahrens

Software Engineer at Facebook, working on React Native.

Spencer has worked on a variety of projects at Facebook over the last several years including Android, iOS, and mobile web product teams, News Feed API, and Search Infrastructure. He's currently working on React Native.

Ben Alpert

Ben Alpert

I build things to help people. Currently making @reactjs at Facebook, previously @khanacademy.

Coming soon...

Sebastian Markbåge

Sebastian Markbåge

React Core Maintainer at Facebook

Coming soon...

Michael Ridgway

Michael Ridgway

JavaScript developer at Yahoo. Currently working on Fluxible: Isomorphic Flux and React.

Mike is software engineer at Yahoo working on node.js and React/Flux frontends that power high-traffic web applications.

Kevin Robinson

Kevin Robinson

Software Engineer at Twitter.

Kevin's especially interested in exploratory data science and visualization, working to create user experiencers that directly help users do what they need to to, or understand what they need to know. He loves connecting knowledge from different fields, and at the moment is particularly inspired by work from the React and ClojureScript communities. He currently works as an engineer at Twitter in Boston, as part of the Fabric team developing tools for mobile developers. In a past career, he worked as a teacher and continues to volunteer working with high-school and undergraduate students teaching about engineering.

Sebastian McKenzie

Sebastian McKenzie

JavaScript fanatic, Creator of Babel (Formerly 6to5).

Sebastian McKenzie is a JavaScript enthusiast based in Sydney, Australia. He's extremely passionate about open source as well as web standards and is always looking to push the boundaries of what is possible. Sebastian is also the creator of the popular Babel compiler that's used by many React developers to bring their JSX and ES6 to life.

Aria Buckles

Aria Buckles

Front-end engineer at Khan Academy.

Aria has been building interactive educational experiences with React at Khan Academy since September 2013, and maintains one of the oldest large React codebases outside of Facebook.

Jed Watson

Jed Watson

Partner at @thethinkmill, Javascript / node.js developer, entrepreneur, creator of @KeystoneJS and @TouchstoneJS.

Jed is a partner at Thinkmill in Sydney, a new development agency with a strong focus on community, open source and R&D. A javascript enthusiast, he has been developing applications on the web for over a decade. On a mission to solve hard framework problems and make developers around the world more productive, Jed is the author of TouchstoneJS, KeystoneJS (a major open source cms for node.js, also built with React.js), and a number of other components and packages available on npm and GitHub.

Elie Rotenberg

Elie Rotenberg

Technichal oversight and member of the board of Webedia Gaming (Jeuxvideo.com, millenium.org, and more).

PhD in Computer Science, CTO and Software Architect at Webedia Gaming (editor of jeuxvideo.com and millenium.org), Elie Rotenberg is a specialist in designing and deploying real-time, large-scale web applications, such as Chats, Web TVs, up to tens of thousands of concurrent users.

Dan Abramov

Dan Abramov

I move slow and maintain things. I built React Hot Loader. In my spare time, I tame side effects. @HelloStampsy.

Dan is a young developer who began writing JavaScript full-time two years ago. Unsatisifed with Backbone’s shortcomings, Dan found React and Flux to be a very solid foundation for building composite and stateful user interfaces at Stampsy. Dan authored and contributed to several popular React components and libraries. Before getting into JavaScript, he used to write C# for Windows, Linux and iOS.

Evan Morikawa

Evan Morikawa

Frontend @Reactjs / Flux / #AtomShell Application Engineer at @Nilas. @Proximate founder. @OlinCollege alum.

Currently a frontend application engineer at Nilas. Before building email clients, Evan founded & customer-funded Proximate, was a dev-in-residence at Techstars, and graduated Olin College of Engineering with a CS degree.

Ben Gotow

Ben Gotow

Incurable builder. Principal of @Foundry376, front-end engineer at @Nilas. Developer of more than 20 iOS apps and the @SparkInspector.

Incurable builder, front-end product engineer at Nilas. Formerly principal of @Foundry376, developer of more than 20 iOS apps and the @SparkInspector. Studied HCI at Carnegie Mellon and CS at Vanderbilt University.

Evan Morikawa

Mikhail Davydov

Frontend JavaScript Application Developer and Web Application Developer Nodejs.

Mikhail is a full stack JavaScript developer at Productive Mobile and currently working on project which transforms enterprise web applications into mobile. Before that time he worked for Yandex and taught about 200 developers to write awesome JavaScript apps. He has many talks and lectures about JavaScript and related technotogies. On leisure time he takes pictures and tries to marry technology and photography in his "2layer photo-project".

Michael Chan

Michael Chan

Web Developer at Ministry Centered Technologies.

Michael Chan is no special flower. He loves ramen and helping JS n00bs learn React. Michael is a developer at Planning Center Online where he gleefully creates shared libraries and components for Planning Center's six applications. Last spring he built the company's first React application, Services Live 3, and continues to develop practices and patterns for writing React.js on Rails.

Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson

Thriller. Previously @ycombinator S2013, @twitter and @path.

Coming soon...

Ryan Florence

Ryan Florence

JavaScript Consultant/Trainer, co-author of React Router.

Coming soon...

The Schedule

  • Ryan Florence Michael Jackson
    09:00-17:00

    A two-day workshop with Ryan Florence and Michael Jackson.

    Tue 30th June
    9:00-9:30 Registration and French Breakfast
    9:30–9:40
    Setup, overview of codebase
    Michael
    9:40–10:45
    Thinking in React
    Ryan
    10:45–11:00 Break
    11:00–12:00
    How do I encapsulate UI?
    Michael
    12:00–13:00 Lunch
    13:00–14:00
    How do I test React code?
    Michael
    14:00-14:45
    In-depth look at the React programming model
    Ryan
    14:45-15:00 Break
    15:00–16:00
    When do I use props vs. state?
    Ryan
    16:00–17:00
    How do I build an app?
    Michael
Ryan Florence Michael Jackson
09:00-17:00

Ryan Florence and Michael Jackson Workshop Day 2

Wed 1st July
9:00-9:30 French Breakfast
9:30–9:45
Q&A from Day 1
9:45–10:45
How do I migrate to React from my existing app?
Ryan
10:45–11:00 Break
11:00–12:00
What is Flux and how/when would I use it?
Michael
12:00–13:00 Lunch
13:00–14:00
How do I build a full-page app with React Router?
Ryan
14:00-14:45
How do I animate transitions in my React app?
Michael
14:45-15:00 Break
15:00–16:00
How can I improve the performance of my React app?
Michael
16:00–17:00
How do I deploy my React app?
Ryan
Mozilla
9:00-18:30

ReactEurope Hackathon

Hackathon will take place at Mozilla HQ from 9am to 6:30pm with great prizes for the winners and guests stars featuring the creators of React Native, Babel.js, React Hot Loader and more! Read all about it here.

Christopher Chedeau, Ben Alpert, Sebastian McKenzie, Lee Byron, Dan Abramov...
🍻
18:45

Bar Night Party 🍹🍸🎉🍟🍔

Our awesome sponsor RedBadger will be organizing a bar night at The Frog at Bercy Village, a brewery located at a 15-minute walk from the venue. Simply show one of the Red Badger team your conference ticket to receive your wristband which you can flash at the bar for free drinks. The Frog is located at Bercy Village which is a pedestrian street full of bars and restaurants. It offers both alcoholic and non alcoholic drinks as well as food.

19:30

Speaker dinner

  • speaker1
    10:00

    keynote

    Christopher Chedeau
  • 10:30

    Inline Styles: themes, media queries, contexts, and when it's best to use CSS

    React allows you to write styles inline and bypass a host of CSS shortcomings. Scope, dependency management, dead code elimination, these problems go away when adding your styles directly to components. But it's not all rainbows and unicorns. Things like theming and media queries become much more difficult when all your styles live directly on components. In this talk, we'll look at how to solve these problems with contexts and plain old JavaScript. We'll also look at the role of container-components and when it's better to "just use CSS."

    Michael Chan
  • 11:30

    Flux over the Wire

    Flux is most often used to implement shared state within a single window. But done properly, this architecture can be used to implement real-time, multi-user shared state between many users of the same web applications. Using HTTP requests to dispatch stores, and Websocket to broadcast updates, Flux over the Wire has the potential to trivialize several hard problems. While the idea of using Websockets to back Flux is rather straightforward, doing it in a way that scales up to tens of thousands of concurrent viewers can prove challenging. In addition, Flux over the Wire offers an interface which considerably eases server-side rendering, as it completely abstracts data fetching and data syncing from the React views that tap into its stores and dispatch its actions.

    Elie Rotenberg
  • 12:00

    React Native: Building Fluid User Experiences

    React Native's architecture has opened up many possibilities for re-inventing the clunkier aspects of UX construction on traditional platforms, making it easier and faster to build world-class experiences. This talk will walk through building an advanced gestural UI leveraging the unique power of the React Native layout and animation systems to build a complex and fluid experience.

    Spencer Ahrens
  • Lee Byron
    14:00

    Exploring GraphQL

    At React.js Conf last January, we introduced the idea of GraphQL: a data fetching language that allows clients to declaratively describe their data requirements. Let's explore more of GraphQL, it's core principles, how it works, and what makes it a powerful tool.

    Lee Byron
  • Ryan Florence
    14:30

    Don't Rewrite, React!

    Your front and back ends are already successfully in production but you don't have to miss out on the productivity that React brings. Forget the rewrites, this is brownfield!

    Ryan Florence
  • 15:30

    Live React: Hot Reloading with Time Travel

    React’s unique strength is bringing to JavaScript development some of the benefits previously exclusive to more radically functional languages such as Elm and ClojureScript, without forcing you to completely eschew local state or rewrite code with exclusively immutable data structures. In this talk, Dan will demonstrate how React can be used together with Webpack Hot Module Replacement to create a live editing environment with time travel that supercharges your debugging experience and transforms the way you work on real apps every day.

    Dan Abramov
  • 16:00

    Relay: An Application Framework For React

    Relay is a new framework from Facebook that enables declarative data fetching & updates for React applications. Relay components use GraphQL to specify their data requirements, and compose together to form truly modular applications. This talk will explore the problems Relay solves, its architecture and the query lifecycle, and how can you use Relay to build more scalable apps. We’ll also see examples of how Relay powers applications as complex as the Facebook News Feed.

    Joseph Savona
  • 17:00

    Back to Text UI

    Paradoxically that today it is easier to create GUI than Text UI. Developer has an arsenal of different GUI libraries and layout engines. When one decides to write Terminal Text UI app he faces obstacles of Text UI DSL Library, imperative layouts, constantly increasing complexity and underdeveloped approaches. In this talk I will show you how to ask browser layout engine for help, how to avoid slavery of DSL and build declarative Text UI using only web-technologies like HTML, JS, CSS and React.

    Mikhail Davydov
  • 17:30

    DOM as a Second-class Citizen

    React has always been about the Virtual DOM. A nice way to render HTML (and some of SVG and maybe some Web Components). Although there's also react-art, react-three, react-canvas, react-curses... Oh, and react-native! Even if you bottom out at HTML, most of what React does really well is rendering to OTHER React components. Meanwhile most projects still try to retrofit our needs into HTML and CSS primitives. I'll talk about why the DOM is flawed and how it is becoming a second-class citizen in the land of React apps.

    Sebastian Markbåge
  • speaker1
    10:00

    Improving Your Workflow With Code Transformation

    Most React developers already use a build pipeline to transform their JSX into vanilla JavaScript. This is usually under-utilised only doing basic transformations such as concatenation, minification and linting. In this talk, Sebastian will go over how this already existing infrastructure can be further utilised to perform even more significant code transformations such as transpilation, optimisation, profiling and more, reducing bugs, making your code faster and you as a developer more productive and happy.

    Sebastian McKenzie
  • 10:30

    The State of Animation in React

    A talk on the past, the present and the future of animation, and the place React can potentially take in this. I will be focusing on a few experiments on animation I've done, specifically: react-tween-state, react-state-stream and some unreleased transition-group related thoughts and work.

    Cheng Lou
  • 11:30

    Simplifying the data layer

    At Twitter, teams have starting adopting React because it’s enabled UI engineers to forget about time when writing rendering code. And we've started exploring similar simplifications in the data layer, embracing the UI’s role as part of a distributed system. First, we'll share how user experience choices are a primary influence on how we design the data layer, especially for teams developing new products with full-stack capabilities. Working with data from multiple backend services has powerful benefits, and shapes the problem space for UI engineering. Next, we'll look at how React and Flux approaches can help in our problem scenarios. Yet even after the advances in React’s component model, the data layer is still an important source of complexity as an app grows and changes over time. Finally, we'll look at new approaches we’ve been exploring, and how designs like decoupling 'recording facts' from 'computing views of those facts' have influenced UI engineering. These designs nudge teams towards simplicity when creating impactful user-facing improvements like real-time updates, optimistic commits, and graceful handling of network outages.

    Kevin Robinson
  • 12:00

    Going Mobile with React

    React.js is changing the way developers think about mobile app development, especially with the recent announcement of React Native. However, in many ways hybrid (web + mobile) app development is here to stay for a large number of mobile apps. Everyone's heard "you can't build a native experience in a web view". We disagree. You just have to know the right tricks. And when you do, the web becomes an incredibly powerful platform for delivering amazing user experience using the technology you know. At Thinkmill in Sydney, over the course of developing several commercial apps, we've experienced the power of using ReactJS for mobile apps built on web technology, and developed a framework we call TouchstoneJS (which Tom Occhino called "the best looking and feeling implementation of this that I've seen" during the Q&A session at React Conf) to share this capability with developers around the world. In this talk I'll share what we've learned and how we've approached the unique challenges of mobile web apps - with tools that are useful to all developers building touch interfaces with React, as well as a walkthrough of our development process and framework. I'll also talk about what you can do with the web platform that you can't with native apps, and even React Native.

    Jed Watson
  • Michael Jackson
    14:00

    React Router

    Since May 2014 over 100 people have contributed code to React Router and many, many more have filed issues, given talks, and used the router in both server and client environments. It has been mine and Ryan's privilege to work with and learn from these wonderful people and to guide the direction of a library that we hope will help us all build amazing products and tools with React over the next few years.

    This year we are introducing support for React Native and we are working closely with the Relay team to ensure the router meets the needs of React developers everywhere React runs. More importantly though, we are focused on bringing great experiences to consumers of applications built using React Router. In this talk, we will discuss how your users can benefit from the many tools the router provides including server-side rendering, real URLs on native devices, and much, much more.

    Michael Jackson
  • 14:30

    Creating a GraphQL Server

    In this talk, we'll take a deeper dive into putting GraphQL to work. How can we build a GraphQL API to work with an existing REST API or server-side data model? What are best practices when building a GraphQL API, and how do they differ from traditional REST best practices? How does Facebook use GraphQL? Most importantly, what does a complete and coherent GraphQL API looks like, and how can we get started building one?

    Nick Schrock
    Dan Schafer
  • 15:30

    Isomorphic Flux

    Flux provides a good framework for building rich client applications, but did you know you can reuse the flux architecture for server rendering? In this talk, I'll walk you through an isomorphic Flux architecture to give you the holy grail of frontend development. With this architecture you'll be able to reuse all of your application code on the server and client without worrying about server-side concurrency issues that you may see with stock Flux. Once the concepts have been explained, I will introduce the open source libraries that we have open sourced and are powering many of Yahoo's high-traffic web applications.

    Michael Ridgway
  • 16:00

    Building submarines that don't leak

    React provides us with a lot of tools for building components, but isn't prescriptive about how we use those. Objects can have props, state, and instance fields. When is it best to use each? We've heard a lot about pure components, but how do we make pure components when we have to deal with the realities of a stateful world? How do we make more complex components whose props actually represent them? We'll cover how we've answered these questions at Khan Academy, including techniques and patterns to make dealing with large pure components simpler, as well as current open questions.

    Aria Buckles
  • 17:00

    How React & Flux Turn Applications Into Extensible Platforms

    Chrome is great, but 3rd party extensions make it better. The iPhone is great, but apps make it better. You React-app may be great, but imagine if you could safely and robustly allow 3rd party extensions to enhance it. We'll talk about specific features of React & Flux, React CSS, programming design patterns, and custom libraries, which can turn a static application into a dynamic platform that an ecosystem of developers can build on top of. We've built a highly-extensible desktop email client with React & Flux on Atom Shell, and we'll also show concrete examples of where these tools enabled a 3rd party ecosystem of email plugins. Our goal is for you to take away how to use React to be more than just great application developers, but now great platform developers as well.

    Evan Morikawa
    Ben Gotow
  • 17:30

    Q&A

Thu 2nd July Fri 3rd July
8:30-10:00 Registration and French Breakfast Check-in and French Breakfast
10:00–10:30
Keynote
Christopher Chedeau
Sebastian McKenzie
10:30–11:00
Michael Chan
Cheng Lou
11:00–11:30 Coffee break Coffee break
11:30–12:00
Elie Rotenberg
Kevin Robinson
12:00–12:30
Spencer Ahrens
Jed Watson
12:30–14:00 French Buffet French Buffet
14:00–14:30
Lee Byron
Michael Jackson
14:30-15:00
Ryan Florence
Nick Schrock & Dan Schafer
15:00–15:30 Coffee break Coffee break
15:30–16:00
Dan Abramov
Michael Ridgway
16:00–16:30
Joseph Savona
Aria Buckles
16:30–17:00 Coffee break Coffee break
17:00–17:30
Mikhail Davydov
Evan Morikawa & Ben Gotow
17:30–18:00
Sebastian Markbåge
Q&A
18:00–19:00 Drink up
19:00–23:00 Special Dinner

Tickets

Getting There

Sponsors

Diamond

Platinum

Gold

Silver

Bronze

Startup

Supporters

Job Board

  • Rangle.io is North America's leading next-generation full-stack JavaScript design and development firm. Dedicated to well-crafted responsive web and mobile applications, we only work with modern JavaScript, HTML5, and CSS.
    Our specialities include Angular, React, Node, Ionic, Meteor, Backbone and other modern JavaScript technologies. As strong functional programming advocates, we lean towards functional reactive programming (FRP) for more complex applications.
    We are a pioneer in Lean UX and our integrated Agile design and development methodologies allow us to start delivering value quickly and continuously, enabling our clients to quickly test and validate their features and business model on an ongoing basis.
    With over two dozen modern JavaScript projects delivered in the last two years, we are the partner of choice for companies starting a new project or migrating to modern HTML5 web and mobile applications.
  • Automattic is a distributed company, democratizing publishing and development.
    We are the people behind WordPress.com, which serves more than 15.8 billion pages a month, as well as a host of other popular services, such as Akismet, Jetpack, and VaultPress. We are strong believers in Open Source, and the vast majority of our work is available under licenses like the GPL.
    Our team members hail from nearly every continent and 36 countries around the world. We are hiring!
    Learn more at http://automattic.com.
  • WORK WITH US
  • Red Badger is a creative software workshop in East London. We love to craft. We love to innovate. And more than anything, we love to create beautiful, compelling experiences built around robust technologies.
    We work for clients such as Fortnum & Mason, BSkyB, Tesco and The BBC.
    We love React.js and run the brilliant React meetup in London.
  • Zalando is Europe’s leading online fashion platform for women, men and children. A publicly traded company as of fall 2014, Zalando has more than 15 million customers in 15 countries. Our technology offices are located in Berlin (HQ), Dortmund, Mönchengladbach and Erfurt, Germany; Dublin, Ireland; and Helsinki, Finland.
    Zalando's tech department has built most of our platform in-house, using open source and cutting-edge technologies such as React, Scala, Python, Cassandra, Clojure, AWS, and Docker. We work in small, agile, autonomous teams and build our systems around five key principles: API First, REST, SaaS, cloud, and microservices.
    What does it take to become “a Zalando”? Above all, it requires passion: to experiment, learn, fail, and repeat the process, so that we get stronger and better every day. Zalando Tech includes men and women from more than 50 different nations and representing a seemingly endless number of interests, hobbies, programming-language preferences, personality types and other characteristics. What unites us is the energy and enthusiasm we share in tackling our common purpose: to deliver award-winning, best-in-class shopping experiences to our customers.
  • CAREERS
    Software Engineer, Frontend (Junior/Senior)
    Software Engineer, Web (Junior/Senior)
    Software Engineer, Backend (Junior/Senior)
  • We are an agile digital agency based in the heart of London. We work with pioneering businesses to help them refine, understand and realise their concepts and ideas. Our toolbox includes Ruby on Rails and now React among other web technologies. We work with organisations like Amnesty International, RedBull and Vodafone.
    In addition to our client projects, we dedicate 20% of our time to what we call global impact projects. In partnership with non-profits and social enterprises we donate our expertise to projects which have a positive global impact.
    We are currently hiring developers with React experience to join our growing team.
  • Reaktor is a creative technology company. We construct exceptionally well-functioning services.
    To achieve the finest quality, we keep design and production tightly together. The digital services Reaktor brings to life are not only extraordinarily beautiful but also a pleasure to use. And they are equipped with all the right features.
    Reaktor’s team of 300 professionals consists of service designers, interaction designers, art directors, software architects, developers and coaches. We have everything required to deliver full end-to-end solutions.
    The one thing our customers value the most is that we get things done. We take pride in our speed, accuracy and quality. With Reaktor, you’ll always know where you're standing and where things are going.
  • From 2008, Ekino is a spin-off of FullSIX Group specialized in digital transformation.
    With over than 200 digital experts, ekino designs and builds digital services.
    Ekino is based on 4 fundamental principles: Innovation prototyping for product vision achievement, digital product design for end-user adoption, digital IS building for speed deployment and data-driven management for cost control.
    Ekino accompanies worldwide leading companies and french startups as Renault, Samsung, Chaumet, Coorpacademy, Musiwork, etc.
    Ekino has one of the best french frontend team with specific skills on AngularJS, HTML5/CSS3, ReactJS, iOS, Android, Node Webkit, Cordova, and other stuff. We search new frontend genius with team spirit, so join us!
  • Strikingly is a modern, mobile-optimized website builder that's extremely easy to use. We focus on beautiful one-page sites and extend it with blogs, forms, and e-commerce. Our mission is to let anyone turn their creative and business ideas into a reality online.
    We’ve got a deep front-end stack to handle all of this (including React, of course), and we’re obsessed with user experience. If you’re a front-end developer looking for a challenge in a growing startup, come talk to us! http://www.strikingly.com/s/careers
    We're currently based in Shanghai, but we have deep Silicon Valley roots. We're backed by Y Combinator (W13), SV Angel, Funders Club, Innovation Works, Infinity Ventures, Index Ventures, Kevin Hale, and many others. Make something people want. Come join us.
  • CAREERS
  • Lodgify is a travel tech startup building innovative software-as-a-service tools for lodging businesses such as vacation rentals and small hotels. We enable lodging operators to easily setup their own website with a “Book now” button and manage their reservations.
    We are an international team that is passionate about building an unprecedented UX fully based on ReactJS. We are now looking for talented frontend developers in Europe to join our adventure.
    We offer a competitive salary, stock options, lunch vouchers, private health insurance and flexible working hours. We are based in a bright rooftop office located in sunny Barcelona, Spain.
    We have recently received €600k funding from notable travel tech investors and are an alumni of Seedcamp London, Europe’s leading accelerator program.
    If you have a strong desire to innovate, learn about new technologies and have a real impact, then contact us via our careers page: http://www.lodgify.com/careers
  • CAREERS
    Maltem Consulting Group is an international group composed with four specialized consultancy firms:
  • Maltem Consulting : specialized in organization and information system management in financial, banking, insurance, energy, telecoms and media domains.
  • Openbridge: consulting, design and implementation of digital, open sources and mobile solutions. Digital is changing everything. That’s why Openbridge helps businesses re-define how to serve connected customers and how to operate as connected enterprises. We offer complete, digital, integrated business and technology services.
  • Bios : consulting, design and implementation of data management solutions. We bring responsiveness / significant closeness and above all the ability to deploy BI solutions related to our recommendations.
  • Alaloop : differs from its unique expertise on the market to provide to its customers a 360° vision of their IT performances, using follow-up dashboards of business lines, technical, sensitive applications and IT infrastructure performances.
  • In few words what we are doing: we are creating a platform which helps enterprise companies to create mobile apps using existing web sites/apps. In two: mobilizing enterprise.
  • leanovia, a "pure player" in IT Performance Optimization.
    Based in Paris and Casablanca, our mission is to improve the performance of our clients information systems.
    Our value proposition covers the design of high performance architectures and the diagnosis of performance issues, using state-of-the-art monitoring and load testing tools.
  • Eventlama aims to make organizing your developer events a breeze. Organizing an event can quickly turn into an overwhelming amount of work that requires the use of various apps from selling tickets, to managing the call of paper, speakers, mobile ticketing, discounts, orders, sponsors and social networks. So much so that it's easy to miss an opportunity or forget to answer a sponsor or speaker. Eventlama takes care of all this with a focus on user experience, collaboration, live feedback and stats to make sure you never miss a thing. With Eventlama, you can always get a quick overview of what's going on and focus on making your dev event awesome.

Organizers

React Organizer

Patrick Aljord

(organizer)
React Organizer

Katiuska Gamero

(co-organizer)
React Organizer

Christopher Chedeau

(collaborator)
React Organizer

Chris Ramón

(collaborator)