Get to know the Satellite speakers

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Satellite speakers and attendees will be on their way to London next week for our biggest European conference to date. Learn more about the work and inspiration of two U.K.-based Satellite speakers, a GitHub Campus Expert and a Met Office Informatics Lab Lead Engineer.

If you want to meet them in person, there's still time to get your Satellite ticket.

Meet Amy Dickens

GitHub Campus Expert - Computer Science PhD at The University of Nottingham

How'd you get started in development?

I started out in recording technology and sound engineering as my bachelor's degree. We did some basic audio programming using MaxMSP and IDE for audio programming, and from there, my love of building things grew. I picked up processing in my final year and then some front end web development skills. After that, I joined the University of Nottingham to do a PhD in Computer Science.

What's the most interesting thing you're working on?

I'm currently researching computer vision and human computer interaction for my PhD on "Gesture Controlled Sound for Users with Complex Disabilities".

Do you have any side projects you want to share?

Yes yes yes. I am hugely enthusiastic about building communities that help women to get into tech and that promote gender equality in the industry. I recently built an interactive map at a hackathon that I'd like to expand to showcase where women are in tech around the world! It's open source and I'm totally up for suggestions as to what to do with it next. Take a look.

What are the biggest challenges you're dealing with?

Sensors and making things see. I’m currently working on Leap Motion Sensors, but they struggle to detect hands of people with certain conditions that cause closed hand syndrome. Plus, getting to grips with convolution neural networks in machine learning. I've just spent a few days on an AI and Machine Learning track at the Codemotion conference in Amsterdam, and it's got me hyped to investigate it more and how it could help my research.

Which emoji best represents you?

Well, that's a no brainer—totally 🦄

Meet Jacob Tomlinson

Lead Engineer - Met Office Informatics Lab

How'd you get started in development?

Since the first time I clicked “view source” on a web page, I’ve been fascinated with how code and markup can be converted into complex functionality. My interest grew from there and lead me down the path to server side languages and databases. It was then I discovered the power of Linux and fell in love with system engineering and architecture.

What's the most interesting thing you're working on?

I'm currently working on a project called Jade which involves building scalable interactive data processing systems to empower environmental scientists.

What are the best parts of what you do?

One of the best parts of my job is getting to collaborate with and learn from incredible people in the technology field. I’m fortunate enough to work alongside top engineers from NASA, Amazon, Microsoft, and more.

What does a normal day look like for you?

An average day involves sitting around a large table with my team writing code and configuring servers. We often entertain visitors and collaborators and play a key role in communicating what the Met Office is working on. I always try to have a lunchtime walk in the surrounding countryside to clear my head.

How do you manage your time?

I keep an A6 bullet journal. I find it really important to have a physical task list as apps are far too easy to minimize and forget about.

Do you have any side projects?

In my spare time I have been working on a Python chatbot framework called opsdroid. I use it alongside the awesome Home Assistant project to talk to my smart home, and we use it to power our ChatOps workflow within our team. It’s designed to be easy to configure with everything contained in one yaml file and easy to extend with simple Python decorator syntax.

What are the biggest challenges you're dealing with?

As with many people, we just have far too much data to process in the ways we’re used to. Coming up with scalable, flexible, parallelized solutions for data processing is both the biggest challenge and most interesting thing I’m working on at the moment.

Which emoji best represents you?

Tough question. My most used emoji is 🤓, so I’ll have to go with that one.


See who else is speaking at Satellite

CodeConf is back and ElectronConf is here

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We're heading to Seattle July 11-13 for CodeConf and ElectronConf, two back-to-back open source conferences—each with its own focus. Join us for three days of learning and building with fellow open source developers. Get your tickets now to take advantage of early bird pricing, and save even more when you purchase tickets to both events.

CodeConf July 11-12

This year, we’re highlighting open source technologies, and diving deep into browser and beyond-browser tools. We'll explore the latest in browser engines, the languages being used, and how they're breaking out of web and into native mobile and desktop software development. With over 30 sessions in two days, you're sure to walk away with enough know-how and inspiration to build the next generation of open source projects.

We're offering early bird pricing on general admission tickets for a limited time and calling for speakers who want to share open source lessons, projects, or skills. Whether it's your first talk or your fiftieth, we'd love to hear from you.

Get early bird CodeConf tickets

Be a CodeConf speaker

ElectronConf July 12-13

After CodeConf, we're hosting ElectronConf, a brand new single track conference with a pre-conference workshop day. The event is dedicated to Electron, the best way to build cross-platform desktop experiences, and brings the entire Electron community together to learn best practices, see how other developers are using Electron, and find out what's next.

Share your experience with Electron as a speaker in one of the eight breakout sessions, lightning talks, or workshops.

Get early bird ElectronConf tickets

Be an ElectronConf speaker

Announcing GitHub Constellation Tokyo

GitHub Constellation June 6, 2017

6月6日(火)、日本で初となるGitHubのカンファレンス”Constellation Tokyo”を開催します! Tabloidで開催するセッションと、GitHubのチーム・パートナー様・お客様・コミュニティの方々とのネットワーキングに皆さんをお招きします。カンファレンスでは、GitHubを全社に展開した例などを含むビジネスケーススタディーを聞くことができます。また、どうすれば社内のデベロッパーエクスペリエンスを向上させることができるかのヒントを得ることもできるでしょう。GitHubの今後の方向性に関する最新情報も、当社チームのメンバーから直接お聞きください。

Constellationに先立って6月5日(月)には、SuperDeluxeでコミュニティミートアップを開催します。オープンソースやコミュニティマネジメントに関するトークを聞き、ドリンクやスナックを楽しみながらGitHubber達とお話ください。

今すぐチケットを入手するか、イベントの最新情報をメールで受け取りましょう!


On June 6, GitHub is hosting Constellation Tokyo, our first-ever conference in Japan! We'd like to invite you to a day of sessions and networking with the GitHub team and your local GitHub community.

At Constellation, you'll learn how Japanese teams are integrating GitHub across their companies to create a better developer experience. Then meet developers who contribute to open source and their communities. You'll also get the latest updates on where GitHub is headed, directly from our team.

Before the conference, we’re hosting a community meetup at SuperDeluxe on June 5. Check out talks on open source and community management and hang out with GitHubbers over drinks and snacks.

We hope you'll leave Constellation with new friends and fresh ideas on how to work better with your team—and with the open source community.

Go to githubuniverse.com/constellation to get your tickets or sign up for updates!

Satellite and Universe: better together deal

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With Satellite just a couple weeks away, we’re sharing a deal to help you experience our two biggest conferences for less. For a limited time, get 50% off Satellite and Universe tickets when you buy them together.

At Satellite, you’ll hear the latest from GitHub and software community leaders with two full days of talks, workshops, and special events in London on May 22-23. Then, reconnect with them four months later at Universe, our flagship conference in San Francisco on October 10-12, to build on the momentum.

Get the complete experience of GitHub events from products to partners to the community around them. But don’t wait! This deal is only available until May 22.

Get the Satellite and Universe ticket bundle

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See you at OSCON this week

Greetings, Austin! If you're going to OSCON this week, we'd love to meet you. We'll be at the GitHub booth in the Expo Hall on Wednesday from 10am-7pm and Thursday from 10am-4:30pm. At our booth, you'll find Open Source Alley, where open source maintainers will present and demo their projects. Throughout the week, you'll also be able to hear talks from GitHub engineers and product leaders. Check out the schedules below to learn more.

Open Source Alley

Open Source Alley is a space in the middle of the OSCON Expo Hall alongside the GitHub booth dedicated to open source projects from across the community.

GitHub Open Source Alley

Whether you're learning to code or scaling your infrastructure, using JavaScript or in love with Go–you're sure to find a project that is right up your alley. Stop by to chat with maintainers and contributors, find out more about the projects, and learn how to get involved with one of these great projects:

  • Exercism is a community helping code newbies and experienced programmers level up their programming skills. With practice problems in over 30 different languages, you can try solving programming exercises and get feedback on your solutions from the community. See a demo on Wednesday, May 10, at 10:25am and 2:30pm.

  • Operation Code empowers the military community to learn software development, enter the tech industry, and code the future. They work with more than 1,000 members through their online community, and welcome past and present Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force, and Coast Guard service members, veterans, and military spouses to apply to their programs. See a demo on Wednesday, May 10, at 10:45am and 3:25pm.

  • Salt is a new approach to automating the management and configuration of any infrastructure or application at scale. Salt can be used for data-driven orchestration, remote execution for any infrastructure, configuration management for any app stack, and more. See a demo on Wednesday, May 10, at 11:40pm and 3:45pm.

  • Hospital Run provides the most modern hospital information system possible to the least resourced environments through open source. Its intuitive interface provides a great user experience, and it's designed to allow records to be carried to remote clinics. See a demo on Wednesday, May 10, at 12:50pm and 5:55pm.

  • Botkit is a toolkit for making bot applications built to ease the process of designing and running useful, creative bots that live inside messaging platforms. Bots are applications that can send and receive messages, and in many cases, appear alongside their human counterparts as users. See a demo on Wednesday, May 10, at 1:30pm and 6:20pm.

  • Homebrew is the missing package manager for macOS. If there's a tool you need on your Mac, then you can almost certainly install it from Homebrew. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 10:20am and 2:30pm.

  • Keep a Changelog encourages open source projects to maintain a curated, chronologically ordered list of notable changes for each version of a project in a change log. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 10:40am.

  • Hugo is a fast and modern static website engine, making website creation simple again. Hugo works flexibly with many formats and is ideal for blogs, docs, portfolios, and much more. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 3:15pm.

  • Beeware is a collection of projects that can be used to help develop, debug, and launch Python software. Each tool follows the Unix philosophy of doing one thing well. Each tool can be used in isolation or they can be chained together to provide a rich set of programming tools. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 11:40am.

  • Appium is an open source test automation framework for use with native, hybrid and mobile web apps. It drives iOS, Android, and Windows apps using the WebDriver protocol. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 3:30pm.

  • Open Collective is on a mission to bring sustainable funding to open source. They offer transparent finances to over 200 open communities and have brought in over $200,000. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 12:40pm.

  • Mimic is a seamless mocking tool that runs inside your browser. It allows you to set a mock programmatically and to test out different scenarios of your application, and share your mocks across your team using your version control system. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 1:00pm and 3:45pm.

  • Zulip is an open source group chat application optimized for software development teams. It has all the features you'd expect in a modern chat application, and you can run it on your own servers and integrate it with your favorite tools. See a demo on Thursday, May 11, at 1:20pm and 4:00pm.

Thanks to StickerMule for donating stickers to many of these projects so they can give them out to visitors at Open Source Alley.

GitHub talks

You'll also be able to find GitHubbers at OSCON this week, discussing everything from APIs to open source best practices. Stop by their talks and introduce yourself! They'd be happy to chat with you.

Satellite: beyond the sessions

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With 14 sessions and two keynotes, there’s plenty to do on the first day of Satellite. But make sure to save some energy for socializing, workshops, and after parties while you’re there. Here’s a rundown of events outside of the conference talks you can experience with your Satellite ticket.

Ask GitHub

Don’t miss your chance to chat with a GitHub expert. Whether you have questions about GitHub Enterprise or Electron, GitHub team members will be at Satellite and ready to help you do your best work.

GitHub Professional Services is offering 30-minute complimentary, private consultations. Stop by Ask GitHub while you’re at Satellite to chat with them or sign up on the Satellite site under Ask GitHub.

Build your community

Connect with developers and teams who share your passions.

Wander through art installations, lounges, and food stations to meet developers working on projects like yours, and strike up a conversation with service providers who can improve your GitHub workflow.

This year, you can look forward to interactive art like an ethereal flower garden from Heroku and recharge lounges hosted by AWS and Sentry.

Celebrate with us

After the conference, walk a few blocks over to the after party at Hawker House, one of London’s biggest street markets. Reconnect with developers you met at the conference, meet session presenters, and challenge them all to a game of foosball when you’re done sampling the food stands.

Hone your skills

The second day of Satellite kicks off on May 23 with workshops—practical sessions, where you’ll build something new with experts leading the way. You’ll have your choice of workshops for €99 like “GitHub and the Internet of Things: Automate IoT Hardware”, “Electron: Start to Finish”, “Creating an InnerSource Culture”, and “Build a ChatBot”.

Space is limited and workshops are almost sold out, so make sure to register for workshops when you get your ticket.

See the full Satellite schedule

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A sneak peek at Satellite sessions

Developers, community builders, and technical leaders from around the world are gearing up to share their experiences in fourteen sessions at Satellite on May 22. Here’s a closer look at a few of the topics and presenters.

Get your Satellite ticket before they sell out to be a part of the sessions.

Satellite speakers

Get excited for Satellite

“How to avoid creating a GitHub junkyard” with Lauri Apple of Zalando

When Lauri isn’t project managing Zalando's core search engineering team, she’s spearheading the team’s InnerSource initiative. She’ll be applying her background as a former journalist and media strategist to a session about building a cohesive narrative on GitHub.

“In this talk, I'll share insights gained from ‘editing’ Zalando's GitHub repository so we can tell a better story. From 400+ projects of widely differing quality, reliability, and maintenance levels, we've winnowed our offerings to make our highest-quality work more discoverable. I'll share how we used GitHub and other tools to create guidelines, categories, and processes that bring sanity to our storytelling. If your organization is facing similar GitHub-bloat challenges, or looking for ways to manage your repos more effectively, you’ll find some help here.”

“The power of the open source community” with Kat Fukui & Mike McQuaid of GitHub

Kat is a California-based Product Designer on GitHub’s Community and Safety team building tools that empower communities. Mike is a Scotland-based Senior Software Engineer and a lead maintainer of Homebrew on the side. They’ll be teaming up to share what they’ve learned about tapping into the power of the open source community to build the most successful people-powered projects.

“In this session, we’ll talk about what makes an open source project successful, and what workflow tools we’ve been building to help communities become happier places. Whether you’re a maintainer, existing open source contributor or looking to make your first ever contribution, this session will help you make the most out of the open source community on GitHub.”

“Openness at King: our journey towards collaboration with GitHub Enterprise” with Raul Pareja and Victor Martinez

Raul and Victor are build and configuration engineers at King, based in Barcelona and the UK respectively. They bring decades of experience in building integration and delivery environments to their session about collaboration among developer teams on GitHub.

“We’re excited to discuss how we’ve used GitHub Enterprise as a sharing and collaborative tool in our current workflow. We needed to boost collaboration between departments and game studios that fit the openness of our company, and while there were challenges along the way, this session will show you how we achieved that outcome.”

“Building a tech community within an African society” with Konrad Djimeli, GitHub Campus Expert

Konrad Djimeli is a student at the University of Buea, Cameroon, an open source developer, and a GitHub Campus Expert. He’ll share his experience with building software in African communities in his session.

“I’m helping build ‘the Silicon Mountain community’ known to be Cameroon's largest growing tech community. It’s still very new and has gone through some refinement to get to where it is now. This talk provides some insight on how technology is being used to solve problems we are facing in this part of the world, and how we are overcoming challenges against all odds.”

“Demystifying the monolith” with Kir Shatrov of Shopify

Kir is a Developer Infrastructure Engineer at Shopify where he works on the core Rails platform. He shares his journey working on the oldest actively developed Rails monolith, Shopify, in his session.

“The Shopify codebase starts in 2005, contains a thousand models and 400 controllers, and remembers the very first Rails versions. Every day hundreds of developers are working on it and pushing new code into a single GitHub repo. How do you scale, not in the number of requests served per minute, but from the perspective of developer experience? How can you automate code reviews and prevent developers from shooting themselves in the foot? We’ve built tools to make developers happy working with monolith, and I’ll share our learnings at Satellite.”

Don’t miss this orbit

These are just a handful of the sessions you’ll be able to participate in at GitHub Satellite. Find more info about sessions in the Satellite schedule, and don’t forget to grab a ticket!

The GitHub Satellite schedule is here: save your seat

There's still time to register for GitHub Satellite, and now you can buy a ticket knowing more about what's in store.

See the full schedule

Here's a peek at what you'll experience in London on May 22-23.

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Hear from the GitHub team

You'll start day one with GitHub's co-founder and CEO, Chris Wanstrath. The keynote will share the latest GitHub updates, and you'll hear more from our team in later sessions. GitHub trainers, engineers, and product designers will cover everything from Git tips to running a healthy open source project.

Learn from the GitHub community

The keynote will also kick off breakout sessions hosted by leaders from our community. They'll share case studies on what they're building on GitHub and the tools they're using to improve the way their teams work together. Learn how:

  • Panna Pavangadkar of Bloomberg is changing how her team builds software
  • Kir Shatrov and the Shopify team improved the experience of hundreds of developers shipping code every day
  • Jacob Tomlinson and the team behind the largest supercomputer in Europe, the Met Office, are using open source tools to manage and analyze the rapidly growing warehouse of weather and climate data

Build something new in the workshops

If you're joining us for day two of Satellite, you'll experience hands-on workshops that bring you closer to the code and experts. In this new workshop format, you'll learn how to build a chatbot, create Electron apps from start to finish, and bring open source principles to your team.

See workshop schedule

Be inspired in London

Outside of the sessions, you'll have plenty of opportunities to connect with other attendees in our conference venue, Printworks—a 16 acre former printing factory. Chat while taking a break in one of the lounges or meet up for all-day coffee and snacks. You'll be immersed in the most exciting software community in the world, and you won't want to miss what we have planned outside the conference doors.

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After party at Hawker House. After the conference, make your way over to the after party a few blocks away at Hawker House in the Rotherhithe neighborhood. You’ll get to meet presenters, visit food stalls, and play billiards and foosball in one of London’s biggest street markets.

Workshops at The White Rabbit. The second day of Satellite kicks off in a striking studio space—a 7,000 square foot renovated Victorian archway in Shoreditch. From chatbots to IoT hardware, you’ll have your choice of things to build alongside experts leading the way.

Visit the Satellite page to see the full schedule and get your ticket—but don’t wait! This conference will sell out.

GitHub Satellite scholarships and community partners

GitHub Satellite, Printworks London, May 22-23

If you haven't grabbed your GitHub Satellite ticket yet, we're making it easier to get there. A select number of free tickets are now available through scholarships and community partners.

We're excited to make the two-day conference in London accessible to more people and enhance the experience for everyone who attends. Learn more about free tickets through one of the following channels.

Scholarship applications

We're welcoming applications for scholarships from the Travis Foundation's Diversity Tickets, which makes it easier for events to reach a more diverse audience. Applications close on Friday, April 14th, so apply now for a scholarship and spread the word!

Community partners

We're also partnering with UK-based organizations that support underrepresented communities to distribute tickets to their members:

  • codebar is a non-profit initiative that facilitates the growth of a diverse tech community by running regular programming workshops
  • blackgirl.tech is an organization that aims to create a safe space for black women to learn and explore technology
  • Code Your Future is a non-profit organization supporting refugees with the dream of becoming developers
  • Nuanced Dinners is a monthly community event for underrepresented groups in tech

If you aren't eligible for a free ticket, get 25% off your ticket with code GITHUBTURNS9 until April 19.

We can't wait to see you at Satellite!

GitHub Satellite 2017 tickets on sale

GitHub Satellite at Printworks London May 22-23

General admission tickets for GitHub Satellite 2017 are now on sale. Join us at Printworks in London May 22-23 for the regional extension of our flagship product and user conference, GitHub Universe.

This year, Satellite is inspired by the way teams work. You'll learn how to bring together the people and tools you need to build great software. Find out what we've been working on, and hear how other teams use the GitHub ecosystem to customize the way they work.

You’ll also experience digital art installations and eat delicious food while exchanging experiences with developers from all over the world.

Confirmed Speakers

  • Chris Wanstrath, Founder & CEO at GitHub
  • Kir Shatrov, Developer Infrastructure Engineer at Shopify
  • Lauri Apple, Open Source Evangelist/Agile Project Manager at Zalando
  • Jacob Tomlinson, Lead Engineer at the Met Office Informatics Lab
  • Phil Haack, Director of Engineering for Client Apps at GitHub

Workshops
Workshops cost €99 and will take place on Tuesday, May 23. Take away hands-on experience, and advance your Git and GitHub Skills with our Training Team in the following workshops: GitHub and the Internet of Things: Automate IoT Hardware, Electron: Start to Finish, Creating an InnerSource Culture, and Build a ChatBot. Space is limited.

Dark Matter
An evening event on Tuesday, May 23, Dark Matter is part mini-conference and part after-party dedicated to the intersection between technology and other domains. Your Satellite conference ticket gets you free entry to Dark Matter.

Sponsorships
Event sponsorships are all about engaging attendees in memorable ways: art installations, lounges, delectable food, and entertaining auxiliary events are just a few examples. Get in touch for more information.

Tickets
General Admission tickets cost €349 and include entry to the After Party (May 22) and Dark Matter (May 23). Workshops are not included in the general admission ticket.

Get Tickets

See you in London!

Thank you to our sponsors

GitHub GDC Party 2017

GitHub GDC Party 2017

With the the Game Developers Conference (GDC) and Virtual Reality Developers Conference (VRDC) in San Francisco next week, that means it's time for our annual GDC Party.

Please swing by GitHub HQ on Tuesday, February 28th at 7 PM, and feel free to bring your laptops and other devices, show off your games, and meet people who love games as much as you do. We'll supply the drinks, Wi-Fi, and Octocat stickers <3

Our friends from itch.io, Ludum Dare, and the Museum of Digital Art and Entertainment will be there with a collection of fun party games - old school classics, weekend game jam entries, and the latest indie games. We may have one or two surprises too…

Please note: GDC/VRDC badges or proof of registration are required for entry. All ages welcome, but please bring a valid photo ID if you're over 21 and would like to drink. We recommend showing up early to avoid disappointment (we certainly wouldn't be the first GDC party to reach capacity quickly).

Can't make it to the party? We'd still love to meet you. Please swing by booth #2210 in the Expo Hall Wednesday through Friday and say hi!

Git Merge 2017 recap

This week more than 350 Git enthusiasts convened in Brussels for Git Merge 2017, and hundreds more tuned in from around the world via live stream. The conference brought together Git contributors, source control teams, and end-users from around the world for two days of sessions, training, and conversation. All proceeds from ticket sales were donated to the Software Freedom Conservancy in acknowledgement of the excellent work they do to improve and defend free and open source software.

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Program highlights

Git Merge stands apart as a conference for the Git community at large, promoting goodwill and dialogue between companies that have a vested interest in the success and progression of Git as a technology and that employ Git core contributors.

Education is a key component of the event—Git Merge kicked off with a full day of workshops for developers of all skill levels led by experts from GitHub and Praqma.

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On day two, Software Freedom Conservancy’s Executive Director, Karen Sandler, opened the day with a thoughtful keynote about how free and accessible software is the key to building the future. Speakers from Autodesk, Atlassian, MIT, Microsoft and more took the stage over the course of the day to discuss the future of Git. Among the themes discussed were scaling, extensions, aliasing, and education.

Diversity and inclusion

Ten percent of total conference tickets were allocated for distribution to the Travis Foundation, Rails Girls Brussels and Operation Code. Twenty-five students received discount codes and complimentary tickets.

The venue was outfitted with gender-neutral restrooms and a nursing room.

Thank you

Git Merge wouldn't be possible without the support of our sponsors, who come together to support the Software Freedom Conservancy, improve and develop Git, and to make this event happen year after year.

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Recordings of the workshops and sessions will be available in the coming weeks. Git Merge will return in 2018, so keep an eye on Twitter for announcements about dates and locations.

Join us for GitHub Satellite 2017: May 22-23 in London (UK)

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Early bird ticket sales and CFP now open

GitHub Satellite is the European edition of our flagship user and product conference, GitHub Universe. Satellite features two keynotes from GitHub leadership and fourteen breakout sessions from all over the GitHub community. We’ll spend an intensive day in breakout sessions featuring maintainers of open source projects, engineering teams facing unique challenges, and leaders using software to change the way their businesses work.

Register before March 7 to save 100 Euro.

Get Tickets >

Interested in speaking at Satellite?

Our call for proposals is open now until March 3. Don’t miss your chance to share your story with more than 600 GitHub users.

Submit a Proposal >

2016 Satellite

For information on sponsorship opportunities please email events@github.com.

Git Merge scholarships and more

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Brussels will play host to Git Merge 2017 in February, and planning is already well underway.

We're building Git Merge to be welcoming to and supportive of everyone in the vibrant Git community. To this end, 100% of conference proceeds will once again go to the Software Freedom Conservancy to protect and further FLOSS projects. We are also pleased to offer scholarships as part of our commitment to accessibility and inclusion at GitHub events and to bring Git Merge to a wider audience.

The Git Merge scholarships consist of a number of discounted student tickets and complimentary tickets for people from currently underrepresented groups in tech. We reserve 10% of tickets to all of our events for scholarships and distribute them through partner organizations in the area serving technologists from underrepresented groups. The Git Merge 2017 partners are Rails Girls Belgium, part of the global Rails Girls movement for women in tech, and Operation Code which supports military veterans and their families learning to code.

Finally, for the first time, we are taking individual applications for scholarship tickets through the Travis Foundation's Diversity Tickets program which makes it easier for events of any size anywhere in the world to reach a more diverse audience. Applications close on January 13th, so there's still time to apply and spread the word!

Save the date: GitHub Universe 2017

GitHub Universe September 2016

GitHub Universe returns in 2017, and we already have some surprises in store for you. Mark your calendars for October 10-12, 2017 at Pier 70 in San Francisco.

Super Early Bird Tickets available now

We're releasing a limited amount of tickets at a super early bird price of $199 USD. There are only 100 tickets available, so make sure to snag yours before they run out.

Audience at GitHub Universe

GitHub Universe is the three-day event for people making the future of software. Immerse yourself in creativity and curiosity with the largest software community in the world. The event is packed with advanced training, deep dives on open source projects, keynotes from industry experts, and a look into successful software teams.

Check out the videos from 2016 at githubuniverse.com.

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