Inclusivity Statement
adapted from the Open Source Feels Diversity Statement
Our goal is that all events we, the GOTO team, organize, attend or otherwise participate in are accessible, safe and inclusive for all.
We welcome you.
We welcome people of any gender identity or expression, race, ethnicity, size, nationality, sexual orientation, ability level, neurotype, religion, elder status, family structure, culture, subculture, identity, and self-identification.
We welcome people wearing a baby sling, hijab, a kippah, leather, piercings, a pentacle, a rainbow, a rosary, tattoos, virtual reality devices or whatever.
We believe it’s possible for people of all viewpoints and persuasions to come together and learn from each other. We believe amazing things happen when folks with different perspectives approach other to create an open and understanding conversation. We believe in the broad spectrum of individual and collective experience and in the inherent dignity of all people.
We believe neurodiversity is a feature, not a bug. We believe in being inclusive, welcoming, and supportive of anyone who comes to us with good faith and the desire to build a community. We strive to make everyone feel welcome and know that their contribution is important because diversity makes the tech community stronger and more productive.
We believe accessibility for people with disabilities is a priority, not an afterthought. We will make sure that all of our events are well accessible to people with physical disabilities. We are aware that accessibility issues are diverse. If you are in need of an assistant to attend an event, we will provide a complimentary ticket. Please contact us with any comments, questions or requests and we will promptly reply.
We have enough experience to know that we won’t get any of this perfect but we have enough hope, energy, and idealism to want to learn how to improve. We may not be able to satisfy everyone, but we promise that if we get it wrong, we will listen to your feedback carefully and respectfully, and we will do our best to make good on our mistakes.
We protect our creativity and our diversity through our Code of Conduct.
We recognize that inclusivity is not as simple as words on a page (or website). We believe that together, we can make GOTO conferences, GOTO Nights and all other events in our community a warm and welcoming place for everyone.
*To contact us directly with any questions, comments, concerns or requests for additional information, please email our GOTO Chicago 2020 Conference Producer Niley Barros Spengler: nab@trifork.com*
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Lunch Keynote
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How to Hack OAuth
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A Guided Tour at D-Wave
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Next-Generation Programming: Rust and Elm
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Data Science for Everyone with ISLE: Leveraging Web Technologies to Increase Data Acumen
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Data Science and Expertise: COVID-19
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Small is the New Big: Designing Compact Deep Learning Models
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Beyond Microservices: Streams, State and Scalability
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Practical Quantum Computing with D-Wave
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Racing Robocars
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Refactoring Trust on Your Team
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Why GraphQL Between Microservices Is the Worst Idea and the Best Idea at the Same Time
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Kotlin Flows and Channels for Android
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Practical End-to-End Container Security at Scale
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This is Your Captain Speaking…” - Leading through Turbulence with Compassion and Confidence
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SaaS Deep Dive: Designing and Building Multi-Tenant Solutions
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You Really Don't Need All That Javascript, I Promise
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High Velocity Development of Microservices
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Git from the Ground Up
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Moving Fast at Scale
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2FA in 2020 and Beyond
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OAuth and OpenID Connect in Plain English
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Visualizing Cloud Systems
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Maximizing Java Application Performance with GraalVM
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Server Driven UI on Mobile
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John Deere Operations Center Development Journey & Ecosystems
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No Return: Beyond Transactions in Code and Life
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Investigation and Creation of Software
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HTML: How to Make Loveliness
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Ray: A System for Distributed Applications
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Keys to Building Machine Learning Systems
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Observability for Data Pipelines: Monitoring, Alerting, and Tracing Lineage
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#DigitalNudge - The Hidden Forces that Shape our Digital Decisions
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Application Security at High Velocity
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Why Are Distributed Systems so Hard?
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Increase App Confidence using CI/CD and Infrastructure as Code
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Bootiful GraphQL with Kotlin
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Leveraging Serverless in Full-stack Development
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I Can Sell You Observability, But You Can't Buy It
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From Zero to A11Y: Building an Accessibility Culture at Optimizely
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Microservices Out In the Wild
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Batching vs. Streaming - John Deere's Journey to Scale & Process Millions of Measurements a Second
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Advanced Feature Flagging: It's All About The Data