Our annual interview with the 2012 Duke Choice Award Winners recorded live at the JavaOne 2012. 
  
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   Show Notes 
  Events 
   
    Oct 13, Devoxx 4 Kids Nederlands 
    Oct 15-17, JAX London 
    Oct 20, Devoxx 4 Kids Français 
    Oct 22-23, Freescale Technology Forum - Japan, Tokyo 
    Oct 30-Nov 1, Arm TechCon, Santa Clara 
    Oct 31, JFall, Netherlands 
    Nov 2-3, JMagreb, Morocco 
    Nov 13-17, Devoxx, Belgium 
    
  Feature Interview 
  Duke Choice Award Winners 2012 - Show Presentation 
  London Java CommunityThe
 second user group receiving a Duke’s Choice Award this year, the London
 Java Community (LJC) and its users have been active in the OpenJDK, the
 Java Community Process (JCP) and other efforts within the global Java 
community. 
  Student Nokia Developer GroupThis
 year’s student winner, Ram Kashyap, is the founder and president of the
 Nokia Student Network, and was profiled in the “The New Java 
Developers” feature in the March/April 2012 issue of Java Magazine. Since then, Ram has maintained a hectic pace, graduating from the People’s
 Education Society Institute of Technology in Bangalore, India, while 
working on a Java mobile startup and training students on Java ME. 
  Jelastic, Inc.Moving
 existing Java applications to the cloud can be a daunting task, but 
startup Jelastic, Inc. offers the first all-Java platform-as-a-service 
(PaaS) that enables existing Java applications to be deployed in the 
cloud without code changes or lock-in. 
  NATOThe
 first-ever Community Choice Award goes to the MASE Integrated Console 
Environment (MICE) in use at NATO. Built in Java on the NetBeans 
platform, MICE provides a high-performance visualization environment for
 conducting air defense and battle-space operations. 
  DuchessRather
 than focus on a specific geographic area like most Java User Groups 
(JUGs), Duchess fosters the participation of women in the Java community
 worldwide. The group has more than 500 members in 60 countries, and 
provides a platform through which women can connect with each other and 
get involved in all aspects of the Java community. 
  AgroSense ProjectImproving
 farming methods to feed a hungry world is the goal of AgroSense, an 
open source farm information management system built in Java and the 
NetBeans platform. AgroSense enables farmers, agribusinesses, suppliers 
and others to develop modular applications that will easily exchange 
information through a common underlying NetBeans framework. 
  Apache Software Foundation Hadoop ProjectThe
 Apache Software Foundation’s Hadoop project, written in Java, provides a
 framework for distributed processing of big data sets across clusters 
of computers, ranging from a few servers to thousands of machines. This 
harnessing of large data pools allows organizations to better understand
 and improve their business. 
  Parleys.comE-learning
 specialist Parleys.com, based in Brussels, Belgium, uses Java 
technologies to bring online classes and full IT conferences to 
desktops, laptops, tablets and mobile devices. Parleys.com has hosted 
more than 1,700 conferences—including Devoxx and JavaOne—for more than 
800,000 unique visitors. 
  Winners not presenting at JavaOne 2012 Duke Choice Awards BOF 
  Liquid RoboticsRobotics
 – Liquid Robotics is an ocean data services provider whose Wave Glider 
technology collects information from the world’s oceans for application 
in government, science and commercial applications. The organization 
features the “father of Java” James Gosling as its chief software 
architect.United Nations High Commissioner for RefugeesThe
 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is on the front 
lines of crises around the world, from civil wars to natural disasters. 
To help facilitate its mission of humanitarian relief, the UNHCR has 
developed a light-client Java application on the NetBeans platform. The 
Level One registration tool enables the UNHCR to collect information on 
the number of refugees and their water, food, housing, health, and other
 needs in the field, and combines that with geocoding information from 
various sources. This enables the UNHCR to deliver the appropriate kind 
and amount of assistance where it is needed.