February 26, Berlin
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Program Committee

Matthias
Fischmann
Wire

17 years ago, while completing his diploma at the Max Planck institute for Computer Science, Matthias Fischmann implemented his thesis in Haskell and has never looked back from functional programming since. His more recent projects in Haskell include an interactive platform for schools and a platform for identity management. He received his doctorate from Berlin's Humboldt-Universität. These days, he works for Wire as a software architect.

Matthias
Neubauer
SICK AG

Matthias Neubauer works as a software architekt with SICK AG in Waldkirch (Breisgau), Germany. His focus is the co-design of hard- and software for new vision sensors. He researched new paradigms in web programming and the development of various testing tools and uses aspects of funktional programming in C++ environments.

Michael
Sperber
Active Group GmbH

Michael Sperber is the C*O of Active Group GmbH. He has been working with functional programming to teach, research, and develop for the past 20 years and has authored several publications on the matter. He is a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Functional Programming and the steering committee of the international Workshop on Functional Art, Music, Modeling and Design (FARM). He is a co-author of the blogs funktionale-programmierung.de.

Stefan
Wehr
Hochschule Offenburg

Stefan Wehr is a professor for Programming, Algorithms and Data structure with Hochschule Offenburg.

Prior to that, he designed and developed complex applications and distributed systems for medilyse GmbH. Most of these were implemented in Haskell. For his doctoral dissertation, he worked on the integration of object-oriented and functional programming languages.

Nicole Rauch is a freelance software engineer and software engineering coach with a background in compiler building and formal verification methods. Her focus is on specification by example and domain-driven design as well as the modernisation of legacy code applications. Her secret love is functional programming. She is part of several teams hosting developer conferences and was among the folks who initiated Softwerkskammer, a German language community for software craftsmanship, and a regional common interest group in Karlsruhe. During her free time, she works on the web platform for Softwerkskammer, implemented in node.js.

 

Scientific advisory board

Annette
Bieniusa
TU Kaiserslautern

Annette Bieniusa read mathematics, Latin and computer science in Saarbrücken, Leeds and Freiburg. She completed her doctorate on Software Transactional Memory in Freiburg (2011) and postdoctoral studies with INRIA (Paris) and is now working as an Akademische Rätin (teaching professor) for TU Kaiserslautern. Her research focusses on the semantics of distributed and concurrent systems, especially (geo-)replication, synchronisation and concepts for programming languages.

Torsten Grust ist a professor for Computer Science with Universität Tübingen, and has been chair for data base systems since 2008. Prior to his engagement in Tübingen, Torsten Grust was a professor for data base systems with TU München and TU Clausthal. Prof. Grust's research is focussed on the design, translation, optimization and analysis of various data base languages. Much of his work falls in the liminal space between data base systems and programming language technology. His department is developing technologies to transform relational data base systems into scalable runtime environments, even when faced with non-relational queries or programming languages.

Peter
Thiemann
Universität Freiburg

Peter Thiemann is a professor of computer science with Universität Freiburg, where he leads the research group for programming languages. He is a leading expert on functional programming, partiall analysis, domain-specific languages and various other areas of software techonology. His current area of research is in statistical and dynamic methods of analysis for JavaScript.