Summit 2011 Wrap Up

It's a wrap! Atlassian Summit 2011 is over, the goat has gone home to graze and the Atlassian Summit sherpas drank one last beer before descending the mountain of a very successful conference (yes, we will stretch this metaphor as long as possible). First of all, big thanks to everyone who made this event fantastic - our 24 sponsors and all 550 guests who came from Russia and New Zealand all all points betwixt. There were so many big announcements at Summit. For those who didn't catch them

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In Part 1 and Part 2 of this series, we were introduced to Unified AppLinks, saw how to consume AppLinks as a plugin, and saw how to extend AppLinks to create our own custom application types and entity types to integrate with. In this final blog post we will see what's involved in implementing a custom authentication provider, and how to add additional configuration screens for AppLinks. State of Play ---------------- At the time of writing, Unified AppLinks supports three authentication

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Summit 2011: Day 3

The sun has set on another Atlassian Summit. And we had a rocking good time. It wasn't just the song-and-dance number this morning ("Oh whoa whoa whoa, Summit Nights, had me a blast"), Darth Vader's deft control of the Atlassian Wallboards, the Oprah moment when attendees found a free pass to Atlassian University, the dozens of talks, lightning talks, and speakers from around the world. It was also the stellar turnout by customers, partners and sponsors who found the extra energy reserves to

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One of our favourite times at Atlassian as developers is ShipIt. 24 hours to hack up some awesome project, demo it to the rest of the company, and vote on whose is best. 24 hours isn't a lot of time, which is why I've emphasised the hack part of that statement. The demo is held together loosely by strings of hard coded configuration, and carefully dodges crucial but yet to be implemented features. An example of something that never gets implemented is a configuration screen for entering the details

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San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) June 7, 2011 - At the annual Atlassian Summit 2011 conference today, Atlassian announced new versions of FishEye and Crucible. FishEye 2.6, a source code collaboration tool, and Crucible 2.6, a peer code review application, are now available to download. FishEye's new Commit Graph feature gives development teams a new and unprecedented view into their projects. Atlassian FishEye and Crucible are used by thousands of companies in dozens of countries across Fortune 1000,

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A new way to visualize your repository, a faster way to search your source code and reviews and full support for Oracle and SQL Server is just some of the feature goodness offered in FishEye 2.6 and Crucible 2.6. What's new in FishEye? Commit Graph FishEye 2.6 introduces a new way to visualize your repositories and commits with a graphical representation of the source - the Commit Graph. FishEye keeps you up-to-date on current activity in your source through Activity Streams and RSS - now

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