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Flash Camp Atlanta 2009
Recently, Flash Camp Atlanta was announced, and it will happen on August 28th at the Georgia World Congress Center in downtown Atlanta. This event is shaping up to be an amazing one!
New To The Flash Platform?
One of the great new features of this event will be the introductory session that is specifically designed for people new to the Flash Platform. This session will give an introduction to Flex, AIR, and some core concepts of the platform. This session will give anyone new to the platform the information that they will need to learn from the rest of the great sessions offered at this event.
Amazing Speaker Lineup
This event has an amazing lineup of speakers! This list includes Jesse Warden, Ben Stucki, Christian Saylor, Carl Smith, Greg Wilson, Douglas Knudsen, Leif Wells, and me (David Tucker). While the sessions have not yet been announced, they will certainly cover some great development and UX topics.
Group Discount
There is a special rate when you purchase 2 or more tickets at a time (only $34.95 per ticket). We hope that many organizations will bring their entire development team (designers and developers) to learn how they can collaborate on developing the next generation of Rich Internet Applications.





Facebook Application Development
glad to see some Flash Platform events trickling down to the southeast. Already purchased my ticket.
It is good to see something in the Southeast. I wish more conferences would consider Atlanta as well. Not everyone can afford to jet off to Boston, Chicago, San Francisco and other expensive far away locales.
I agree, I like to think that Atlanta is a fairly happening place. It's very surprising to me that there are so few Flash events here. I look forward this and hopefully future events.
Well, Atlanta is Atlanta but at least it's somewhat central for the Southeast. E3 used to be held in Atlanta years ago before LA locked them into a permanent contract. One of the rumored reasons was that people were complaining over the heat and humidity of which most of the attendees were not used to. My suggested solution was to not hold the conference in the summer! Duh.