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16-17 June, 2026
Mumbai, India
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Note: The schedule is subject to change.

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IMPORTANT NOTE: Timing of sessions and room locations are subject to change.


Venue: Lotus 2 (Third Floor) clear filter
Tuesday, June 16
 

2:00pm IST

Building a Zero-Copy DSP Offload Framework in Linux Using RPMsg - Vishnu Pratap Singh & Paresh Bhagat, Texas Instruments
Tuesday June 16, 2026 2:00pm - 2:40pm IST
Modern embedded audio devices increasingly run mainline Linux, but achieving deterministic low-latency multi-channel audio processing remains a challenge. While heterogeneous SoCs include DSP accelerators capable of handling signal processing workloads efficiently, integrating these accelerators into a standard Linux audio stack without proprietary middleware is non-trivial.
This talk presents a practical, upstream-friendly approach to building a zero-copy DSP offload framework using mainline Linux components such as remoteproc, rpmsg, and ALSA. Instead of relying on custom kernel patches or vendor-specific frameworks, the solution leverages DMA-backed shared memory and rpmsg-based signaling to enable efficient inter-processor communication between ARM application cores and a DSP.
A key focus of this session is eliminating redundant memory copies across kernel and user space boundaries. By designing a ping-pong buffer architecture with shared memory mapping and pointer-based synchronization, we achieved deterministic real-time streaming with significantly reduced CPU utilization and improved latency characteristics.
Speakers
avatar for Vishnu Pratap Singh

Vishnu Pratap Singh

Engineering Leader, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Vishnu Pratap Singh is an embedded systems expert and engineering leader with nearly two decades of experience in Linux development, BSP, and Linux based product engineering for communication devices, Satellite terminals, smart devices, IoT, and pro-audio. He is currently driving... Read More →
avatar for Paresh Bhagat

Paresh Bhagat

Embedded Software Engineer, Texas Instruments India
I am an Embedded Software Engineer at Texas Instruments with nearly 3 years of experience in developing and integrating solutions for embedded Linux systems. My experience includes Hypervisor such as Jailhouse, embedded Linux build systems like Buildroot and Yocto, and Linux audio... Read More →
Tuesday June 16, 2026 2:00pm - 2:40pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded
  • Audience Experience Level Any

2:50pm IST

DTS 101: From Roots To Trees, Aka Devicetree for Beginners - Krzysztof Kozlowski, Qualcomm
Tuesday June 16, 2026 2:50pm - 3:30pm IST
Practical guide to writing Devicetree sources (DTS) and bindings for the Linux kernel. Jump in if you want to know:
1. What compatibility means between devices and how to express it in DTS.
2. What can be in DTS and what cannot.
3. Fastest way to upstream your DTS (no need for 10 iterations!).
4. Validate your DTS and live error-free ever after.

The talk will focus on Devicetree (DTS and bindings) in the context of Linux kernel, which is also applicable to several other projects like U-boot.
Speakers
avatar for Krzysztof Kozlowski

Krzysztof Kozlowski

Linux Kernel Maintainer, Qualcomm
Krzysztof Kozlowski is an active Linux Kernel developer, working currently for Qualcomm. Krzysztof (co-)maintains several upstream kernel subsystems: the SoC subsystem (formerly arm-soc), Devicetree bindings, Memory controller drivers and Samsung Exynos SoC ARM/ARM64 architecture... Read More →
Tuesday June 16, 2026 2:50pm - 3:30pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded

3:40pm IST

Hardening IoMT Medical Devices: Defense‑in‑Depth on Yocto‑Based Embedded Linux - Abraham Gogulamudi, GEHealthcare
Tuesday June 16, 2026 3:40pm - 4:20pm IST
Connected medical devices (IoMT) increasingly depend on Yocto‑based Embedded Linux platforms to perform critical, patient‑impacting functions. As cyberattacks on healthcare rise, securing these devices is now central to patient safety, regulatory compliance, and lifecycle quality. This session provides a practical, defense‑in‑depth blueprint for hardening IoMT devices—starting from secure boot and measured trust to OS‑level hardening, system integrity, secure OTA updates, sandboxing, runtime protection, and zero‑trust device‑to‑cloud communication.
We will map real‑world cyber trends to specific embedded mitigations and align them with global regulatory expectations for medical devices. The session also demonstrates how open‑source tools within the Yocto ecosystem can enforce reproducible security controls, generate SBOMs, and support automated vulnerability triage throughout the device lifecycle.
Attendees will gain engineering‑ready patterns to build secure, maintainable Linux‑based devices—applicable not only in healthcare, but also industrial IoT, automotive, and safety‑critical embedded domains.
Speakers
avatar for Abraham Gogulamudi

Abraham Gogulamudi

Abraham Gogulamudi, GEHealthcare
Abraham Gogulamudi is a Senior Engineering Manager at GE HealthCare with 19+ years of experience in Embedded Linux, Yocto, and cybersecurity for regulated medical devices. He leads the PCS medOS platform, driving secure‑by‑design architectures, SBOM/CVE automation, and lifecycle... Read More →
Tuesday June 16, 2026 3:40pm - 4:20pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded
  • Audience Experience Level Any

4:50pm IST

Downstream Zephyr RTOS Release Management - Keeping up With Upstream Pace - Parthiban N, Linumiz
Tuesday June 16, 2026 4:50pm - 5:30pm IST
Zephyr is officially 10 years old and many silicon manufacturers are moving towards it as a de-facto RTOS. With over 3000+ contributors and 15,000+ commits per release, Zephyr is one of the fastest moving open source RTOS projects today.
Linumiz is a software partner with silicon manufacturers like Infineon and Texas Instruments, maintaining open source downstream Zephyr releases for their customers. This involves backporting bug fixes, security fixes, rebasing, and moving to new release cycles to keep up with Zephyr's upstream development pace.
In this talk, I will walk through how we manage these downstream releases and cope with upstream pace - what works, what doesn't, and what product developers should keep in mind when building long-term products on Zephyr.
Speakers
avatar for Parthiban

Parthiban

Embedded Software Engineer, Linumiz
With over 14 years of experience in software engineering, Parthiban founded Linumiz, a company that provides domain-neutral software services for U-Boot, Linux, and Zephyr, ranging from board bringup, board supported package, customization, device drivers, to over the air software... Read More →
Tuesday June 16, 2026 4:50pm - 5:30pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Zephyr

5:40pm IST

Zephyr at 10: The Open RTOS Powering India's IoT Boom - Hilary Carter, The Linux Foundation
Tuesday June 16, 2026 5:40pm - 6:20pm IST
Ten years ago, the Zephyr Project set out to build an open, scalable real-time operating system for connected and resource-constrained devices. Today, Zephyr powers a rapidly growing ecosystem spanning IoT, industrial systems, automotive platforms, and edge computing.

This session celebrates Zephyr’s first decade and explores what has driven its success—from technical architecture and open governance to a vibrant global contributor community. Drawing on insights from a new Linux Foundation Research study, the discussion will highlight key milestones, ecosystem growth, and the forces shaping Zephyr’s future.

In this session, we’ll explore:

-The Zephyr features that are most valued
-How open collaboration accelerates RTOS innovation
-Growth of the global Zephyr developer ecosystem
-Real-world Zephyr practitioner use cases & insights

Key questions:
-How is Zephyr being used across embedded products?
-What are the defining features of Zephyr that have contributed to its adoption?
-What are the attributes of the Zephyr community that contribute to the project's growth and health?
Speakers
avatar for Hilary Carter

Hilary Carter

SVP Research, The Linux Foundation
Hilary Carter is a writer, researcher, and team leader, producing engaging, decision-useful insights that broaden the understanding of open source and emerging technologies and their impact on business, government, and society. She has contributed to books and numerous research reports... Read More →
Tuesday June 16, 2026 5:40pm - 6:20pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Zephyr

6:30pm IST

Lightning Talk: If Zephyr Wants To Power AI Cameras, What Must Change? - Rutvij Trivedi, Silicon Signals Pvt. Ltd.
Tuesday June 16, 2026 6:30pm - 6:45pm IST
Cameras are no longer just for pictures, they are now real-time data pipelines that send information to ISPs, NPUs, and control logic. This is because edge AI is becoming a most wanted vision systems. Zephyr is good at deterministic embedded control, but AI-driven camera workloads need new architectural features like zero-copy buffer sharing, accelerator coordination, bounded latency, metadata synchronization, and controlled backpressure.

This talks about what needs to change in Zephyr's camera and driver architecture to make AI vision work in the real world. Based on our experience with Linux media pipelines and setting up embedded cameras, we look at where traditional RTOS-style camera models fail and what simple abstractions are needed to make them work without adding too much complexity.

The goal is not to make Linux features equal, but to make the architecture better. This includes designing pipelines, structuring buffer ownership, making streaming states more predictable, and making things easier to see. The goal is to keep Zephyr lightweight while also allowing robotics, industrial, and mission-critical systems to work with the next generation of AI cameras.
Speakers
avatar for Rutvij Trivedi

Rutvij Trivedi

Co-Founder & M.D., Silicon Signals Pvt. Ltd.
Rutvij, MD of Silicon Signals, has 12 years in Embedded Linux, board bring-up, product engineering, and software development. He built a team at Silicon Signals contributing to open source (Linux kernel, ZephyrOS, AOSP, U-boot, LineageOS). His product development experience spans... Read More →
Tuesday June 16, 2026 6:30pm - 6:45pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Zephyr

6:55pm IST

Lightning Talk: Strengthening Zephyr’s Camera Framework: Architecture Review and Enhancements - Elgin Perumbilly & Ankit Siddhapura, Silicon Signals Pvt LTD
Tuesday June 16, 2026 6:55pm - 7:10pm IST
This session compares how camera support is built in the Zephyr Project and in the Linux kernel camera subsystem.

Zephyr focuses on real-time behavior, low memory usage, and simple system design, making it suitable for small, low-power vision devices. Linux, through frameworks such as Video4Linux2 and the Media Controller subsystem, provides a more structured and scalable approach capable of handling complex camera pipelines, multiple cameras, and advanced processing.

The session examines architectural trade offs between the two camera subsystems, comparing their design approaches and highlighting differences in driver structure, pipeline design, and overall system integration. It also explores how Zephyr’s camera architecture can evolve to support more advanced and scalable vision needs, moving closer to Linux capabilities.
Speakers
avatar for Elgin Perumbilly

Elgin Perumbilly

Embedded Software Engineer, Silicon Signals Pvt LTD
Embedded Software Engineer at Silicon Signals Pvt. Ltd

Active contributor to Linux and Zephyr ecosystems, camera driver maintainer in Linux.

Embedded Software Engineer specializing in Linux and Zephyr camera stacks, with hands-on experience on NXP and Qualcomm platforms



... Read More →
avatar for Ankit Siddhapura

Ankit Siddhapura

Technical Lead, Silicon Signals Pvt. Ltd
Ankit Siddhapura is a Technical lead in embedded software at Silicon Signals pvt ltd.

A dedicated contributor to the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) and the Android custom ROM.

Embedded Software Engineer with expertise in Android/Linux BSP, AOSP camera stack, and IoT solutions. Experienced with Qualcomm, NXP, and Amlogic platforms, camera HAL, and wireless protocols like Wi-Fi, Zigbee, and LoRaWAN



... Read More →
Tuesday June 16, 2026 6:55pm - 7:10pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Zephyr
 
Wednesday, June 17
 

12:00pm IST

ESim – Democratizing Electronic Design Automation Through Open Source - Sumanto Kar & Shanthi Priya, FOSSEE, IIT Bombay
Wednesday June 17, 2026 12:00pm - 12:40pm IST
Linux has long been the backbone of open innovation in computing, yet access to fully open, Linux-native Electronic Design Automation (EDA) workflows remains limited due to proprietary tools, restrictive licenses, and platform lock-in. eSim(https://esim.fossee.in) is an open-source EDA platform developed under the FOSSEE (Free/Libre and Open Source Software for Education) project at IIT Bombay, designed to bring complete circuit design and simulation workflows to the Linux ecosystem.

This talk presents eSim as a Linux-first, fully open-source EDA solution that integrates schematic capture, SPICE-based simulation, PCB design workflows, and support for open PDKs using established open-source tools and standards. Built to run natively on Linux distributions, eSim enables students, educators, and researchers to design and simulate electronic circuits without relying on proprietary software, aligning closely with Linux principles of transparency, and freedom.

The session will showcase real-world adoption of eSim across academic institutions and future directions toward scalable, reproducible, and community-driven open hardware design.
Speakers
avatar for Sumanto Kar

Sumanto Kar

Assistant Project Manager, FOSSEE, IIT Bombay
Sumanto Kar did his M.Tech in Industrial Engineering & Operations Research, IIT Bombay and B.E. in Electronics Engineering from Mumbai University. His interests lie in contributing to the open-source EDA tools. He is actively involved with the FOSSEE project, contributing to the development... Read More →
avatar for Shanthi Priya

Shanthi Priya

Research Assistant, FOSSEE, IIT BOMBAY
Research Assistant at the eSim FOSSEE project, IIT Bombay, engaged in simulation workflow development, digital electronics analysis, and technical evaluation using open-source electronic design tool
Wednesday June 17, 2026 12:00pm - 12:40pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded
  • Audience Experience Level Any

12:50pm IST

Don’t Trash It, Hack It: Reverse Engineering Secrets & Re-purposing ISP Routers - Dheeraj Reddy Jonnalagadda, Pixxel
Wednesday June 17, 2026 12:50pm - 1:30pm IST
We trust ISP-provided routers with authentication, firmware updates, and remote management. Yet, many remain opaque black boxes running outdated, poorly audited software built on open source tools.
In this session, we open that box.
Using a commercially deployed embedded Linux router, I will demonstrate a practical workflow for analyzing locked-down firmware and reclaiming control with open source tools.

First, the Security Lesson: We will walk through firmware extraction and forensic analysis in a structured way. This includes inspecting the flash storage, reverse engineering vendor binaries to uncover hardcoded passwords, and manipulating U-Boot to alter the boot process to gain root access. The focus throughout is understanding how embedded Linux systems are built and identifying where security assumptions fail.

Second, the Practical Upgrade: With root access secured, we move beyond analysis to utility. We will transform the router into a network-wide ad blocker using lightweight tools like dnsmasq, demonstrating how open source enables device longevity and architectural control.
This session is not about breaking devices; it is about understanding and reclaiming them.
Speakers
avatar for Dheeraj Reddy Jonnalagadda

Dheeraj Reddy Jonnalagadda

Senior Flight Software Engineer, Pixxel
Embedded software engineer who started close to the metal — close enough to smell the solder fumes. Moved to Embedded Linux when I got bored of microcontrollers, and never looked back, mostly because there's always another router to liberate. I believe hardware ownership is non-negotiable... Read More →
Wednesday June 17, 2026 12:50pm - 1:30pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded
  • Audience Experience Level Any

1:40pm IST

Detecting and Defusing the Ticking Time Bomb: Understanding CVEs and Upstreaming in Yocto - Siddharth Doshi, Montavista Software LLC
Wednesday June 17, 2026 1:40pm - 2:20pm IST
Unpatched vulnerabilities don't break builds, but can compromise entire infrastructures. A single neglected CVE in an embedded device can be a ticking time bomb, potentially causing millions in damages. But in an ocean of CVE's known vulnerabilities, how do you achieve high detection rates without drowning in false positives?

This session touch bases the lifecycle of a CVE, their exploitability, including how CVSS scores are calculated. It then addresses "translation problem"-explaining why different OS ecosystems label and backport CVEs differently, often confusing automated scanners.

Next, the talk deep-dives into practical solutions, demonstrating how to use SBOMs to map dependencies and implement a semi-automated, custom scanning strategy on top of it to maximize threat detection.

Finally, it focuses on practical application within the Yocto Project. The session explores "sustainability loop," sharing tips for applying security patches and version upgrades without breaking the build and dicusses why hoarding local patches creates crushing technical debt, and why pushing fixes upstream is the most strategic, secure choice for both their organization and open-source community.
Speakers
avatar for Siddharth Doshi

Siddharth Doshi

Senior Software Engineer, Montavista Software LLC
Open source enthusiast and 9 years of experience in various rpm and debian based OS specifically in userspace and toolchain domain with a some basic Kernel knowledge. An active Yocto contributor and have been following and integrating various LF projects for 7 years. Also, led a team... Read More →
Wednesday June 17, 2026 1:40pm - 2:20pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded

3:35pm IST

Generic BootLoader on Android Platforms - Naina Mehta, Qualcomm India Private Limited
Wednesday June 17, 2026 3:35pm - 4:15pm IST
Bootloaders are critical foundation of Android boot process, responsible for everything from hardware initialization to kernel handoff. However, the current landscape is heavily fragmented, with each silicon vendor and OEM maintaining different bootloader implementations. This diversity leads to duplication of effort, slower security patching, and complex barriers to upgrading the Android boot framework across the ecosystem.
To address these challenges, Google has introduced Generic BootLoader (GBL) - a unified, Rust-based bootloader developed within the Android Open Source Project (AOSP). Designed as a UEFI application, GBL standardizes the boot flow across x86, ARM64, and RISC-V architectures and can be deployed across various existing firmware stacks, including U-Boot, EDK2, and LittleKernel.
This session provides a deep dive into GBL’s architecture. We will explore how GBL utilizes standard upstream UEFI protocols and how it interfaces to select appropriate Device Trees (DT), apply DT fixups, and prepare prepare kernel data (bootconfig/command-line). We will also examine GBL-specific protocols handling Android requirements like A/B slots, Verified Boot (AVB), and Fastboot.
Speakers
avatar for Naina Mehta

Naina Mehta

Lead Engineer, Senior, Qualcomm India Private Limited
Linux Kernel engineer primarily supporting core kernel frameworks and BootLoader for Android on Qualcomm Snapdragon Chipsets.
Wednesday June 17, 2026 3:35pm - 4:15pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded

4:25pm IST

A Practical Perfetto Introduction for AOSP and Linux Developers - Stefan Lengfeld, inovex GmbH
Wednesday June 17, 2026 4:25pm - 5:05pm IST
Perfetto is a tracing and profiling tool developed by Google and well integrated into Android. It's also used for Chromium and can be used on any Linux device, too.

In this talk, I want to give a practical and hands-on introduction to Perfetto. I will briefly describe the architecture of Perfetto which consists of the trace recording, trace analysis and trace visualization. Then I will describe and explain thfe key features of the Perfetto UI for tracing and profiling Android applications, native services, binder communication and gernally the Linux kernel, e.g., the ftrace events for IRQs or the scheduler. I will also present specialized features in Perfetto that the Android team implemented to analyze the graphics stack. Additionally, I will share real world usage tips and common pitfalls to avoid from my project experience. And at the end, I will showcase the SQL trace processor capability to programmatically analyze traces that can also be integrated into a command line or CI testing workflow.
Speakers
avatar for Stefan Lengfeld

Stefan Lengfeld

Embedded Linux and Android Engineer, inovex GmbH
Stefan Lengfeld has been an Embedded Linux and Embedded Android developer at inovex since 2017. He is a Linux kernel contributor and has been professionally involved in all topics related to embedded software development since 2015. Even before that, he dove into the depths of Linux... Read More →
Wednesday June 17, 2026 4:25pm - 5:05pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded
  • Audience Experience Level Any

5:15pm IST

Breaking the TCP Barrier: Accelerated I/O for S3 With RDMA - Vidushi Mishra, IBM/Redhat
Wednesday June 17, 2026 5:15pm - 5:55pm IST
S3 APIs power modern Linux infrastructure, yet most object storage traffic still relies on TCP/IP. Under high concurrency and large transfers, TCP becomes CPU-intensive and limits throughput. RDMA promises Accelerated I/O through kernel bypass and zero-copy data movement—but applying RDMA to S3 workloads is not the same as NFS or block storage.

This session explores how RDMA can accelerate S3-style object transfers in distributed storage systems. We examine memory registration strategies, connection scalability, and what changes when dealing with multipart uploads, HTTP range reads, and parallel clients.

Through real validation scenarios, we compare throughput, latency, and CPU usage across TCP and RDMA paths. We’ll also highlight where RDMA excels, and where it falls short, such as in small-object or metadata-heavy workloads.

Attendees will gain a practical framework for evaluating Accelerated I/O in their own Linux storage environments: what to measure, what to tune, and what performance gains to realistically expect.
Speakers
avatar for Vidushi Mishra

Vidushi Mishra

Senior Storage Engineer in Storage Ceph, IBM/Redhat
Storage Engineer (12 yrs) in distributed storage—Ceph & S3-compatible object systems. I build and break at scale: performance + scalability + correctness across multi-tenant/multisite deployments (resharding, replication, lifecycle, archive tiers, IAM/ACLs, notifications). Benchmarks... Read More →
Wednesday June 17, 2026 5:15pm - 5:55pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  Embedded
  • Audience Experience Level Any

6:25pm IST

Agentic Delivery, Guardrailed: AI in CI/CD & Platform Engineering (Open Source Patterns) - Manas Ray & Kalyan Kolachala, Symphony AI Group
Wednesday June 17, 2026 6:25pm - 7:05pm IST
AI is changing software delivery—but most teams don’t need more “chat with logs.” They need an engineering platform that turns delivery signals into reliable, auditable outcomes. In this session, we’ll walk through practical AI patterns for CI/CD and internal platforms using open-source building blocks: pipeline failure triage copilots grounded in CI logs and runbooks, flaky test detection, test prioritization/selection to shorten feedback loops, and change-risk scoring to drive progressive delivery.
You’ll get a reference architecture that treats the platform as a product: a unified “delivery intelligence” layer that connects Git, CI, CD, and observability (OpenTelemetry) into a closed loop—recommend → assist → automate—only within strict guardrails. We’ll cover what makes this production-safe and open-source friendly: evidence-first outputs (no claim without links), policy-as-code boundaries, secrets redaction, prompt-injection defenses, and evaluation harnesses so AI behavior is testable like any other dependency.
Attendees leave with a starter backlog, rollout plan, and metrics to prove impact (cycle time, false-red rate, MTTR, and change failure rate).
Speakers
avatar for Manas Ray

Manas Ray

Distinguished Architect, Symphony AI Group (saigroup.ai)
Seasoned Technical Architect with expertise in platform and product engineering using Cloud Computing, BigData,
Machine learning, Agentic AI, Kubernetes, Microservices, and DevOps practices in diverse business domains.
avatar for Kalyan Kolachala

Kalyan Kolachala

Managing Director and Head of AI, SymphonyAI Group India
Kalyan is a senior engineering leader with experience in delivering world class, enterprise products and platforms involving SaaS, AI/ML, GenAI, Kubernetes, Cloud, and big data. He is currently India MD at SAI Group, a global enterprise AI leader. Worked previously at Intuit and Hitachi... Read More →
Wednesday June 17, 2026 6:25pm - 7:05pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  CI/CD

7:15pm IST

Event-Driven Platform Engineering: From Reactive Ops To Autonomous Control Loops - Josephine Eskaline Joyce & Prashanth Bhat, IBM India Pvt Ltd
Wednesday June 17, 2026 7:15pm - 7:55pm IST
Modern platform teams are overwhelmed by reactive operations where manual escalation, delayed remediation, and siloed automation take over. This session presents Event-Driven Platform Engineering as a framework for the design of platforms from ticket-driven systems to autonomous control loops. With the aid of Kubernetes controllers, event streams, policy engines, and real-time telemetry, platforms can identify, decide, and act without recourse to human intervention. We will also look at how events from observability systems, CI/CD pipelines, policy violations, and runtime signals can be transformed into actionable triggers for automation that powers scaling, remediation, governance enforcement, and developer workflows. The talk presents a reference architecture consisting of Kubernetes operators, Prometheus metrics, event brokers, and policy-as-code frameworks for developing self-adaptive internal developer platforms. Attendees will gain a structured approach to designing event-native platforms such as MTTR reduction, SLA compliance, continuous guardrails enforcement, and developer experience enhancement that align with open-source cloud-native environments.
Speakers
avatar for Josephine Eskaline Joyce

Josephine Eskaline Joyce

STSM, Principal Cloud Architect, IBM India Pvt Ltd
Josephine Eskaline Joyce is a Principal Cloud Architect and Senior Technical Staff Member (STSM) at IBM India, bringing over 26 years of experience in the IT industry. As an IBM Master Inventor, she is recognized for her deep expertise in cloud architecture, cloud security, enterprise... Read More →
avatar for Prashanth Bhat

Prashanth Bhat

Lead Architect, IBM Cloud, IBM India Private Limited
Prashant is a Cloud Architect working in the PaaS and Automation space, with a strong focus on cloud-native, event-driven architectures, and resilience engineering. Over the years, I’ve designed and built large-scale cloud services that power proactive alerting, automation, and... Read More →
Wednesday June 17, 2026 7:15pm - 7:55pm IST
Lotus 2 (Third Floor)
  CI/CD
 
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