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      "id": "3017f4e51028525a",
      "title": "Mindstone Athens April AI Meetup",
      "description": "Please Note: This event is advertised on multiple platforms. Please RSVP and get a ticket on Mindstone to view the agenda and guarantee a spot.\n\n\nWelcome to the most electrifying and ground-breaking AI Meetup in Athens!\n\n\nJoin us once a month as we delve into the world of artificial intelligence, explore its cutting-edge practical applications, and marvel at the astonishing projects that are shaping our future.\n\n\nWhy should you attend?\n\n• Get up close and personal with the AI projects that are r",
      "fullDescription": "The elevator opens onto an open-plan office floor where someone has already started rearranging desks to face a projector screen. Epignosis headquarters smells like fresh coffee and the particular ozone tang of too many laptops running in one room. By half past six on a Tuesday evening, the chairs are filling with people who still have their work backpacks on, laptops half-open, Slack notifications pinging as they settle in for one of Athens's longest-running monthly AI gatherings.\n\nMindstone's April meetup follows a rhythm the regulars already know. There will be talks -- sometimes a deep technical walkthrough of a model architecture, sometimes a live demo where something breaks and the room collectively troubleshoots, sometimes an open discussion where the format loosens and people argue about inference costs or whether the latest open-source release actually changes anything. The exact agenda lands closer to the date. What stays consistent is the room itself: a working ed-tech company's headquarters in central Athens, borrowed for the evening and filled with people who spend their days inside neural networks, training pipelines, and product backlogs.\n\nThe crowd here is not uniform. You will find ML engineers who want to talk about quantization techniques sitting next to startup founders who want to understand what is actually feasible to build on a seed budget. Data scientists from Greek enterprises rub shoulders with freelance developers who picked up PyTorch six months ago and are trying to figure out what to do with it. The conversations between talks are often where the real density lives -- someone sketching a system diagram on a napkin, two people discovering they have been independently working on similar retrieval-augmented pipelines, a quick exchange of GitHub handles.\n\nIf you work with AI daily and want a room where you can speak in acronyms without explaining them, this is that room. If you are earlier in the journey -- maybe you have completed some courses, built a side project, and want to see what practitioners in Athens are actually shipping -- this is equally your room. The community has been growing month over month as the city's AI ecosystem expands, and the meetup reflects that gradient of experience without gatekeeping it.\n\nThere is no entrance fee. You register through the Mindstone platform to claim your spot, and spots do fill as the community has scaled. Epignosis provides the space, which means the infrastructure is solid -- good wifi, a proper screen, enough power outlets for the laptop-dependent crowd.\n\nThe evening tends to wind down organically. After the scheduled content wraps, clusters of people drift toward continued conversation, sometimes spilling out to nearby streets where the restaurant and bar density makes extending the night easy. Bring a charger. Your phone battery will not survive the networking.",
      "fullDescriptionEn": "The elevator opens onto an open-plan office floor where someone has already started rearranging desks to face a projector screen. Epignosis headquarters smells like fresh coffee and the particular ozone tang of too many laptops running in one room. By half past six on a Tuesday evening, the chairs are filling with people who still have their work backpacks on, laptops half-open, Slack notifications pinging as they settle in for one of Athens's longest-running monthly AI gatherings.\n\nMindstone's April meetup follows a rhythm the regulars already know. There will be talks -- sometimes a deep technical walkthrough of a model architecture, sometimes a live demo where something breaks and the room collectively troubleshoots, sometimes an open discussion where the format loosens and people argue about inference costs or whether the latest open-source release actually changes anything. The exact agenda lands closer to the date. What stays consistent is the room itself: a working ed-tech company's headquarters in central Athens, borrowed for the evening and filled with people who spend their days inside neural networks, training pipelines, and product backlogs.\n\nThe crowd here is not uniform. You will find ML engineers who want to talk about quantization techniques sitting next to startup founders who want to understand what is actually feasible to build on a seed budget. Data scientists from Greek enterprises rub shoulders with freelance developers who picked up PyTorch six months ago and are trying to figure out what to do with it. The conversations between talks are often where the real density lives -- someone sketching a system diagram on a napkin, two people discovering they have been independently working on similar retrieval-augmented pipelines, a quick exchange of GitHub handles.\n\nIf you work with AI daily and want a room where you can speak in acronyms without explaining them, this is that room. If you are earlier in the journey -- maybe you have completed some courses, built a side project, and want to see what practitioners in Athens are actually shipping -- this is equally your room. The community has been growing month over month as the city's AI ecosystem expands, and the meetup reflects that gradient of experience without gatekeeping it.\n\nThere is no entrance fee. You register through the Mindstone platform to claim your spot, and spots do fill as the community has scaled. Epignosis provides the space, which means the infrastructure is solid -- good wifi, a proper screen, enough power outlets for the laptop-dependent crowd.\n\nThe evening tends to wind down organically. After the scheduled content wraps, clusters of people drift toward continued conversation, sometimes spilling out to nearby streets where the restaurant and bar density makes extending the night easy. Bring a charger. Your phone battery will not survive the networking.",
      "fullDescriptionGr": "The elevator opens onto an open-plan office floor where someone has already started rearranging desks to face a projector screen. Epignosis headquarters smells like fresh coffee and the particular ozone tang of too many laptops running in one room. By half past six on a Tuesday evening, the chairs are filling with people who still have their work backpacks on, laptops half-open, Slack notifications pinging as they settle in for one of Athens's longest-running monthly AI gatherings.\n\nMindstone's April meetup follows a rhythm the regulars already know. There will be talks -- sometimes a deep technical walkthrough of a model architecture, sometimes a live demo where something breaks and the room collectively troubleshoots, sometimes an open discussion where the format loosens and people argue about inference costs or whether the latest open-source release actually changes anything. The exact agenda lands closer to the date. What stays consistent is the room itself: a working ed-tech company's headquarters in central Athens, borrowed for the evening and filled with people who spend their days inside neural networks, training pipelines, and product backlogs.\n\nThe crowd here is not uniform. You will find ML engineers who want to talk about quantization techniques sitting next to startup founders who want to understand what is actually feasible to build on a seed budget. Data scientists from Greek enterprises rub shoulders with freelance developers who picked up PyTorch six months ago and are trying to figure out what to do with it. The conversations between talks are often where the real density lives -- someone sketching a system diagram on a napkin, two people discovering they have been independently working on similar retrieval-augmented pipelines, a quick exchange of GitHub handles.\n\nIf you work with AI daily and want a room where you can speak in acronyms without explaining them, this is that room. If you are earlier in the journey -- maybe you have completed some courses, built a side project, and want to see what practitioners in Athens are actually shipping -- this is equally your room. The community has been growing month over month as the city's AI ecosystem expands, and the meetup reflects that gradient of experience without gatekeeping it.\n\nThere is no entrance fee. You register through the Mindstone platform to claim your spot, and spots do fill as the community has scaled. Epignosis provides the space, which means the infrastructure is solid -- good wifi, a proper screen, enough power outlets for the laptop-dependent crowd.\n\nThe evening tends to wind down organically. After the scheduled content wraps, clusters of people drift toward continued conversation, sometimes spilling out to nearby streets where the restaurant and bar density makes extending the night easy. Bring a charger. Your phone battery will not survive the networking.",
      "hasNativeGreek": false,
      "startDate": "2026-04-21T18:30:00",
      "endDate": "2026-04-21",
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      "url": "https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/mindstone-athens-april-ai-meetup-tickets-1980368772308",
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      "id": "e0abea86b2c50b69",
      "title": "Devoxx Greece 2026",
      "description": "3-day developer conference. Part of global Devoxx family. Covers Java, Cloud, AI/ML, Security, Architecture. Community-driven.",
      "fullDescription": "The marble-and-glass foyer of the Athens Concert Hall -- Megaron Mousikis -- fills with the sound of footsteps and badge scanners on the morning of April 23. Developers stream through the doors into a building designed for orchestras and now, for three days, repurposed for code. Devoxx Greece brings the global Devoxx conference family to the cultural district of Kolonaki, and the venue's multiple halls allow parallel tracks to run simultaneously across Java, Cloud, AI and machine learning, Security, and Architecture.\n\nYou pick up your badge and face the first real decision of the day: which track to follow. The program is built through a Call for Papers process, which means the sessions come from practitioners who submitted, were reviewed, and were selected -- not from sponsors who paid for a slot. This community-driven curation runs through the DNA of every Devoxx edition, from the original in Belgium to the events in the UK, France, Morocco, and Poland. The Greek edition carries the same editorial standards into a Mediterranean setting.\n\nMegaron Mousikis is one of Athens's architectural landmarks, a brutalist concert complex on Vasilissis Sofias Avenue at the edge of Kolonaki. The acoustics built for symphonies serve technical talks well: presenters do not fight the room, and code projected on screen remains legible from the back rows. Between sessions, the building's corridors and outdoor terraces offer space to decompress, compare notes, and argue about whether the talk on microservices actually addressed the hard parts.\n\nThe three-day format allows a rhythm that single-day events cannot. Day one, you orient -- scanning sessions, finding your cohort, calibrating the depth of content. Day two, you go deep, staying in one track or deliberately cross-pollinating between two. Day three, you consolidate, revisiting speakers, following up on hallway conversations, collecting the references and repository links that will matter when you are back at your desk on Monday.\n\nThe Devoxx audience skews toward working developers and architects -- people who ship software and need to make technology choices with consequences. The AI/ML track sits alongside Java and Cloud, which reflects how machine learning has moved from a specialty to an integrated concern in mainstream software engineering.\n\nIf you build software professionally and want three days of dense, peer-reviewed technical content delivered in a top-tier venue, Devoxx Greece earns its place on your calendar. If you are looking for high-level trend overviews or executive-oriented programming, the granularity here will feel too deep.\n\nLate April in Athens is warm without the summer intensity. The walk from Megaron to Syntagma Square takes fifteen minutes through tree-lined streets, and the evening light lasts long enough for post-conference dinners to start on outdoor terraces.",
      "fullDescriptionEn": "The marble-and-glass foyer of the Athens Concert Hall -- Megaron Mousikis -- fills with the sound of footsteps and badge scanners on the morning of April 23. Developers stream through the doors into a building designed for orchestras and now, for three days, repurposed for code. Devoxx Greece brings the global Devoxx conference family to the cultural district of Kolonaki, and the venue's multiple halls allow parallel tracks to run simultaneously across Java, Cloud, AI and machine learning, Security, and Architecture.\n\nYou pick up your badge and face the first real decision of the day: which track to follow. The program is built through a Call for Papers process, which means the sessions come from practitioners who submitted, were reviewed, and were selected -- not from sponsors who paid for a slot. This community-driven curation runs through the DNA of every Devoxx edition, from the original in Belgium to the events in the UK, France, Morocco, and Poland. The Greek edition carries the same editorial standards into a Mediterranean setting.\n\nMegaron Mousikis is one of Athens's architectural landmarks, a brutalist concert complex on Vasilissis Sofias Avenue at the edge of Kolonaki. The acoustics built for symphonies serve technical talks well: presenters do not fight the room, and code projected on screen remains legible from the back rows. Between sessions, the building's corridors and outdoor terraces offer space to decompress, compare notes, and argue about whether the talk on microservices actually addressed the hard parts.\n\nThe three-day format allows a rhythm that single-day events cannot. Day one, you orient -- scanning sessions, finding your cohort, calibrating the depth of content. Day two, you go deep, staying in one track or deliberately cross-pollinating between two. Day three, you consolidate, revisiting speakers, following up on hallway conversations, collecting the references and repository links that will matter when you are back at your desk on Monday.\n\nThe Devoxx audience skews toward working developers and architects -- people who ship software and need to make technology choices with consequences. The AI/ML track sits alongside Java and Cloud, which reflects how machine learning has moved from a specialty to an integrated concern in mainstream software engineering.\n\nIf you build software professionally and want three days of dense, peer-reviewed technical content delivered in a top-tier venue, Devoxx Greece earns its place on your calendar. If you are looking for high-level trend overviews or executive-oriented programming, the granularity here will feel too deep.\n\nLate April in Athens is warm without the summer intensity. The walk from Megaron to Syntagma Square takes fifteen minutes through tree-lined streets, and the evening light lasts long enough for post-conference dinners to start on outdoor terraces.",
      "fullDescriptionGr": "The marble-and-glass foyer of the Athens Concert Hall -- Megaron Mousikis -- fills with the sound of footsteps and badge scanners on the morning of April 23. Developers stream through the doors into a building designed for orchestras and now, for three days, repurposed for code. Devoxx Greece brings the global Devoxx conference family to the cultural district of Kolonaki, and the venue's multiple halls allow parallel tracks to run simultaneously across Java, Cloud, AI and machine learning, Security, and Architecture.\n\nYou pick up your badge and face the first real decision of the day: which track to follow. The program is built through a Call for Papers process, which means the sessions come from practitioners who submitted, were reviewed, and were selected -- not from sponsors who paid for a slot. This community-driven curation runs through the DNA of every Devoxx edition, from the original in Belgium to the events in the UK, France, Morocco, and Poland. The Greek edition carries the same editorial standards into a Mediterranean setting.\n\nMegaron Mousikis is one of Athens's architectural landmarks, a brutalist concert complex on Vasilissis Sofias Avenue at the edge of Kolonaki. The acoustics built for symphonies serve technical talks well: presenters do not fight the room, and code projected on screen remains legible from the back rows. Between sessions, the building's corridors and outdoor terraces offer space to decompress, compare notes, and argue about whether the talk on microservices actually addressed the hard parts.\n\nThe three-day format allows a rhythm that single-day events cannot. Day one, you orient -- scanning sessions, finding your cohort, calibrating the depth of content. Day two, you go deep, staying in one track or deliberately cross-pollinating between two. Day three, you consolidate, revisiting speakers, following up on hallway conversations, collecting the references and repository links that will matter when you are back at your desk on Monday.\n\nThe Devoxx audience skews toward working developers and architects -- people who ship software and need to make technology choices with consequences. The AI/ML track sits alongside Java and Cloud, which reflects how machine learning has moved from a specialty to an integrated concern in mainstream software engineering.\n\nIf you build software professionally and want three days of dense, peer-reviewed technical content delivered in a world-class venue, Devoxx Greece earns its place on your calendar. If you are looking for high-level trend overviews or executive-oriented programming, the granularity here will feel too deep.\n\nLate April in Athens is warm without the summer intensity. The walk from Megaron to Syntagma Square takes fifteen minutes through tree-lined streets, and the evening light lasts long enough for post-conference dinners to start on outdoor terraces.",
      "hasNativeGreek": false,
      "startDate": "2026-04-23",
      "endDate": "2026-04-25",
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        "name": "Μέγαρο Μουσικής Αθηνών",
        "address": "Vassilissis Sofias Avenue & Kokkali 1, Athens 115 21",
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      "price": {
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      "url": "https://devoxx.gr/",
      "ticketUrl": "https://devoxx.gr/",
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      "createdAt": "2026-02-20 16:12:10",
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