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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",
      "type": "tech",
      "genres": [
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        "Tech"
      ],
      "tags": [],
      "venue": {
        "name": "Μέγαρο Μουσικής Αθηνών",
        "address": "Vassilissis Sofias Avenue & Kokkali 1, Athens 115 21",
        "neighborhood": "Ilisia",
        "coordinates": {
          "lat": 37.975,
          "lon": 23.757
        },
        "capacity": null
      },
      "price": {
        "type": "with-ticket",
        "amount": 25,
        "currency": "EUR",
        "range": "€15-80"
      },
      "url": "https://devoxx.gr/",
      "ticketUrl": "https://devoxx.gr/",
      "source": "devoxx.gr",
      "createdAt": "2026-02-20 16:12:10",
      "updatedAt": "2026-04-15 12:14:03",
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      "@type": "EducationEvent",
      "id": "751e22533893151e",
      "title": "Athens SEO 2026",
      "description": "Technical SEO + AI in search. Europe-facing.",
      "fullDescription": "Concrete, glass, and the faint residual geometry of runways -- The Ellinikon Experience Centre sits on the site of the former Athens International Airport, now in the middle of one of Europe's largest urban redevelopment projects on the southern coast. On May 22-23, this venue hosts Athens SEO 2026, a conference built at the intersection of technical search engine optimization and the AI systems that are rewriting how search works.\n\nYou arrive at a venue that embodies transformation -- a decommissioned airport becoming a mixed-use district -- to discuss a field undergoing its own fundamental shift. The conference addresses the technical mechanics of search visibility in an era when AI-generated answers, large language model integrations, and shifting crawl behaviors are changing the rules that SEO practitioners have relied on for a decade. The content is Europe-facing, drawing speakers and attendees who work across markets with different languages, regulations, and search behaviors.\n\nThe sessions go deep into the plumbing: structured data, crawl budget optimization, log file analysis, Core Web Vitals, and the emerging question of how to maintain visibility when search engines increasingly synthesize answers rather than serve links. The AI thread runs through the program not as a separate track but as an integrated concern -- because for anyone working in search today, the AI layer is no longer optional context.\n\nThe Ellinikon Experience Centre provides a modern, purpose-built event space that reflects the ambition of the surrounding development project. Located in the southern Athens suburb of Ellinikon, the venue is accessible via the tram line that runs along the coast or by car from the city center. The coastal location means breaks between sessions come with glimpses of the Saronic Gulf, and the late-May weather makes outdoor networking areas genuinely usable.\n\nThe two-day format allows the program to layer foundational technical sessions on day one with more advanced and speculative content on day two. The European orientation of the conference means the case studies reflect the complexity of multi-market, multi-language SEO -- not just the English-language, US-centric perspective that dominates many search conferences.\n\nIf you work in technical SEO and need to understand how AI is reshaping search infrastructure, ranking systems, and content discovery, this conference addresses your professional reality directly. If your interest in SEO is primarily content strategy or brand marketing without a technical foundation, the depth of the sessions will outpace you.\n\nThe Ellinikon site carries a particular atmosphere in late May -- open sky, sea air, and the visible evidence of a coastline being reimagined. Between sessions, the scale of the surrounding construction project serves as an unintentional metaphor for the industry under discussion: familiar ground, fundamentally restructured.",
      "fullDescriptionEn": "Concrete, glass, and the faint residual geometry of runways -- The Ellinikon Experience Centre sits on the site of the former Athens International Airport, now in the middle of one of Europe's largest urban redevelopment projects on the southern coast. On May 22-23, this venue hosts Athens SEO 2026, a conference built at the intersection of technical search engine optimization and the AI systems that are rewriting how search works.\n\nYou arrive at a venue that embodies transformation -- a decommissioned airport becoming a mixed-use district -- to discuss a field undergoing its own fundamental shift. The conference addresses the technical mechanics of search visibility in an era when AI-generated answers, large language model integrations, and shifting crawl behaviors are changing the rules that SEO practitioners have relied on for a decade. The content is Europe-facing, drawing speakers and attendees who work across markets with different languages, regulations, and search behaviors.\n\nThe sessions go deep into the plumbing: structured data, crawl budget optimization, log file analysis, Core Web Vitals, and the emerging question of how to maintain visibility when search engines increasingly synthesize answers rather than serve links. The AI thread runs through the program not as a separate track but as an integrated concern -- because for anyone working in search today, the AI layer is no longer optional context.\n\nThe Ellinikon Experience Centre provides a modern, purpose-built event space that reflects the ambition of the surrounding development project. Located in the southern Athens suburb of Ellinikon, the venue is accessible via the tram line that runs along the coast or by car from the city center. The coastal location means breaks between sessions come with glimpses of the Saronic Gulf, and the late-May weather makes outdoor networking areas genuinely usable.\n\nThe two-day format allows the program to layer foundational technical sessions on day one with more advanced and speculative content on day two. The European orientation of the conference means the case studies reflect the complexity of multi-market, multi-language SEO -- not just the English-language, US-centric perspective that dominates many search conferences.\n\nIf you work in technical SEO and need to understand how AI is reshaping search infrastructure, ranking systems, and content discovery, this conference addresses your professional reality directly. If your interest in SEO is primarily content strategy or brand marketing without a technical foundation, the depth of the sessions will outpace you.\n\nThe Ellinikon site carries a particular atmosphere in late May -- open sky, sea air, and the visible evidence of a coastline being reimagined. Between sessions, the scale of the surrounding construction project serves as an unintentional metaphor for the industry under discussion: familiar ground, fundamentally restructured.",
      "fullDescriptionGr": "Concrete, glass, and the faint residual geometry of runways -- The Ellinikon Experience Centre sits on the site of the former Athens International Airport, now in the middle of one of Europe's largest urban redevelopment projects on the southern coast. On May 22-23, this venue hosts Athens SEO 2026, a conference built at the intersection of technical search engine optimization and the AI systems that are rewriting how search works.\n\nYou arrive at a venue that embodies transformation -- a decommissioned airport becoming a mixed-use district -- to discuss a field undergoing its own fundamental shift. The conference addresses the technical mechanics of search visibility in an era when AI-generated answers, large language model integrations, and shifting crawl behaviors are changing the rules that SEO practitioners have relied on for a decade. The content is Europe-facing, drawing speakers and attendees who work across markets with different languages, regulations, and search behaviors.\n\nThe sessions go deep into the plumbing: structured data, crawl budget optimization, log file analysis, Core Web Vitals, and the emerging question of how to maintain visibility when search engines increasingly synthesize answers rather than serve links. The AI thread runs through the program not as a separate track but as an integrated concern -- because for anyone working in search today, the AI layer is no longer optional context.\n\nThe Ellinikon Experience Centre provides a modern, purpose-built event space that reflects the ambition of the surrounding development project. Located in the southern Athens suburb of Ellinikon, the venue is accessible via the tram line that runs along the coast or by car from the city center. The coastal location means breaks between sessions come with glimpses of the Saronic Gulf, and the late-May weather makes outdoor networking areas genuinely usable.\n\nThe two-day format allows the program to layer foundational technical sessions on day one with more advanced and speculative content on day two. The European orientation of the conference means the case studies reflect the complexity of multi-market, multi-language SEO -- not just the English-language, US-centric perspective that dominates many search conferences.\n\nIf you work in technical SEO and need to understand how AI is reshaping search infrastructure, ranking systems, and content discovery, this conference addresses your professional reality directly. If your interest in SEO is primarily content strategy or brand marketing without a technical foundation, the depth of the sessions will outpace you.\n\nThe Ellinikon site carries a particular atmosphere in late May -- open sky, sea air, and the visible evidence of a coastline being reimagined. Between sessions, the scale of the surrounding construction project serves as an unintentional metaphor for the industry under discussion: familiar ground, fundamentally restructured.",
      "hasNativeGreek": false,
      "startDate": "2026-05-22",
      "endDate": "2026-05-23",
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      "venue": {
        "name": "The Ellinikon Experience Centre",
        "address": "Elliniko 167 77, Greece",
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      "url": "https://athensseo.com/",
      "ticketUrl": "https://athensseo.com/",
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      "createdAt": "2026-02-20 16:12:10",
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