Blind Bird tickets for Longhorn PHP 2026 are on sale now!
The schedule isn't announced yet, but this is the lowest ticket price you'll see. Join us for two days of learning, community, and great conversations with developers from across the PHP ecosystem.
longhornphp.com
If you could attend a conference talk about ANY PHP-related topic, what would it be? What's the talk you've been searching for but haven't found yet? Drop your idea in the comments...
(And if you're qualified to give that talk... our CFP is open 😉)
cfp.longhornphp.com/
"What should I talk about?"
If you've solved an interesting problem, learned something the hard way, improved a process, explored a new technology, or have advice that would've helped you a year ago - you probably have a conference talk.
More ideas: cfp.longhornphp.com/ideas
Have an idea you've been meaning to share? You're in luck - the Longhorn PHP 2026 Call for Papers is open! You don't need to be a conference veteran! We're looking for talks that help developers learn, grow, and build better software.
Submit your talk: cfp.longhornphp.com
Remember to grab Blind Bird tickets for Longhorn PHP 2026 for the best pricing - once the talk lineup is published, prices will go up!
Tickets available for just the conference, just tutorials, and both, as well as virtual tickets for conference day
longhornphp.com
Longhorn PHP is returning October 15-16, 2026 in Austin! Our CFP is open through June 30. Get all the details on our speaker package, check out some talk ideas, and submit your talk or tutorial here: cfp.longhornphp.com/
It's official: this year's conference dates are Thursday, October 15 for Tutorial Day and Friday, October 16 for keynotes, talks, open spaces, and more! Two days rather than three, still multi-track, still here for the community. Grab a ticket at longhornphp.com.
We may be starting to wrap things up, but this amazing event is far from over! Huge thanks to @Vonage for sponsoring our second after party! #LonghornPHP wouldn't be possible without our sponsors, so please make sure to thank them!
Our final set of multi-track #longhornphp sessions consist of David Kerber talking about IAM, Lemon explaining the benefits of progressive web apps, and Ben Batschelet describing how to create developer-friendly projects.
Our 3pm #longhornphp sessions have commenced, with @crell digging into PHP properties, @jimbojsb talking search with TypeSense, and Levi Morrison showing how to write PHP extensions in Rust.
Thanks to our 11am hour #longhornphp presenters: @asgrim talking about PIE, @EvanHahn walking through Unicode, and Keith Davis explaining the machinations of a multi-version, multi-step PHP upgrade.
We're well into our first multi-track #longhornphp sessions of the day, after a keynote from @realFlowControl. We have @daveliddament talking about decoupling tests, Eric Poe walking through the command line, & Nočnica Mellifera explaining how to monitor synthetics w\Playwright.
Thanks to all of our fantastic speakers today, and our sponsors as well! Ready for the After-Party? Tonight's party is sponsored by @RoaveTeam - come hang out in the Main Ballroom to socialize, enjoy some tasty beverages, and play games! As always, Code of Conduct applies!
For our final #longhornphp sessions of the day we have @crell getting meta about PHP attributes, Mandy Hubbard talking about software supply chain security, and @ogprogrammer vibe coding it up with Claude.
A bit late, but this hour's #longhornphp sessions are courtesy @bytesofbree talking about Git, @lotharthesavior on building resilient event-driven applications, and @mikemiles86 talking about shifting left by incorporating testing earlier in the development process.
Our next set of afternoon #longhornphp sessions is a rundown of what happens when you inherited a legacy application by @JoePFerguson, a discussion of local development via DDEV with Bernardo Martinez, and a digression into writing SQL with AI by @stoker.