Mike Bria
Mike is a person with exuberance for bringing great things into the world. He has nearly a decade and half of experience as a craftsman of object-oriented enterprise applications and considers coding an art. Currently he works as a IT management and development consultant for Turnberry Solutions, helping software organizations deliver higher quality and more value, make money, and have fun. He also publishes the blog MBarking On Innovation. MB lives with his wife (Kristen) and kitties (Dolce & Izzie) just outside Philadelphia. He tweets as @mbria.
All of Mike Bria's Content on InfoQ
Latest featured content by Mike Bria

- Topics
- Agile in the Enterprise,
- Agile,
- Methodologies,
- Code Analysis
In this interview, Joshua Kerievsky, founder of Industrial Logic, discusses the need for developer
performance metrics to enable organizations to determine the capabilities of developers. He also discusses his
project known as the Limited Red Society. The goal of the Limited Red Society is to help developers limit the
amount of time their code is in the red.
News by Mike Bria
- Topics
- Java,
- Debugging,
- Tools
Chronon Systems has announced the beta availability of their new Chronon Recording Server, a "remote control" component of sorts for their Chronon toolsuite. With it you can record the internal state of your java application while it runs, wherever it runs, then later "play back" the entire program execution to examine or debug. Chronon Systems says its "DVR for Java".
- Topics
- IDE,
- Java,
- Tools
Martin Lippert at VMWare's SpringSource recently announced the 2.6.0 and 2.6.1 releases of their Eclipse-based development environment for building Spring applications, SpringSource Tool Suite. InfoQ caught up with Martin to have him personally walk us through what developers can look forward to with this new release, and more.
- Topics
- Web 2.0,
- Java,
- Enterprise Architecture,
- Architecture,
- SOA
IBM's IMPACT 11 conference is underway this week hosting more than 8,000 business and IT leaders representing 60 countries, gathered to learn discuss how to "work smarter for better business outcomes". During the 4 day event, IBM revolves their unveiling of many new tools, products, solutions, and ideas around the one key message of enabling "Business Agility".
- Topics
- Java,
- Tools,
- Announcements,
- Cloud Computing
VMware and Google today announced an early November 2010 'general availability' of their collaborative projects to move Java-based cloud development forward by bringing the Google Web Toolkit to Spring Roo, integrating Spring Insight with Google Speed Tracer, and incorporating Google Plugin for Eclipse into the Eclipse-based SpringSource Tool Suite.
Interviews by Mike Bria

- Topics
- Agile,
- Agile Techniques
Arlo Belshee and James Shore, both Gordan Pask Award winners, discuss their experiences and thoughts regarding continuous flow (i.e. without iterations) agile development practices and techniques. They discuss many well known and not-so-well known practices such as naked planning, kanban, the detective's blackboard, and MMFs and provide insight into how these practices affect success.

- Topics
- Agile in the Enterprise,
- Agile,
- Agile Techniques,
- Adopting Agile
Mike Cottmeyer is focused on maintaining business agility while adopting team agility. He shares various techniques and strategies that are successful with larger organizations when adopting and adapting agile techniques. He also shares his experience helping people transition from traditional project management to agile project management.

- Topics
- Adopting Agile,
- Agile Techniques,
- Agile
David Anderson discusses using the Kanban concept to make software development more efficient, the use of Kanban in both a large enterprise organization and as a consultant, how Kanban (in association with related systems such as CONWIP and Drum-Buffer-Rope) is catching on in the industry and helping developers improve predictability of their software, and the Lean Software and Systems Consortium.

- Topics
- Leadership,
- Agile in the Enterprise,
- Agile,
- Adopting Agile
Mary and Tom discuss the history of Lean, and what they feel are the most important things for software teams and organizations to thrive.Results are not the point, the point is growing your people, converting them into effective problem solvers who are relentlessly improving. If everybody in the organization is a problem solver, you'll get steadily better and better.