InfoQ Homepage Keynote Content on InfoQ
-
Everything I Have Learned I Have Learned From Someone Else
David Nolen keynotes on how developers learn as seen in a number of diverse examples drawn from objected oriented user interface programming to constraint logic programming.
-
Cloud and Big Data: Unicorns All the Way Down
Francine Bennett keynotes on using big data in the cloud.
-
The Past, Present and Future of Code Generation
Sven Efftinge keynotes on the history, the current status and the future of code generation tools and techniques.
-
Keynote: A Forward Look at Federated Wiki
Ward Cunningham keynotes on how Events, Sockets, CORS, Closures, SVG, DSLs, Canvas, EC2 and Raspberry Pi contribute to a new type of wiki, a federated one.
-
Keynote: 8 Lines of Code
Greg Young discusses eight lines of very common code finding in them massive numbers of dependencies and difficulties, looking for ways to get rid of them.
-
Programming The Feynman Way
Ben Evans explores the idea that many of the characteristics of Feynman’s approach to physics are applicable to programmers, fueling the dream of a world where developers are free to be themselves.
-
Joy of Coding 2013 Keynote: Michael Feathers
Michael Feathers keynotes on the history of programming, what brings joy to this activity and why developers like it.
-
When Geek Leaks
Neal Ford keynotes on the impact the real world has on software development and the other way around.
-
What They Don’t Teach You About Running a Business When Taking Your CS Degree
Francesco Cesarini shares business lessons learnt while growing Erlang Solutions from a one man band to a multinational company with 70 employees, offices in 3 countries, and clients on 5 continents.
-
Keynote: Embracing Uncertainty
Dan North discusses the need to embrace uncertainty of scope, technology, effort and structure, expecting the unexpectable and anticipating ignorance.
-
Keynote: Real Software Engineering
Glenn Vanderburg sustains the need for redefining software engineering as the science and art of designing and making systems that can readily adapt to the situations to which they may be subjected.
-
Keynote: Cloud Interoperability
Chris Harding emphasized the need for cloud interoperability and the key areas where standards are most needed – configuration, management, security, storage, communication – for businesses to growth.