InfoQ Homepage Conferences Content on InfoQ
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DevOps'n the Operating System
John Willis takes a look at the history of how Devops principles and operating systems have converged, and demos how containers, unikernels and Devops can work in the future.
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Containers Change Everything
Anne Currie talks about the architectural impact of containers, and what modern container schedulers mean for resilience, redundancy and server density.
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Effortless Eventual Consistency with Weave Mesh
Peter Bourgon and Matthias Radestock explain the theory behind Weave Mesh, some of the important key features, and demonstrate some exciting use cases, like distributed caching and state replication.
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Future of Container-Enabled Infrastructure
Brandon Philips describes how bringing containers, schedulers, and distributed systems together will create more reliable and greatly more trusted server infrastructures.
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Phoenix and Elm – Making the Web Functional
Chris McCord and Evan Czaplicki keynote on the birth, development and benefits of using their respective tools they created for web development: Phoenix and Elm.
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Monitoring and Troubleshooting Real-Time Data Pipelines
Alan Ngai and Premal Shah discuss best practices on monitoring distributed real-time data processing frameworks and how DevOps can gain control and visibility over these data pipelines.
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Where's My DevOps API?
Matthew Erbs discusses the need for applying lessons learned building APIs for customers to the creation of internal APIs for the DevOps team.
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Lead the Revolution by Being Ordinary
Katherine Kirk shares real life, practical steps and techniques that she's successfully used to help solve tough tech people issues with teams, executives and divisions.
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Elm: Finding the Functional in Reactive Programming
Claudia Doppioslash discusses some of the useful features of Elm, such as time traveling debugger, immutability, union types, type inference and Functional Reactive Programming.
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The Nihilist’s Guide to Wrecking Humans & Systems
Christina Camilleri talks about how social engineering can be used in conjunction with technical attacks to create sophisticated and destructive attack chains and shares some real world war stories.
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The Seven (More) Deadly Sins of Microservices
Daniel Bryant talks about the 2016 edition of the seven deadly sins in building microservices, some of the anti-patterns in microservices along with tools for avoiding them.
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Lessons Learned on Uber's Journey into Microservices
Emily Reinhold shares stories of how a rapid growth company broke up a monolith into a series of microservices, with practices and lessons that can save time and money.