InfoQ Homepage Conferences Content on InfoQ
-
An Architect’s World View
Colin Garlick presents a foundation of value for the practice of architecture, starting with the values that architecture is established on, showing what's important for an architecture.
-
Treat Your Code as a Crime Scene
Adam Tornhill teaches how to predict bugs, detect architectural decay and find the code that is most expensive to maintain, how to evaluate knowledge drain in a codebase, and much more.
-
Netflix Built Its Own Monitoring System - and Why You Probably Shouldn't
Roy Rapoport shares some of the lessons Netflix learned building a monitoring system, the challenges, pitfalls and opportunities encountered along the way.
-
Evolutionary Architecture and Microservices - A Match Enabled by Continuous Delivery
Rebecca Parsons explores the relationship between evolutionary architecture, continuous delivery and microservices, focusing on how they support each other in the creation of complex systems.
-
Concurrency: It's Harder (and Easier) than You Think
Paul Butcher advises on using concurrency the right way in order to avoid its pitfalls.
-
Connected Products, Systems, and the Little Chip with a Big Brain
Jack Schulze discusses the emerging design domain of connected products and the challenge of representing systems through interfaces in the emerging world of connected devices.
-
Overcoming Cultural Differences by Focusing on Similarities
Jutta Eckstein presents techniques that helped her to create a common culture in different global projects she worked on.
-
CheckCell: Data Debugging for Spreadsheets
The presenters introduce CheckCell, an Excel add-on used to identify cells that have an unusually high impact on the spreadsheet’s computations.
-
Write Your Own Compiler in 24 Hours
Phillip Trelford explains how compilers work with live code samples, primarily in F# and C#, covering language design and parsing, all-the-way through to emitting code.
-
The Art of Prototypes and Building MVPs
Ben Hall takes a dive at where to begin along with the mind-set and tooling required to quickly and effectively create prototypes.
-
Thinking in a Highly Concurrent, Mostly-functional Language
Francesco Cesarini illustrates how the Erlang way of thinking about problems leads to scalable and fault-tolerant designs, describing 3 ways of clustering Erlang nodes within the server side domain.
-
Modular Design with Web Components
Rob Dodson dives into the Web Component ecosystem to show you how easy it is to use off-the-shelf components to create gorgeous multi-device applications.