InfoQ Homepage Conferences Content on InfoQ
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The Immutable Front-end in ClojureScript
Logan Linn explores the design and implications of an architecture built around immutable data structures using ClojureScript and Om, a ClojureScript interface to Facebook's React.
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Etsy Search: How We Index and Query 26 Million One-of-a-kind Items
Aaron Gardner pulls back the covers on the Etsy Search ecosystem and how they got here -- the good, the bad, and the funky.
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Groovy for System Administrators
Daniel Woods discusses Enterprise Operations which is seeing a shift in the management paradigm of infrastructure.
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Fastest Servlets in the West?
The authors demonstrate Apache Tomcat's stability under high load, describe some do's (and some don'ts!), explain how to performance test a Servlet-based application, etc.
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Booting up Spring Social
Craig Walls presents the latest that Spring Social has to offer, including integration with Spring Security, automatic reconnect, and a dramatically simpler configuration model using Spring Boot.
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How Individuals can Change the World
Brie Rogers Lowery inspires those willing to change their businesses in spite of what feels like official stonewalling or apathy.
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A Distributed Transactional Database on Hadoop
John Leach explains using HBase co-processors to support a full ANSI SQL RDBMS without modifying the core HBase source, showing how Hadoop/HBase can replace traditional RDBMS solutions.
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Uncertainty, Complexity, the Cynefin Framework and Knowing Enough to Act
Greg Brougham introduces the Cynefin model and related practices which can be used to address uncertainty in the modern world.
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The Community that Values Participation and Improvement
Karl Scotland tells the story of a world wide athletic community, wondering what would happen if there were a similar community of small teams focused on work knowledge.
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Lean Leadership Principles: Stepping Beyond Visual Management
Simon Morris presents his leadership principles: know when a team is dysfunctional, attack problem causes at all levels, make decisions by consensus, encourage responsibility and engagement.
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Why Should I Care About Your Case Study?
Thomas Epping considers that case studies, even successful ones, should not be blindly applied everywhere, but one should take only what’s useful for one’s circumstance.