InfoQ Homepage Conferences Content on InfoQ
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Keynote: AMQP 1.0
John O’Hara keynotes on reasons for organizations to embrace AMQP, how the ecosystem has developed so far, and how AMQP manages to provide the means for secure multi-vendor messaging.
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Who are You? Who am I? Who is Anybody?
Paul Downey talks on the current status of identity management on the web covering cross-site challenges, REST, HTTPS, Open ID, all in the context of enterprise architecture.
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Building for the Cloud @ Netflix
Carl Quinn presents the build and deployment architecture used by Neflix in order to provide content out of Amazon AWS.
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The Childish Washer & The Happy Website
Jeroen van Geel emphasizes the need for creating digital products that have personality, explaining what product personality is, and how it can be achieved.
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Getting Truth Out of the DOM
Yehuda Katz discusses techniques for keeping data out of the DOM based on the idea that retrieving such data from the DOM involves a performance penalty and may affect data integrity.
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The Guardian's Content Web API
Phil Wills discusses why The Guardian has introduced the Content Web API, how it has influenced the architecture of the site and how they develop software and collaborate with partners.
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Mojito: A Tale of Two Runtimes
Matthew Taylor introduces Yahoo! Mojito, a web development framework that can be used to deploy JavaScript components that can run either on the server or a plethora of clients.
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Spring Social: For the New Web of APIs
Craig Walls discusses the need for adding social features to applications, how to secure such applications and how Spring Social can help.
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Remaining Hazards and Mitigating Patterns of Secure Mashups in ECMAScript 5
Mark S. Miller explains how to create secure mashups with ECMAScript 5, emphasizing the security pitfalls to be avoided and patterns to use in order to stay clear of them.
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Tailoring Spring for Custom Usage
Josh Long uncovers some of the hooks available in the Spring framework: life cycles, scopes, beans, resources, XML marshallers, REST, transactions, caching, Spring Integration adapters, and others.
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Writing Usable APIs in Practice
Giovanni Asproni presents techniques for writing usable APIs: using user's perspective, naming, the caller should have the control, explicit context, error reporting, logging, organizing.
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Introducing RavenDB: NoSQL is Rapping at Your Door
David Neal introduces RavenDB, a document-oriented database with .NET, Silverlight, JavaScript and REST APIs.