InfoQ Homepage Development Content on InfoQ
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Stream Processing with Apache Flink
Robert Metzger provides an overview of the Apache Flink internals and its streaming-first philosophy, as well as the programming APIs.
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The Case for Bringing Swift to the Server
Patrick Bohrer and Chris Bailey present a preview of IBM latest cloud deployment configurations, Swift package-based cloud services, tools integration, and their plan to bring Swift to the server.
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Git Journey from Mars to Neon
Matthias Sohn presents the Git features that are implemented in Eclipse Neon including git-flow commands, support for attributes, hooks and filters, versioning large binary files and others.
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Docker, Vagrant and Kubernetes Walk into an Eclipse'd Bar
Max Rydahl Andersen explains how one can use Docker and Vagrant today with Eclipse to improve the local development experience and then cover how it all came together in the cloud and container space.
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Broken Performance Tools
Brendan Gregg focuses on broken tools and metrics instead of the working ones. Metrics can be misleading, and counters can be counter-intuitive. He advises on how to approach new performance tools.
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Node4J: Running Node.js in a JavaWorld
Ian Bull introduces Node4J and explores the performance characteristics and highlights the tools that help one develop, debug and deploy Node.JS applications running directly on the JVM.
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You, Me and Jigsaw
Thomas Schindl presents his view on the new Java 9 module system. He introduces the main concepts, presenting how it works and how it differs from OSGi.
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Microservices Chaos Testing at Jet
Rachel Reese talks about Jet.com's chaos testing methods and code in depth, but also lays out a path to implementation that everyone can use.
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Spring Framework 5 - Preview & Roadmap
Juergen Hoeller talks about the key themes in Spring 5, support for Java 8, comprehensive support for JDK 9, a strong focus on HTTP/2, and first-class support for Spring-style reactive architectures.
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The Quest for Low-latency with Concurrent Java
Martin Thompson focuses on algorithms which provide very high throughput while keeping latency low and predictable, discussing the concurrency theory and implementing these algorithms in Java 8.
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Why We Do Tech the Way We Do Tech Now?
Pavlo Baron attempts to explain why people are doing multiple languages, platforms, technology stacks and databases in one project.
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A Board Game Night with Geeks
Felienne Hermans explains how she used F# to determine if the game Quarto can end up in a tie or if there is always a winner. The technique used can be applied to scheduling and register allocation.