InfoQ Homepage Development Content on InfoQ
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Apache Kafka Event-streaming Platform for .NET Developers
Viktor Gamov reviews Kafka -internal architecture, fault-tolerance, message durability- and how the Confluent .NET client offers a framework for computation over streaming data.
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From Idea to Dev to Ops
James Ward, Josh Long, Matt Raible show how to regain some of the simplicity by taking advantage of the latest in cloud services and Spring.
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Build Your Own WebAssembly Compiler
Colin Eberhardt looks at some of the internals of WebAssembly, explores how it works “under the hood”, and looks at how to create a (simple) compiler that targets this runtime.
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FF4J: Feature Toggling for Spring/Spring Boot Applications
Sasi Peri shows feature toggling using FF4J framework for Spring/Spring Boot applications.
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Concurrency, Scalability and Transactions -- Myths and Surprises
Renan Ranelli explores the interaction between massive concurrent servers, databases and transaction isolation.
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Parsing JSON Really Quickly: Lessons Learned
Daniel Lemire talks about the lessons learned while writing the fast JSON parser, simdjson. One of the most important lessons is the importance of a nearly obsessive focus on performance.
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Coding Without Complexity
Ellen Chisa talks about complexity in software and the need to remove it as much as possible. One possibility is to remove something that is not absolutely needed as a way to reduce complexity.
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KIT-BASHING THE BLORB - What Happens When All the Dead Come Back and They're Still Really Fun
Jason Scott discusses the status and the future of the Internet Archive.
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Building Reactive Pipelines: How to Go from Scalable Apps to (Ridiculously) Scalable Systems
Mark Heckler discusses and demoes reactive and highly scalable microservices built with Project Reactor using RabbitMQ, Apache Kafka, and Spring Cloud Stream.
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Make Your Electron App Feel at Home Everywhere
Kilian Valkhof discusses the process of making an Electron app feel at home on all three platforms: Windows, MacOS and Linux, making devs aware of the pitfalls and how to avoid them.
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The Talk You've Been Await-ing for
Steve Klabnik goes over the deep details of how async/await works in Rust, covering concepts like coroutines, generators, stack-less vs stack-ful, "pinning", and more.
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Securing Software from the Supply Side
Nickolas Means talks about the tools that GitHub provides for Open Source maintainers to improve the safety and security of the software supply chain at the source.