InfoQ Homepage Development Content on InfoQ
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How to Talk about APIs
Andrew Seward presents tips on how to talk about an API and how to create an ubiquitous language for that.
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Making the World Smarter – One “Thing” at a Time
Anand Oswal keynotes on the IoT landscape, from the edge to the cloud, enterprise to consumer IoT, fog computing and the wave of new applications that are set to launch the 4th industrial revolution.
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Addressing Security Regression by Unit Testing
Christopher Grayson covers unit testing solutions that are both integrated into tested codebases as well as solutions that can test deployed codebases from a black box standpoint.
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Cloud-Sourcing T.S. Eliot
Sarah Gray shares her observations from using Erlang to reconstruct poetry from live Twitter streams, what’s great and not so great about Erlang, what language features she loves, etc..
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WebHooks: The API Strikes Back
Phil Nash takes a look at services that use Webhooks, exploring reasons to use WebHooks and the emerging best practices, and discusses implementing WebHook endpoints with live coded examples.
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Building out Hypermedia Clients
Todd Brackley outlines the general engine of a hypermedia client implementation, what API forms look like, and then outlines five design issues useful in creating such clients.
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Simplifying API Development
Abhinav Asthana discusses methods for simplifying API development.
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Java Performance Engineer's Survival Guide
Monica Beckwith provides a step-by-step approach to finding the root cause of any performance problem in a Java app, showcasing through an example a few performance tools and the performance process.
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Concurrency and Strong Types for IoT
Carl Hewitt promotes using strong types and the actor model to deal with various devices in IoT.
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Money Is in the Gap
Eric Horesnyi discusses how to develop an API business to have financial success.
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This Will Cut You: Go's Sharper Edges
Thomas Shadwell talks about how distinct, exploitable misuse patterns arise in software languages, and through examples in Go hopes to show the language's distinct security characteristics.