InfoQ Homepage Performance Content on InfoQ
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From Monolith to Microservices
Sha Ma discusses how GitHub migrates from a monolith architecture to microservices, detailing some best practices.
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It’s Not Your Machine, It’s Your Code
Adekunle Adepoju discusses how limitations in the Linux kernel can lead to unneeded horizontal scale, and how to circumvent those and other limitations.
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Project Valhalla: Bringing Performance to Java Developers
Tobi Ajila explains the advances being made in Project Valhalla to improve Java's memory density by making it easy to create compact, cache efficient data structures.
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InfoQ Live Roundtable: Observability Patterns for Distributed Systems
The panelists explore how a sound observability strategy can help mitigate operational costs and avoid common pitfalls in monitoring distributed systems.
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How the HotSpot and Graal JVMs Execute Java Code
James Gough discusses HotSpot, explores Graal and the JVM ecosystem to discover performance benefits of a platform 25 years in the making.
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Elixir vs Scala
Ludwik Bukowski and Kacper Mentel compare the results of a pattern recognition app implemented in Elixir and Scala.
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Scaling N26 Technology through Hypergrowth
Folger Fonseca shares his experience during the time of hypergrowth at N26, a mobile-first bank which was recently listed as the number one startup in Germany.
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Performance vs. New Features: It Doesn’t Have to Be a Zero-Sum Game
Dmitry Vyazelenko explores implementing CRC checksums for a durable log while trying to retain respectable performance.
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Lessons from DAZN: Scaling Your Project with Micro-Frontends
Luca Mezzalira explains how to implement micro-frontends, enabling to scale up a project with tens of developers without reducing the throughput.
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Image Formats, Performance and Cognitive Load
Tobias Baldauf discusses how to optimize and deliver images for maximum effectiveness.
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Monitoring All the Things: Keeping Track of a Mixed Estate
Luke Blaney talks about how to approach monitoring an estate of many technologies and what the Financial Times did to improve visibility across systems built by all its teams.
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Distributed Tracing in the Wild
Adrian Cole, Tommy Ludwig and Narayanan Arunachalam share the “Sites” project, which is an inventory of real-life setups people use today with distributed tracing to increase developer productivity.