InfoQ Homepage Presentations
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21st Century Languages Panel
Track hosts Ashley Williams (Core Rust Team member) pulls together an interlanguage working group to discuss newer software languages.
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Kotlin: Write Once, Run (Actually) Everywhere
Jake Wharton talks about the Kotlin language, how it compiles to run on more than just the JVM, and whether it can fully pull off the multiplatform trick allowing a single codebase to run everywhere.
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Ethics and AI: Identifying and Preventing Bias in Predictive Models
Federica Pelzel explores how bias and discrimination can be introduced into models, and different strategies to prevent it from happening.
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The Most Secure Program Is One That Doesn’t Exist
Diane Hosfelt gives an overview of how Rust’s design gives security guarantees and discusses goals and visions for the future.
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WebAssembly. Neither Web Nor Assembly, All Revolutionary
Jay Phelps talks about WebAssembly, a bytecode designed and maintained by Google, Microsoft, Apple, Mozilla, Intel, LG, among others. He talks about what WebAssembly is and what it isn’t.
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Teaching TDD to Different Learning Styles
Tiffany Larson walks through how to identify a person's learning style and what techniques can be leveraged in order to create the most productive learning environment.
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Next Generation MongoDB: Sessions, Streams, Transactions
Christoph Strobl, Jeff Yemin discuss some of the features in latest MongoDB versions: sessions, change streams, retriable writes, reactive access and transactions.
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Facial Recognition Adversarial Attacks, Policy and Choice
Gretchen Greene demonstrates the technical feasibility of facial recognition adversarial attacks, describes using it at airports and borders and invites contributions to their open sourced prototype.
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Managing Values-driven Open Source Projects
Nick O'Neill covers the unusual parts of starting a company with passion instead of money.
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Building Serverless Robust, Secured Angular 6 Web Applications
Jeff St. Germain discusses how to setup a series of serverless Azure API endpoints, secure those APIs with JWT tokens from Identity Server 4, and to scaffold the APIs into an Angular 6 site.
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From Quadcopters to Helicopters: Formal Verification for Safer Vehicles
Kathleen Fisher explores the promises and limitations of current formal methods and techniques for producing useful software that probably does not contain exploitable bugs.
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Software Loves Languages (On Passion & Product)
Isaac Elias talks about finding or building a company that lights up a room, product processes that reciprocate affection, hiring people, how "engineering-driven" cultures can crush dreams, and more.