InfoQ Homepage Presentations
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Women in AI & Blockchain
The panelists discuss the role women can play in AI and blockchain technologies.
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Scaling Agile Transformation in a Waterfall Enterprise
Ryan Johnson discusses common issues and solutions to them for teams moving from a waterfall approach to an agile one.
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Buckets, Funnels, Mobs and Cats or: How We Learned to Love Scaling Apps to the Cloud
The authors discuss how to migrate apps to the cloud using funnels and buckets, and then scale them and test for resilience.
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Modern Messaging with RabbitMQ, Spring Cloud and Reactor
Arnaud Cogoluègnes demos messaging apps built with RabbitMQ with Reactor on Spring Cloud. Code used in this talk is made available for download.
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Tea Ceremonies: Steeping IT Ops in Your Developer's Hot Water
Olaf Gradin shares Fiserv’s experience working with Pivotal Application Service, what worked and what didn’t.
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Springing into Kotlin: How to Make the Magic Even More Magical
Mark Heckler discusses how Kotlin can be used to reduce boilerplate and increase code quality, showing how to begin incorporating Kotlin into an existing Spring application.
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Netflix Play API - An Evolutionary Architecture
Suudhan Rangarajan talks about what patterns Netflix observed in their previous architectures and how they arrived at a list of practices to create an Evolutionary Architecture.
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Paying Technical Debt at Scale - Migrations @Stripe
Will Larson talks about why migrations are the only mechanism to effectively manage technical debt as their company and code grow, and what makes running them so hard.
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npm and the Future of JavaScript
Laurie Voss talks about what npm knows about JavaScript users, how JavaScript usage patterns are changing, and JavaScript security, tools, and future direction.
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Full Cycle Developers @Netflix
Greg Burrell presents Netflix’s journey from siloed teams to their Full Cycle Developer model for building and operating their services at Netflix.
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Desktop Applications in Electron: Pro Tips and Tricks
Paul Betts talks about some common pitfalls that many developers new to Electron fall into, especially people with a web background who are new to Desktop development.
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Mocking .NET without Hurting Its Feelings
John Wright discusses two main types of mocking frameworks: constrained frameworks (like RhinoMocks and Moq) and unconstrained frameworks (such as Typemock Isolator and Telerik JustMock).