InfoQ Homepage Presentations
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0 – 100 MPH - Launching a New Product at Scale
Dan Macklin explains why bet365 has adopted Erlang as a core development platform and goes through the highs and lows of managing change in one of the world's biggest on-line bookmakers.
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The Indian Design Tradition - Folklore and Fluidity in both Function and Form
Nagaraju Pappu introduces the design language used by Indian civilization in creating beautiful art from temples to textiles, to music and murals.
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Rate Types for Stream Programs
Thomas Bartenstein, Yu David Liu introduce RATE TYPES, a new type system to reason about and optimize data-intensive programs, performing static quantitative reasoning about stream rates.
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Groovy Browser Automation
Colin Harrington introduces GEB, a browser automation solution, combining the power of WebDriver, jQuery content selection, the robustness of Page Object modelling and the expressiveness of Groovy.
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Groovy for Java Developers
Peter Ledbrook attempts to answer the question "Java is a good all-purpose programming language, but does that mean it's the best tool for all jobs?"
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Big Data in Memory
John Davies shows a Spring work-flow consuming 7.4kB XML messages, binding them to 25kB Java but storing them in just 450 bytes each, 10 million derivative contracts in-memory on a laptop.
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IoT Realized - The Connected Car
This session explores the power of Spring XD in the context of the Internet of Things (IoT).
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Deis + Mesos: Docker PaaS at Scale
Gabriel Monroy demonstrates using Deis to orchestrate Docker deployments, as well as Deis' integration with popular schedulers like Fleet, Mesos, and Kubernetes.
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Crafting Experience Strategy
Cathy Wang discusses experience strategy: what it is, relationship with UX, business and service design, different approaches to it, and how it can help to achieve success.
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One Weird Trick for Making Perfect Software
Pieter Hintjens teaches a trick he is using daily to create better software clients.
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Gobblin: A Framework for Solving Big Data Ingestion Problem
Lin Qiao discusses the architecture of Gobblin, LinkedIn’s framework for addressing the need of high quality and high velocity data ingestion.