InfoQ Homepage Presentations
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Abusing CSharp 5
Jon Skeet entertains the audience with C# snippets that one should not use in real life.
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A Light Saber for Your Disruptive Tool Belt: The Business Model Canvas
Pete Cohen introduces the Business Model Canvas, a shared visual language for describing and designing business models, helping teams to achieve their goals within the context of an overall vision.
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McDonalds, Six Sigma, and Offshore Outsourcing: Unexpected Sources of Insight
Chad Fowler keynotes on his career, the passion, the mistakes and good choices he made, and how that can help others learn the craft of software engineering.
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SQL on Hadoop - Pros, Cons, the Haves and Have Nots
Ted Dunning discusses the different options for running SQL on Hadoop including pros and cons.
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Developing Microservices for PaaS with Spring and Cloud Foundry
This session describes architectural patterns for developing microservices: Service Decomposition, API Gateways, Stateless/Shared-Nothing Apps, Configuration and Backing Service Consumption, etc.
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JSF in the Modern Age
Keith Shakib presents how to use JSF 2 to write user interfaces on the server side.
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The Art of Learning and Mentoring
Jutta Eckstein discusses how pedagogical patterns and corresponding tools can help individuals improve themselves, making them better mentors and therefore help their teams improve continuously.
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Clojure Is the New C
Robert Martin argues that Clojure is a replacement for C with its simple syntax and minimal semantics.
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The State of Speech Recognition on Mobile
Simon MacDonald explains how to use speech recognition effectively on mobile platforms, covering the W3C Web Speech API specification and its current implementation status.
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The State of Hybrid Mobile Development
TJ VanToll takes a look at where the hybrid ecosystem is today, and where it's heading, trying to evaluate if the ecosystem is growing or shrinking.
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The Product Design Sprint and Test-Driven Design
Alex Baldwin explains the exercises used in the 5 phases of a Design Sprint: Build, Diverge, Converge, Prototype, and Test.
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The Pivotal Way
Josh Knowles shares thoughts on the strong engineering culture which has made the Pivotal Labs team successful, taking a look at how things have evolved over the past 20 years.