InfoQ Homepage Presentations
-
Javascript... FOR SCIENCE!
Angelina Fabbro, Bill Mills call developers to help scientists progress in their research, providing advice, a project and a JavaScript tool that could be the starting point in this endeavor.
-
Gershwin: Stack-based, Concatenative Clojure
Daniel Gregoire introduces Gershwin, a stack-based, concatenative programming language with a Clojure runtime that targets the JVM.
-
Add ALL the Things: Abstract Algebra Meets Analytics
Avi Bryant discusses how the laws of group theory provide a useful codification of the practical lessons of building efficient distributed and real-time aggregation systems.
-
Design, Composition, and Performance
This talk will explore the nature of design and composition and how it impacts our approach to software development practice and tools.
-
Partitions for Everyone!
Kyle Kingsbury discusses some of the limitations found in distributed systems and the way some of them behave under partitioning.
-
How GitHub (no longer) Works
Zach Holman discusses the various stumbling blocks GitHub encountered as the company grew over the years.
-
Big Data Platform as a Service at Netflix
Jeff Magnusson details some of Netflix' key services: Franklin, Sting and Lipstick.
-
One to Many: The Story of Sharding at Box
Tamar Bercovici presents Box’s transition from a single MySQL database to a fully sharded MySQL architecture, all the while serving 2 billion queries per day.
-
Building APIs with Grails
Bobby Warner discusses the pros and cons of the available options that Grails developers have for creating RESTful APIs.
-
Advanced Web Development Techniques With Grails 2
Jeff Scott Brown presents some of the advanced features available in Grails 2 for web application development.
-
Which Is Easier? 100T-10M or 10M-1B
Zoltan Toth-Czifra shares scalability lessons learned at Softonic, a company that has developed and grew along with the Internet for over 15 years.
-
Practicing Joy
Chad Fowler keynotes on practicing joy as a software developer, starting from his life experiences and concluding that joy is intrinsic while happiness requires discipline.