InfoQ Homepage Presentations
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Can Chaos Coerce Clarity from Compounding Complexity? Certainly
Matt Simons attempts to catch some Black Swans in a system’s architecture and infrastructure, hidden in increased complexity.
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Healthy Code, Happy People (an Introduction to Elm)
Katja Mordaunt discusses writing webapps in a simpler way than using the traditional HTML, CSS and JavaScript.
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InfoQ Live Roundtable: Production Readiness: Building Resilient Systems
The panelists discuss observability, security, the software supply chain, CI/CD, chaos engineering, deployment techniques, canaries, blue-green deployments all in the pursuit of production resiliency.
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Lessons from Incident Management and Postmortems at Atlassian
Jim Severino shares what worked (and didn't work) in incident management and post-mortems for Atlassian.
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Identifying Hidden Dependencies
Liz Fong-Jones discusses some of the manual experiments they ran at Honeycomb, the bugs discovered in some automatic replacement tools, and what steps they took for continuously running experiments.
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InfoQ Live Roundtable: Observability Patterns for Distributed Systems
The panelists explore how a sound observability strategy can help mitigate operational costs and avoid common pitfalls in monitoring distributed systems.
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Automating Chaos Attacks
Daniel Albuquerque and Nikos Katirtzis show how to run attacks in both manual and automated ways.
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Chaos Engineering: the Path to Reliability
Kolton Andrus shares examples of what works, what doesn’t, and what the future holds in using Chaos Engineering to build reliability in a system.
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How Netflix Scales Its API with GraphQL Federation
Jennifer Shin and Stephen Spalding discuss Netflix’s API unification process using GraphQL Federation.
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Breaking Serverless Things on Purpose: Chaos Engineering in Stateless Environments
Emrah Şamdan discusses the challenges of building a highly resilient serverless app, designing for unpredictable problems, and planning for chaos experiments, using various observability solutions.
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Failing over without Falling over
Adrian Cockcroft shows how to use System Theoretic Process Analysis (STPA), as advocated by Professor Nancy Leveson’s team at MIT, to analyze failover hazards.
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InfoQ Live Roundtable: Microservices - Are They Still Worth It?
The panelists discuss the positive and negative impact of microservices: is there an alternative middle ground, have we learned how to deal with operational complexity?