InfoQ Homepage QCon London 2025 Content on InfoQ
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Fast Eventual Consistency: Inside Corrosion, the Distributed System Powering Fly.io
Innovative cloud solutions expert Somtochi Onyekwere recently presented at QCon London 2025, unveiling Corrosion—Fly.io's advanced open-source distributed system. By leveraging CRDTs and Rust, Corrosion enhances scalability and data synchronization, addressing latency challenges and ensuring rapid, consistent application deployment across a global network of 40+ regions.
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QCon London: AI Agents Can Work Together to Make Humans Better
In a well-received closing keynote at QCon London 2025, independent AI consultant Hannah Foxwell challenged the common narrative about AI making us more productive and helping us to do more, instead arguing that AI agents should be designed to eliminate mundane work for us rather than replace human jobs.
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QCon London 2025: Hybrid Cloud-Native Networking in Enterprise - Some Assembly Required
In an engaging talk at QCon London 2025, Louis Ryan, CTO of Solo.io and co-creator of Istio, addressed the complexities of hybrid cloud-native networking. He emphasized intentional assembly of network components, critical evaluation of tools, and treating networking as a primary focus to ensure reliability, observability, and security in today's intricate enterprise environments.
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QCon London 2025: Applying Domain-Driven Design at Scale
At QCon London 2025, Vanderbijl unveiled how domain-driven design transformed a chaotic healthcare platform into a coherent business architecture. Through innovative strategies like "Take That" and "Robbie Williams," the team tackled architectural complexity, emphasizing adaptability and continuous improvement. This journey illustrates DDD as an evolving process essential for sustainable growth.
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QCon London: In an Enterprise Ecosystem Your Platform Is Not an Island
In a talk at QCon London, Rachael Wonnacott explained the challenges in building a developer platform in an organisation with legacy processes and how a golden path leading to either a Kubernetes Hotel or a Public Cloud House might be necessary.
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QCon London: How to Design GenAI Interaction from the Company That Designed Apple’s First Mouse
During her QCon London keynote, Savannah Kunovsky, managing director of emerging technologies at IDEO, talked about how design thinking can ensure that the products we build are not only technically impactful but genuinely impactful. She also discussed how we can use Gen AI to assist people in being more connected and adapting their interactions to their users' needs.
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QCon London 2025 Day 1: Parsing Data from Space, Developer Joy, Local First Apps, Platforms
The 19th annual QCon London conference was held at The Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre in London, England. This three-day event, organized by C4Media, consists of presentations by expert practitioners. Day One, scheduled on April 7th, 2025, included a keynote address by Dr. Kenneth Harris and presentations from five conference tracks.
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QCon London 2025: the Origin Story of AMQP - Advanced Message Queuing Politics
Join John O'Hara, creator of the Advanced Message Queuing Protocol (AMQP), as he shares the compelling journey of this groundbreaking technology at QCon London. Discover the intricate dynamics of collaboration, challenges faced, and the human element in open standards. O'Hara's insights illuminate the politics behind technology development, proving vision is as vital as innovation.
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How Senior Software Engineers Can Learn from Junior Engineers
A rigid hierarchical dynamic between senior and junior software engineers can stifle innovation, discourage fresh perspectives, and create barriers to collaboration. According to Beth Anderson, senior engineers can actively learn from their junior counterparts. She suggests creating an environment of mutual growth, psychological safety, and continuous learning.
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QCon London 2025: Achieving AI Precision through Intelligent Data Retrieval
Adi Polak, a Confluent expert, addressed AI precision challenges at QCOn London 2025, introducing agentic RAG to enhance data retrieval accuracy. With insights on the limitations of current systems and actionable strategies for implementation, Polak emphasized precision as a crucial factor in operationalizing AI, building trust, and improving business outcomes.
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QCon London 2025: Insights from 20+ Years in Mission-Critical Infrastructure
Matthew Liste, head of infrastructure at American Express, shared insights at QCon London 2025 on building robust cloud platforms in financial services. With 20+ years of experience, he emphasized stability, security, scalability, the value of interchangeable components, and long-term sustainability, urging professionals to maintain focus and foster a strong team culture for platform engineering.
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QCon London: Bringing DevOps Principles to Controls and Audit
Ian Miell delivered a talk at QCon London 2025 on a modernised approach to compliance, announcing an open-source project that aims to solve many of the problems seen in the audit and compliance process. Miell highlighted that there's a disconnect between modern DevOps practices of automation and repeatability, and traditional audit and compliance procedures.
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Lessons on How to Get Timeouts, Retries and Idempotency Right from Sam Newman at QCon London
At QCon London, Sam Newman - the architect who has attributed the coining of the term microservices, went back to the basics to underline the three critical things to get right when working with distributed systems: timeouts, retries and idempotency. Through the talk, he provided mechanisms allowing distributed systems to be more robust.
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QCon London: Mistakes People Make Building SaaS Software
Jon Topper, AWS ambassador and founder of The Scale Factory, shared key insights at QCon London 2025 on building effective SaaS solutions. He highlighted pitfalls, stressing the importance of multi-tenancy from day one, automating tenant provisioning, and planning disaster recovery. Topper encouraged leveraging community wisdom to avoid costly mistakes and implement secure, scalable architectures.
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Lessons Learned from Growing an Engineering Organization
As their organization grew, Thiago Ghisi's work as director of engineering shifted from being hands-on in emergencies to designing frameworks and delegating decisions. He suggested treating changes as experiments, documenting reorganizations, and using a wave-based communication approach to gather feedback, ensuring people feel heard and invested.