InfoQ Homepage QCon Software Development Conference Content on InfoQ
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Performance: What's Next?
A lot of the techniques and approaches that are used for developing and improving software performance are tried and tested rather than innovative. But what does the future hold? Will software evolve?
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Panel: Java Is Still Free?
The panelists talk about costs, freedom of use, who governs Java/OpenJDK and what providers are for Java infrastructure for the next 5, 10, 15 years.
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Risk of Climate Change and What Tech Can Do
Jason Box and Paul Johnston briefly share several bold visions to slow down the pace of climate change to buy time and save lives.
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Taking the Canary out of the Coal Mine
Mike Ruth discusses how canaries can take all shapes and sizes: Web servers, network devices, cloud instances, and numerous token variants.
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Security & Psychology: Demotivating Persistent Threats
Jarrod Overson breaks down the workflow for effective threat mitigation of sophisticated attackers.
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Open Source Robotics: Hands on with Gazebo and ROS 2
Louise Poubel gives an overview of ROS (Robot Operating System) and Gazebo (a multirobot simulator), the problems they've been solving so far and what's on the roadmap for the future.
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Engineering Dumb: Modern Mobile Thin Clients
Brandon John-Freso talks about building a complex feature at OkCupid and demonstrates a few design patterns to create remotely configurable layouts and behavior on-the-fly.
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Using Quantum Computers to Simulate Chemistry
Peter Morgan shows how quantum computers can be used to simulate chemistry with applications in drug discovery, material science and industrial processes.
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Restoring Confidence in Microservices: Tracing That's More Than Traces
Ben Sigelman talks about rethinking distributed tracing in terms of the most vital organizational problems that microservices introduced.
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Building Artificial General Intelligence
Peter Morgan takes a look at how deep learning is presently being extended in ways that take AI technologies far beyond the simple image classifiers that they were originally developed to solve.
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Complex Event Flows in Distributed Systems
Bernd Ruecker demonstrates how the new generation of lightweight and highly-scalable state machines ease the implementation of long running services.
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Multi-Modal Input Design for Magic Leap
Colman Bryant talks about what types of new input modalities are coming online and how they can be used and combined in different ways to surpass existing approaches with stories from Magic Leap.