InfoQ Homepage QCon Software Development Conference Content on InfoQ
-
Michelangelo - Machine Learning @Uber
Jeremy Hermann talks about Michelangelo - the Machine Learning Platform that powers most of the machine learning solutions at Uber.
-
Making AI FaaSt
Dragos Dascalita Haut and Akhilesh Kumar demo an AI app built with serverless, composing multiple AI functions into one workflow deployed on a FaaS on Apache OpenWhisk..
-
Terraform Earth - Secure Infrastructure for Developers
Chase Evans describes the primitives and processes Coinbase used to eliminate unilateral access and safely shared the power of infrastructure with the entire engineering team.
-
Helping Developers to Help Each Other
Gail Ollis shares what experienced developers said about the day-to-day decisions made by their peers and how these make the job harder or easier.
-
Yes, I Test in Production (And So Do You)
Charity Majors talks about testing in production and the tools and principles of canarying software and gaining confidence in a build, also instrumentation and observability .
-
Building Production-Ready Applications
Michael Kehoe explores how to deploy microservice to production. He talks about best practices for designing, deploying, monitoring & documenting applications.
-
Capacity Planning for Crypto Mania
Jordan Sitkin and Luke Demi talk about how Coinbase had to deal with the cryptocurrency spikes of 2017.
-
Three Things I Wish I Knew When I Started Designing Languages
Peter Alvaro talks about the reasons one should engage in language design and why many of us would (or should) do something so perverse as to design a language that no one will ever use.
-
21st Century Languages Panel
Track hosts Ashley Williams (Core Rust Team member) pulls together an interlanguage working group to discuss newer software languages.
-
Kotlin: Write Once, Run (Actually) Everywhere
Jake Wharton talks about the Kotlin language, how it compiles to run on more than just the JVM, and whether it can fully pull off the multiplatform trick allowing a single codebase to run everywhere.
-
The Most Secure Program Is One That Doesn’t Exist
Diane Hosfelt gives an overview of how Rust’s design gives security guarantees and discusses goals and visions for the future.
-
WebAssembly. Neither Web Nor Assembly, All Revolutionary
Jay Phelps talks about WebAssembly, a bytecode designed and maintained by Google, Microsoft, Apple, Mozilla, Intel, LG, among others. He talks about what WebAssembly is and what it isn’t.