InfoQ Homepage QCon Software Development Conference Content on InfoQ
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Unwinding a Decade of Assumptions - Architecting New Experiences
Cole Turner discusses implementing new experiences across dozens of Netflix microservices, how they navigate assumptions, from ideation to delivery, and how those assumptions impact decision-making.
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Panel: Event Driven Architectures of Scale
Wes Reisz, Matthew Clark, Gwen Shapira, and Ian Thomas discuss the evolution of event-driven architectures over the decades, the advantages that EDA offers, and thoughts for the future.
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Balancing Synchronous and Asynchronous Communication in Virtual Teams
Tammy Bjelland shows how to improve the balance of synchronous and asynchronous communication, and make a positive impact on a team and business outcomes with a simple-to-use framework.
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Minimizing Design Time Coupling in a Microservice Architecture
Chris Richardson discusses design-time coupling in a microservice architecture and why it's essential to minimize it, describing how to design service APIs to reduce coupling.
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Netflix Networking: Beating the Speed of Light with Intelligent Request Routing
Sergey Fedorov discusses how to build the Internet latency map, using network protocols and edge infrastructure, and how to use a data-driven approach to evolve your client-server interactions.
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Optimizing Your Web Performance: Separating the Signals from the Noise
Carl Anderson shares the journey Trainline has been on leading up to Google introducing Core Web Vitals as a ranking signal, discussing web performance.
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Production Infrastructure Cloning++: Reliability and Repeatability
JD Palomino discusses how they have developed a cloud and product-agnostic infrastructure pipeline to handle extra steps and custom configuration, with no special exceptions.
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Helm: Past, Present, Future
Bridget Kromhout, Matt Butcher, Matt Farina discuss Helm, what they want to take it to, Helm 3 and 4.
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Security and the Language of Intent
Tracy Holmes and Petros Kolyvas discuss why the language of security for infrastructure is often lost in translation and how policy as code can help.
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Server-Side WASM: Today and Tomorrow
Connor Hicks explores WASM today, and the capabilities that it will have tomorrow, using the Suborbital Development Platform to illustrate how WASM modules can be used to compose server APIs.
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Architecting for Focus, Flow, and Joy: beyond the Unicorn Project
The panelists discuss some of the most fun and least fun moments when coding, how functional programming practices have helped, and how productivity can be unleashed at a team-of-teams scale.
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Less Mess, Less Stress: the Reliability Benefits of Custom Tools
Daniel Hochman discusses how an overreliance on vendor tooling leads to worse reliability outcomes, how Lyft lowered MTTR for its most common alerts using custom tooling, and how Clutch can help.