InfoQ Homepage QCon Software Development Conference Content on InfoQ
-
Panel: JavaScript - Is the Insanity Over?
Is JavaScript finally ready to make developers happy? Are the days of transpiling really numbered? People seem to be stuck with JavaScript, but the developer experience might just be getting better.
-
My Team Is High Performing But Everyone Hates Us
Stephen Janaway tells the story of a high performing team, what went well and why they ultimately failed. He shares some lessons about how to keep a high performing team happy and what to avoid.
-
Privacy Architecture for Data-Driven Innovation
Nishant Bhajaria discusses how to set up a privacy program and shares tips on how to influence engineering and other teams to own their data and its usage so that privacy is a shared goal.
-
Six Things I've Learned as a Manager I Wish I Knew Before
Georgiy Mogelashvili shares personal stories about his experience as a manager, his mistakes and achievements, with a grain of some valuable insights he learned along the way.
-
Making Npm Install Safe
Kate Sills discusses how to minimize the risks of running third-party JavaScript.
-
Beyond the Distributed Monolith: Rearchitecting the Big Data Platform
Blanca Garcia Gil talks about how BBC re-architected a distributed monolith, shares the lessons learnt from operating it for nearly 3 years, and how they designed their new microservices architecture.
-
Kubernetes is Not Your Platform, It's Just the Foundation
Manuel Pais discusses how successful Kubernetes adoption requires thinking about what a platform really means and learning which team structures and interactions work well.
-
Panel: How to Make the Future Become Your Present
Sometimes, adopting new tech took more nurturing than expected to ensure it was successful. Not every decision was the right one, but each presented new learning opportunities.
-
Ethics Landscape
Theo Schlossnagle gives a fly-by survey of the vast and mature field of ethics and attempts to convince people to adopt ethical considerations into the software development lifecycle.
-
Life After Java 8
Gil Tene looks at the realities of Life after 8. He discusses the rate of change, the current Java ecosystem, and the implications of LTS.
-
Observability in the Development Process: Not Just for Ops Anymore
Christine Yen explores what observability looks like in practice, so that production stops being just where the development code runs into issues.
-
Interoperability of Open-source Tools: The Emergence of Interfaces
Katie Gamanji focuses on the evolution of interfaces within the Kubernetes landscape, including networking, storage, service mesh and cluster provisioning.