InfoQ Homepage QCon Software Development Conference Content on InfoQ
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Remote Working Approaches that Worked (And Some that Didn’t)
Charles Humble talks about his personal experience working remotely at C4 Media, the company behind InfoQ & QCon . He shares some lessons he has learned so we can spot common pitfalls and avoid them.
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ML/AI Panel
The panelists discuss what makes ML different from other types of applications and why it requires special tooling.
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Optimizing You Panel: Path to Awesomeness
The panelists discuss their own choices and events from their histories that propelled their careers, and helped them achieve awesomeness in one or more areas of their lives.
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Impact Starts with You
Julia Nguyen delves into what they do at if-me.org to keep themselves accountable as an inclusive and beginner-friendly open source community.
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Swift for Tensorflow
Paige Bailey demonstrates how Swift for TensorFlow can make advanced machine learning research easier and faster.
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Security and Compliance Theater - The Seventh Deadly Disease
John Willis describes the “Seven Deadly Diseases of DevOps” with a focus on the most costly of them all - Security and Compliance Theater.
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Kafka Needs No Keeper
Colin McCabe talks about the ongoing effort to replace the use of Zookeeper in Kafka: why they want to do it and how it will work.
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The System of Profound Knowledge
Ben Rockwood talks about the System of Profound Knowledge, a modern system that sets forth a pattern of thinking that the society is still trying to fully implement.
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Helm 3: A Mariner's Delight
Lachlan Evenson talks through differences from the Helm of yore, tips for a successful rollout or upgrade, and opportunities to shape a project’s future.
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DevOps & Lean Thinking Panel
The panelists discuss the latest trends and processes in DevOps & Lean Thinking.
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Declarative APIs in an Imperative World
Tilde Thurium explains problems the Atom Editor team came across when they started using React as their UI framework, as well as the solutions they came up with.
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Sorbet: Why and How We Built a Typechecker for Ruby
Dmitry Petrashko talks about Sorbet, a fast, powerful type checker designed for Ruby. At Stripe, they used Sorbet to drive code quality via measurable, concrete indicators.