InfoQ Homepage Culture & Methods Content on InfoQ
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QCon London: Mistakes People Make Building SaaS Software
Jon Topper, AWS ambassador and founder of The Scale Factory, shared key insights at QCon London 2025 on building effective SaaS solutions. He highlighted pitfalls, stressing the importance of multi-tenancy from day one, automating tenant provisioning, and planning disaster recovery. Topper encouraged leveraging community wisdom to avoid costly mistakes and implement secure, scalable architectures.
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Lessons Learned from Growing an Engineering Organization
As their organization grew, Thiago Ghisi's work as director of engineering shifted from being hands-on in emergencies to designing frameworks and delegating decisions. He suggested treating changes as experiments, documenting reorganizations, and using a wave-based communication approach to gather feedback, ensuring people feel heard and invested.
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QCon London: a Three-Step Blueprint for Managing Open Source Risk
At QCon London 2025, Johnson Matthey's vulnerability manager, Celine Pypaert, discussed managing open-source dependency risks while maintaining momentum in innovation. She described a three-part blueprint for handling the security challenges that arise with the now widespread use of open-source dependencies.
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QCon London: Monzo's Recipe for Developer Experience: Assemble, Build, Communicate
Fabien Deshayes spoke on how Monzo has created and optimised their developer experience teams in a talk at QCon London 2025. Deshayes outlined some techniques for building an effective Developer Experience platform, focusing on three key aspects: assembling effective teams, building impactful products, and communicating value across the organisation.
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How Software Developers Can Build Their Personal Brand to Elevate Their Influence
A strong public brand helps software engineers in job transitions and creates opportunities, while an internal brand builds credibility within your company. Pablo Fredrikson shared a story about how he helped a team struggling with a service issue to improve relationships. To build your brand, define your goals, take on visible projects, and be helpful. It benefits both you and the company.
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Exploring Aging of Programmers: Fostering Inclusive and Age-Friendly Workplaces
Age-related discrimination assumes older programmers are less capable or unwilling to learn. Kate Gregory stresses that inclusive, age-friendly workplaces benefit all employees. She advises staying open to new experiences, learning, and building connections to maintain a fulfilling career and well-being as we age.
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Applying DevOps Principles and Practices as a Quality Assurance Engineer
DevOps streamlines software development with automation and collaboration between development and IT teams for efficient delivery. According to Nedko Hristov, testers' curiosity, adaptability, and willingness to learn make them suited for DevOps. Failures can be approached with a constructive mindset; they provide growth opportunities, leading to improved skills and practices.
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Learnings from Working with Programming Rules and Guidelines
Programming rules and guidelines improve code consistency, but misapplication can lead to poor results. Arne Mertz suggests that software developers selectively adopt rules and guidelines, and document deviations with clear explanations. They can discuss their experiences in communities or during their daily work, to foster collaboration and improve code quality without unnecessary bureaucracy.
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Using Artificial Intelligence for Analysis of Automated Testing Results
Analysis of automated testing results is a very important and challenging part of testing activities. At any given moment we should be able to tell the state of our product according to the results of automated tests, Maroš Kutschy said at QA Challenge Accepted. He presented how artificial intelligence helps them save time spent on analysis, reduce human errors, and focus on new failures.
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Ensuring Security without Harming Software Development Productivity
Security can be at odds with a fast and efficient development process. At QCon San Francisco Dorota Parad presented how to create a foundation for security without negatively impacting engineering productivity. She showed how you can make your security strategy almost invisible to the engineers while embedding it deep into the culture at the same time.
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How a Software Architect Uses Artificial Intelligence in His Daily Work
Software architects and system architects will not be replaced anytime soon by generative artificial intelligence (AI) or large language models (LLMs), Avraham Poupko said. They will be replaced by software architects who know how to leverage generative AI and LLMs, and just as importantly, know how NOT to use generative AI.
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Most Companies Experience Weekly Outages: The State of Resilience 2025 Report
According to The State of Resilience 2025 Report, published by Cockroach Labs, outages are commonplace in most organizations, with 55% of companies reporting weekly and 14% reporting daily outages. Staggering 100% of survey participants experienced revenue losses due to outages, with some companies (8%) reporting losses of USD $1 million or higher over the last 12 months.
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How to Foster a Continuous Improvement and Learning Mindset in Software Development
According to Ramya Sriram, individuals and teams must embrace a continuous improvement and continuous learning mindset to stay competitive and relevant. She spoke about continuous improvement and learning, where she explored how her company fosters a culture of innovation through programs that support experimentation, providing employees with the time and space to explore new approaches and adapt.
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How Data Contracts Support Collaboration between Data Teams
Data contracts define the interface between data providers and consumers, specifying things like data models, quality guarantees, and ownership. They are essential for distributed data ownership in data mesh, ensuring data is discoverable, interoperable, and governed. Data contracts improve communication between teams and enhance the reliability and quality of data products.
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Creating Accessible Websites Using the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
Web accessibility is about making web content available to users with disabilities. Development teams can use the success criteria of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines to improve accessibility and create an inclusive website.