InfoQ Homepage Presentations
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Future of Data Engineering
Chris Riccomini talks about the current state-of-the-art in data pipelines & data warehousing, and shares some of the solutions to current problems dealing with data streaming & warehousing.
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Automated Testing for Terraform, Docker, Packer, Kubernetes, and More
Yevgeniy Brikman talks about how to write automated tests for infrastructure code, including the code written for use with tools such as Terraform, Docker, Packer, and Kubernetes.
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Stateful Programming Models in Serverless Functions
Chris Gillum explores two stateful programming models - workflows and actors.
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How Do We Heal?
Alex Qin offers a vision for how to can come together and co-create the world yearned, drawing inspiration from restorative justice practices, the work of the Code Cooperative, and her own experience
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Elephants Can Dance: Two Contrasting Transformations
Sunil Mundra showcases two contrasting case studies, one a failure and the other a success in Agile transformation, to bring out the key variables that determine success or failure.
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Refactoring Space as Energy Drink for Your Codebase
Michael Mai discusses how to approach the adoption of LeSS in an organization.
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Death by User Stories
Jenny Martin discusses what to do when the number of user stories grows large.
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Real Options
Yves Hanoulle and Geike Hanoulle offer examples teaching how to apply real options to one’s life and projects.
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Adventures in Programming, Automating, Teaching and Marketing
Alan Richardson discusses lessons learned from writing commercial and open source tools, multi-user adventure games, REST APIs, test automation, and automating applications.
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Finding the Joy in Chaos Engineering
Lenny Sharpe and Brian Lee discuss how Target has built resiliency into their systems and how developing a strong culture around Chaos Engineering has paid off.
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Hello, Spring Security 5.2
Rob Winch, Eleftheria Stein-Kousathana and Filip Hanik walk through “hello security,” demonstrating how Spring Security can be customized to meet business requirements.
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Eighteen Years of Spring
Rod Johnson discusses some of the key things that make successful frameworks, including: the Open/Closed principle, the role of Design Patterns, clear layering, consistent coding conventions, etc.