InfoQ Homepage Presentations
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The Spectrum of Synchronousness
James Stanier discusses shifting to asynchronous communication for remote working, going through a spectrum of options, plotting interactions on it, pre- and post- remote work.
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Lead with Speed
Courtney Kissler believes in speed for strong results. Tactics covered: outcome-based teams, making all work visible, limiting WIP, understanding velocity and viscosity, and architecture evolution.
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Data Pipelines & Data Mesh: Where We Are and What the Future Looks Like
Zhamak Dehghani, Tareq Abedrabbo and Jacek Laskowski discuss the current challenges for building Modern Data Pipelines and applying Data Mesh in the real world, what the future looks like, and tools.
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Panel: Living on the Edge
Jose Nino, Rita Kozlov, and Ivan Ivanov discuss when we need to care about edge optimizations, what the development workflow looks like when on the edge, and some of the challenges.
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Federated GraphQL to Solve Service Sprawl at Major League Baseball
Olessya Medvedeva and Matt Oliver discuss how they have begun to implement a Federated GraphQL architecture to solve the issue of service discovery, sprawl and ultimately getting the data needed.
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Airbnb at Scale
Selina Liu walks through what it takes to decompose a large and complex monolith into independent, performant services, and how they evolve and scale the architecture with changing business needs.
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Cloud DevSecOps in Practice: People, Processes and Tools
The panelists discuss how to get the right security, DevOps, and cloud engineering stakeholders together to build a realistic DevSecOps strategy.
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Create from Anywhere: the Netflix Workstations Story
Michelle Brenner discusses the studio Netflix has been building for their originals, the technology behind it and the challenges faced.
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Panel: WebAssembly - the Past, Present and Future
Aaron Turner, Taylor Thomas and Matt Butcher discuss the past, the present, and the future; where they think this technology will be most impactful in the coming years.
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Seven Ways to Fail at Microservices
Holly Cummins discusses a number of anti-patterns in building microservices: The murky goal, Microservices envy, Cloud native spaghetti, The enterprise hairball, The someday automation, and others.
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Improving eBay's Development Velocity
Randy Shoup and Mark Weinberg discuss breaking down silos, measuring software delivery, continually reducing build, startup, PR validation, and deployment time, embedding experts in product teams.
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Maintaining Software Quality with Microservices
The panelists discuss what microservices are, why companies are making the transition, how to identify the challenges when planning the move to microservices, and best practices for software quality.