Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique. Duis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique. Duis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere.
Save Your SpotTogether with BOSCH we invite you to a full day of learning more about the intersection of mobility and code. Get to know more about how modern mobility is defined by an intricate interplay of hardware and software and how cars are not only connected to the road, but also to the cloud.
Coding the Future of Mobility features a variety of talks and a workshop, that give you valuable insights into the world of mobility - wether you join in-person or online.
Together with Bosch we invite you to a full day of learning more about the intersection of mobility and code. Get to know more about how modern mobility is defined by an intricate interplay of hardware and software and how cars are not only connected to the road, but also to the cloud.
Coding the Future of Mobility features a variety of talks and a workshop, that give you valuable insights into the world of mobility - wether you join in-person or online.
Java's JAX-RS, DI, JPA, Metrics, Fault Tolerance, Configuration, cloud-readiness combined with minimal start times, high performance, and Go-like feel – and this without a dependency on a particular framework, vendor, or library.
In this session, I will implement a next-generation Java backend from scratch and explain the magic on-the-fly. Java SE, reactive APIs, Helidon, Quarkus, GraalVM, MicroProfile, and a bit of Jakarta EE included.
Developer (Architect), Consultant, Trainer (https://airhacks.io), Podcaster (https://airhacks.fm) and Java enthusiast Adam Bien (https://adambien.blog) uses Java since JDK 1.0 and JavaScript since LiveScript and still enjoys writing code.
Adam regularly organizes Java / Web / Architectures online live workshops https://airhacks.live and monthly Q&A live streaming show: https://airhacks.tv.
The way we use Java has changed. Applets – or any browser-side Java – are a long, long, time ago. Java moved to the back-end and stayed there, but the back-end has gotten bigger, more distributed, and more complicated. Some things that were a good idea ten years ago turn out to be a terrible idea in the cloud, and what used to be "good enough" for testing really is not anymore. Managing microservices architecture demands a lot of us, to ensure observability, operational resiliency, and organizational agility. This talk will introduce some of the new tools, patterns, and best practices for Java development in 2020. It also gives a tour of some of the most painful anti-patterns Holly as seen as a consultant with the IBM Garage.
Holly Cummins is a Senior Technical Staff Member and Innovation Leader at IBM. Holly has used technology to enable innovation, for clients across a range of industries, from banking to catering to retail to NGOs. During her time as a lead developer in the IBM Garage, she has led projects to count fish, help a blind athlete run ultra-marathons in the desert solo, improve health care for the elderly, and change how city parking works. Holly is also an Oracle Java Champion, IBM Q Ambassador, and JavaOne Rock Star. Before joining the IBM Garage, she was Delivery Lead for the WebSphere Liberty Profile (now Open Liberty). Holly co-authored Manning’s Enterprise OSGi in Action and is a regular keynote speaker. She is an active speaker and has spoken at KubeCon (keynote), GOTO, JavaOne, Devoxx, Sonar+D, JavaZone, JFokus, The ServerSide Java Symposium, GOTO, JAX London, QCon, GeeCon, and the Great Indian Developer Summit, as well as a number of user groups.
This talk will cover the most important and game-changing features brought to you in the latest java versions.
These improvements modernize the way we program and should be in the toolbox of every engaged programmer.
Michael Inden is an Oracle-certified Java developer who holds a degree in computer science. After completing his studies in Oldenburg, he worked as a software developer and architect, team leader, and CTO for various international companies. Currently, he is self-employed as a consultant. Michael Inden gained over 20 years of experience in designing complex software systems and has participated in various training courses and Java One conferences in San Francisco. He likes to pass on his knowledge as a trainer in training courses and at conferences as well as in coaching colleagues.
New languages bring new ways of thinking and teach us new principles and tools that we can bring back to our day to day language.
Using a real application as an example, we will learn how to build and design Java applications that follow Clojure’s functional principles using just core Java, without any libraries, lambdas, streams, or weird syntax; and we will see what benefits those functional principles can bring.
No Clojure or functional programming knowledge required, just plain old good Java.
Daniel Lebrero is a baby CTO, a teen remote worker, a mature Clojurian, an elder Architect, an ancient TDDer, and an antediluvian Java dev.
With more than 20 years of software development experience, he has worked on monolithic websites, embedded applications, low latency systems, microservices, streaming applications, and big data.