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.
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.
Software is all fun and games until things start to fail and the error hunt begins. The larger and more distributed your applications are, the more complex such error hunts become. Adding distributed tracing to your applications is a perfect way to reduce this complexity. With OpenTelemetry we now have an industry standard for implementing distributed tracing.
My name is Wolfgang. I live near Linz, Austria, and have been working as a professional software developer for more than 20 years now. I believe in constant learning and embracing new technologies. Also, I like making stuff and blogging about it. This includes writing code, tinkering with electronics, 3D printing or just building LEGOs with my kids.
In my presentation, I will try to answer on most popular questions about typescript on StackOverflow. I mean, when it is better to use unions instead of function overloading. How to represent recursive types, data structures with infinity repetitions, range of numbers, how to work with tuples and enums, and why mutations are not welcome in typescript. All examples are taken from real life. I will try to save your time and show the most common pitfalls in TypeScript, some good and bad practices.
I've been working as a front-end developer for 5 years. Most of the time I'm using TypeScript on a daily basis. Apart from TypeScript, I'm interested in Rust, ReScript, and F# programming languages. Spend some time on StackOverflow (@captain-yossarian) answering TypeScript questions.
Ever built a UI library? Did you ever had to rewrite it so it can be used with a different library? Ever had to port that perfect date-picker just because it was written in jQuery and not React?
Let's talk about web components and how they help to build scalable and maintainable applications. Do you need to replace your whole front-end stack with web components or can you replace bit by bit? Spoiler: it's the latter.
Ever wondered if they play well with Angular, React or Vue?
Why would you consider web components and when can you safely ignore their existence?
Join me and find out!
A Java developer that saw the light and embraced Internet Explorer 6 as his digital overlord. With 15 years of experience in the field I’ve seen how we re-invent the wheel to fit the new shiny framework. As a software architect, I’m responsible for finding the best, most simple and elegant solutions for our clients, which used to be Flash then became jQuery and angular.js and who knows what it might be tomorrow. We try to continuously improve, but we also need to help each other which is why I love to share my experiences and mistakes.
Always bet on the web.