Avsnitt
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Brian Sletten: @bsletten | about.me/bsletten
00:30 - Brian Sletten Introduction
02:01 - What is WebAssembly?
caniuse.com: Search=webassembly
Google Native Client (NaCl)
NaCl and PNaCl
asm.js
11:58 - The Popularity and Attraction of WebAssembly
21:44 - Will WebAssembly kill the desktop?
33:00 - The Synergy Between Rust and WebAssembly
Mozilla
40:38 - Getting Started with WebAssembly, Additional Resources, and Advice
Twitter: #WebAssembly
Learn WebAssembly | PACKT Books
The Pragmatic Programmer: Programming WebAssembly with Rust
“Lin Clark WebAssembly” Google Search
@WasmWeekly -
Simon Brown: simonbrown.je | @simonbrown | Software Architecture for Developers | Simon blogs at Coding the Architecture
This episode is sponsored by Pivotal and ThoughtWorks.
02:13 - Simon’s Background and Career Path Thus Far
04:20 - Structurizr and Software Tooling
The C4 Software Architecture Model
08:44 - Architecture Concepts in Programming Languages and an Architecturally Evident Coding Style
12:24 - Organization of Code and Software Systems; Microservices
The Moose Technology Platform
23:32 - Lack of Design Thinking
Distributed Big Balls of Mud
Simon's Modular Monoliths @ Devoxx Belgium 2016
This episode is sponsored by The O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference and ArchConf 2017.
29:08 - Cargo Culting Ideas and Testing Strategies
Martin Fowler’s PresentationDomainDataLayering
39:36 - Problems with Terminology
44:37 - Tooling “for the right thing”
52:59 - Advice for an Aspiring Software Architect -
Saknas det avsnitt?
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Neal Ford: @neal4d | nealford.com
This episode is sponsored by Pivotal and ArchConf 2017
01:36 - Neal’s Background and Career Path Thus Far
Clipper Development
Delphi
Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs)
11:52 - Evolutionary Architecture and Evolvability
Neal and Rebecca Parsons on Microservices as an Evolutionary Architecture
Neal’s Evolutionary Architecture Podcast Episode on Software Engineering Daily
Neal and Rebecca Parsons Discuss Evolutionary Architecture on the Thoughtworks Tech Leaders Podcast
Neal’s Webinar on Evolutionary Architectures
Docker - Dynamic Equilibrium
Arrival of the Fittest: How Nature Innovates by Andreas Wagner
26:56 - Fitness Functions; Ensuring Resiliency
31:19 - Microservice Architecture and Complexity
40:57 - Data Ownership: Who owns customer? Logical Cohesion
50:44 - -ilities: Tradeoffs -
Michael Nygard: @mtnygard | Wide Awake Developers (Mike’s Blog) | The Cognitect Blog | Release It! Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software
This episode is sponsored by Pivotal.
01:42 - Mike’s Background and Career Path Thus Far
02:59 - Complex Systems
The Complexity Explorer
06:22 - Continuous Partial Failure and Looking at Microservices
Mike’s New Normal Blog Series
11:23 - “Agile”: Why?
14:03 - Antifragility
Blog Post: From Resilient to Antifragile
Nassim Taleb’s Antifragile
Normal Accidents: Living with High-Risk Technologies by Charles Perrow
20:18 - Evolutionary Design
Blog Post: The Art of War, Maneuverability, and Microservices
Sun Tzu’s The Art of War
Matt’s Antifragile Architecture Talk
Evolutionary Architecture by Neal Ford, Rebecca Parsons, and Pat Kua
29:05 - Redundancy and DRY (Don’t Repeat Yourself)
YAGNI (You Aren’t Gonna Need It)
37:11 - What services should I actually have?
41:00 - Contracts Between Services
48:29 - Advice for Someone Getting Started as an Architect:
Ward Cunningham’s c2 Wiki
The Pattern Oriented System Architecture Series -
My guest today is my good friend Mark Richards. Mark is an independent hands-on software architect, with 20 of his 30 years of experience in the industry playing some type of architecture role on a myriad of different software projects. He is the author of several books including Java Message Service, 2nd Edition, and is featured in the book 97 Things Every Software Architect Should Know. In addition to that he is a frequent speaker on the conference circuit (which is how we met), and gives various extremely popular software architecture trainings around the world.
In this episode we discuss his keynote from the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference in London, which took place in October 2016. -
My guest for this episode is Tudor Girba. Tudor builds tools and techniques for improving the productivity and happiness of software teams. He currently acts as a software environmentalist at feenk gmbh, a coaching and consulting company that he co-founded.
In 2014 he received the Dahl-Nygaard Junior Award for his work on modeling and visualization of evolution and interplay of large numbers of objects.
He leads the work on the Moose platform for software and data analysis, he initiated the work on the Glamorous Toolkit project for reinventing the software development environments, and he is a board member of the Pharo programming language and environment. He also authored the humane assessment method for making software engineering decisions, and the demo-driven approach to embedding design thinking in software development. -
My guest for this show is Tim Berglund, Vice President of Developer Education at DataStax. We start by discussing the unique challenges of distributed systems for architects, eventually landing on the most important piece of distributed systems advice a software architect can receive. We then dive into types of distributed systems and how to build up one's skill set in this important area.