Keynotes from the O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference in New York 2016

Watch full keynotes covering software architecture, microservices, distributed systems and more. From the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference in New York 2016.

By Mac Slocum
April 12, 2016
The keynote stage at the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference The keynote stage at the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference (source: O'Reilly)

Experts from across the software architecture world are gathering in New York City for the O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference. Below you’ll find links to full keynote presentations from the event.

Bla bla microservices bla bla

Jonas Bonér looks at microservices from the perspective of first principles, distilling it to its essence and putting it within the context of distributed systems.

Learn faster. Dig deeper. See farther.

Join the O'Reilly online learning platform. Get a free trial today and find answers on the fly, or master something new and useful.

Learn more

The evolution of evolutionary architecture

Rebecca Parsons looks at common software architecture practices and explains how our use of them has evolved.

Conversational commerce

When a conversational style of user interface is coupled with ubiquitous instant messaging, new opportunities emerge for companies to interact with their customers.

What I learned about architecture from running marathons

Ted Malaska explains how long hours of training, blisters, and shin splints relate to life-changing lessons in software architecture.

Evolving toward microservices: How HomeDepot.com made the transition

Christopher Grant offers the lessons his team learned as HomeDepot.com transitioned from monolith to microservices.

Going cloud native: It takes a platform

Chip Childers explains what it means to be truly “cloud native,” what it takes to get there, and how a platform can make it all work.

From static to future-proof: Enterprise architectures in the age of the customer

Thomas Cozzolino highlights the importance of the developer experience, API-first thinking, common data models, and enterprise ecosystems amidst the backdrop of growing customer expectations.

Let’s make the pain visible

Janelle Klein outlines the Idea Flow Learning Framework, a strategy for measuring the friction in developer experiences that makes the problems visible.

Post topics: Software Architecture
Share: