Ken Sipe
Twin Cities Software Symposium
Minneapolis · October 3 - 4, 2014
Cloud Architect & Tech Leader
Ken is a distributed application engineer. Ken has worked with Fortune 500 companies to small startups in the roles of developer, designer, application architect and enterprise architect. Ken's current focus is on containers, container orchestration, high scale micro-service design and continuous delivery systems.
Ken is an international speaker on the subject of software engineering speaking at conferences such as JavaOne, JavaZone, Great Indian Developer Summit (GIDS), and The Strange Loop. He is a regular speaker with NFJS where he is best known for his architecture and security hacking talks. In 2009, Ken was honored by being awarded the JavaOne Rockstar Award at JavaOne in SF, California and the JavaZone Rockstar Award at JavaZone in Oslo, Norway as the top ranked speaker.
Presentations
Understanding Java Memory
So your server is having issues? memory? Connections? Limited response? Is the first solution to bounce the server? Perhaps change some VM flags or add some logging? In todays Java 6 world, with its superior runtime monitoring and management capabilities the reasons to the bounce the server have been greatly reduced.
Introduction to Java 8
Java 8 is finally released. We haven't seen this number of changes to Java the language since Java 5. This session will provide a review of the changes to Java 8 with a focus on the language changes such as the addition of lambdas which will either have you excited for a language feature which allows you to express what you want vs. how you want it or will have you concerned about readability in your code base.
Flying through the Cloud
cloud architecture… an architectural walk through cloud services and components
high level
Data Centers / VDC
CDN
Monitoring
Load Balancing
Queue
Storage (s3, etc)
DNS
Search
Routing
(Amazon + Open Source) example: CloudSearch vs ElasticSearch
Security
low level
HAProxy
Nerve
synapse
queues
compute
dns
Architectural Case Studies
There is nothing better than looking at real-world examples to understand project failures and project successes. This session is intended to be an open conversation, based closely to a birds of a feature (BOF) session, however it will have a series of “that happened to me” topics throughout discussed from the perspective of technology.
OOP Principles
For decades object-oriented programming has been sold (perhaps over sold) as the logical programming paradigm which provides “the way” to software reuse and reductions in the cost of software maintenance as if it comes for free with the simple selection of the an OO language. Even with the renewed interests in functional languages, the majority of development shops are predominately using object-oriented languages such as Java, C#, and Ruby. So most likely you are using an OO language… How is that reuse thing going? Is your organization realizing all the promises? Even as a former Rational Instructor of OOAD and a long time practitioner, I find great value in returning to the basics. This session is a return to object-oriented basics.