Northern Virginia Software Symposium - November 6 - 8, 2015 - No Fluff Just Stuff

Jeremy Deane

Northern Virginia Software Symposium

Reston · November 6 - 8, 2015

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Jeremy Deane

Chief Architect at Foundation Medicine

Jeremy Deane is innovative technology leader, conference speaker, and technical author with diverse experience, in premier technical settings, with proven expertise in Enterprise Architecture, Software Architecture, and Software Process Improvement.

Presentations

Enterprise Messaging Workshop

This two-session workshop will cover everything from messaging basics to advanced messaging techniques leveraging Enterprise Integration Patterns. In addition, the workshop will include hands-on exercises using Apache ActiveMQ and Camel.

Enterprise Messaging Workshop

This two-session workshop will cover everything from messaging basics to advanced messaging techniques leveraging Enterprise Integration Patterns. In addition, the workshop will include hands-on exercises using Apache ActiveMQ and Camel.

Technology Innovation Diffusion

In this session you will learn to strategically introduce technology innovations by applying specific change patterns to groups of individuals. Using these patterns and related techniques will not only benefit your organization but will ultimately benefit your career as a technologist by making you a better influencer, writer, and speaker.

Event-driven Microservices

Using the Microservices Architectural Style to incrementally adopt an Event-driven Architecture (EDA) lowers up-front costs while decreasing time-to-market. EDA extracts value from existing occurrences, limiting invasive refactoring or disrupting existing application development efforts. Implementing Event-driven Microservices yields intelligence, scalable, extensible, reactive endpoints.

Architecture Resiliency

No matter the techniques used to make enterprise solutions Highly Available (HA), failure is inevitable at some point. Resiliency refers to how quickly a system reacts to and recovers from such failures. This presentation discusses various architectural resiliency techniques and patterns that help increase Mean Time to Failure (MTTF), also known as Fault Tolerance, and decrease Mean Time to Recovery (MTTR).