Kirk Knoernschild
Northern Virginia Software Symposium
Reston · April 22 - 24, 2016
Software Developer & Mentor
Kirk is software developer with a passion for building great software. He takes a keen interest in design, architecture, application development platforms, agile development, and the IT industry in general, especially as it relates to software development. His recent book, Java Application Architecture was published in 2012, and presents 18 patterns that help you design modular software.
Presentations
Modular Architecture - Refactoring the Monolith
Microservices are all the rage. But this isn’t a session on microservices. It’s a session on modularity. At the end of the day, microservices are just one way to the increase modularity of our software system. But there are others.
Java 9 - The Jigsaw Module System
With Java 9, modularity will be built in to the Java platform…Finally! In this session, we explore the default Jigsaw module system and compare it to the alternative module system, OSGi, on the Java platform.
Modularity, Microservices, and Modern Architectures
New architectural paradigms are emerging that challenge traditional assumptions about the way that scalable and adaptable software is built. At the heart of these paradigms is a modular approach that breaks apart the monolithic application into microservices. But breaking apart the monolith has implications beyond software architecture and microservices are just one implementation alternative.
Java Micro Frameworks for Microservices
Microservice architecture is a modern architectural approach that focuses on breaking apart the monolith and building modular services. But the framework we use has a tremendous impact on how we build and deploy services. A new type of framework has emerged that provides a lightweight stack for building microservices.