Devoxx Poland 2019
from Monday 24 June to Wednesday 26 June 2019.
A lifelong developer advocate, community organizer, and technology evangelist, Burr Sutter is a featured speaker at technology events around the globe—from Bangalore to Brussels and Berlin to Beijing (and most parts in between)—he is currently Red Hat’s Director of Developer Experience. A Java Champion since 2005 and former president of the Atlanta Java User Group, Burr founded the DevNexus conference—now the second largest Java event in the U.S.—with the aim of making access to the world’s leading developers affordable to the developer community. When not speaking abroad, Burr is also the passionate creator and orchestrator of highly-interactive live demo keynotes at Red Hat Summit, the company’s premier annual event.
See also http://burrsutter.com
12 Ways of the Cloud Native Warrior
Now that Kubernetes has become the defacto standard for cloud native application architecture involving microservices and serverless functions, it does represent an extreme environment for your application logic. In this deep dive, 3-hour session, we will be exploring 12 ways, steps along the path, from Linux container neophyte to cloud native application architect. Topics include: Kubernetes basic objects, custom resource definitions (CRDs), Istio VirtualServices, advanced rollout/deployment patterns, auto-scale to zero with Knative, source-to-url automated build machinery and more.
Particle Accelerators and Java with Quarkus
In a cloud native world enamored of Microservices and Serverless, meet Quarkus—Java’s brilliant response to technologies like Node.js, Python and Go that had until recently proven quicker, smaller and arguably more nimble. But we know seeing is believing—we’ll show you Quarkus in action. Get ready to experience “Supersonic, Subatomic Java”— and make Open Source frameworks like Hibernate and Apache Camel faster, smaller and more dynamically scalable than ever before.
Future of Cloud Native Java is Native Java
Some have said that Java is too "big" and too "slow" for a cloud native microservices or serverless architecture that leverages ephemeral Linux containers, that flow quickly through a CI/CD pipeline, canary deployed via a service mesh. Here, we will introduce you to a new way of running Java in Cloud, in Kubernetes/OpenShift with Quarkus leveraging GraalVM or vanilla Hotspot on OpenJDK.