WHY COMPLEXITY WILL EAT THE WORLD:
2 EXECUTIVES DISCUSS THE
EVOLUTION OF SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT
The systems you're building are complex and distributed, made up of numerous applications and services. They're hard to build and harder to manage with no one right way to build to meet your customer's needs.
2 expert executives -- Inés Sombra (Director of Engineering at Fastly) and James Turnbull (CTO of Empatico) -- will discuss how complexity has changed technical architecture, systems design, and how we do engineering.
Based on their vast professional and personal experience and knowledge of the software industry, including: open-source tools, software development, testing, product-market fit and more, they will give us their expert point-of-view of things to come, and key issues to keep in mind.
This webinar is especially important for companies that have embraced the digital age and are on the prowl for ever-enhanced user experience, and for their dedicated engineers, which want to keep a leg up on the competition.
After the talk, Inés and James will answer your questions in a live Q&A session.
Inés Sombra is a director of engineering at Fastly, where she spends her time helping the web go faster. Inés holds an M.S.
in Computology with an emphasis on Cheesy 80’s Rock Ballads.
She has a fondness for steak, fernet, and a pug named Gordo. In a previous life, Inés was a Data Engineer.
James Turnbull is the CTO of Empatico.
A long-time member of the open source community, James is the author of nine technical books about open source software: The Terraform Book, The Art of Monitoring, The Logstash Book, The Docker Book, Pro Puppet, Pulling Strings with Puppet, Pro Linux System Administration, Pro Nagios 2.0, and Hardening Linux.
He was formerly CTO at Kickstarter and an advisor at Docker. James likes food, wine, books, photography, and cats. He is not overly keen on long walks on the beach or holding hands.
Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book.
It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software.
There are many variations of passages of Lorem Ipsum available, but the majority have suffered alteration in some form, by injected humour, or randomised words which don't look even slightly believable.
There are many variations of passages of Lorem Ipsum available, but the majority have suffered alteration in some form, by injected humour, or randomised words which don't look even slightly believable.