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I See Events Everywhere; Who will Organize Them?

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30

min

I See Events Everywhere; Who will Organize Them?

I See Events Everywhere; Who will Organize Them?

I See Events Everywhere; Who will Organize Them?

I See Events Everywhere; Who will Organize Them?

publish date

May 28, 2024

duration

30

min

Difficulty

Intermediate

Beginner

Beginner

Beginner

Case details

Some years ago, events appeared in the IT world with the idea of decoupling many applications or microservices, improving performance, reducing complexity, and allowing change flows. Some companies adopted this new paradigm instead of the classic synchronic world where the client needs to wait until the provider answers; initially, everything looked fine, but after some months, the problems appeared. This talk will delve into the complexities of leveraging events in application development. We'll explore the potential pitfalls, organizational challenges, and strategies to bring order to the chaos of event-driven architectures. Additionally, we will shed light on the crucial aspects of documenting event flows and testing methodologies, offering practical insights to ensure the robustness and maintainability of your event-driven systems.

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About Author

Technical Leader

#

Software Architecture

Andres Sacco has been working as a developer since 2007 in different languages, including Java, PHP, NodeJs, Scala, and Kotlin. Most of his background is in Java and the libraries or frameworks associated with this language. In most of the companies he worked for, he researched new technologies to improve the performance, stability, and quality of the applications of each company.

In 2017 he started to find new ways to optimize the transference of data between applications to reduce the cost of infrastructure. He suggested some actions, some of them applicable in all the manual microservices and others in just a few. All this work concludes with the creation of a series of theoric-practical projects, which are available on the page Manning.com Recently he published a book on Apress about the last version of Scala. Also, he published a set of theoric-practical projects about uncommon ways of testing like architecture tests and chaos engineering.

He dictated internal courses to different audiences like developers, business analysts, and commercial people. Also, he participates as a Technical Reviewer on the books of the editorials: Manning, Apress, and Packt.

Technical Leader

#

Software Architecture

Andres Sacco has been working as a developer since 2007 in different languages, including Java, PHP, NodeJs, Scala, and Kotlin. Most of his background is in Java and the libraries or frameworks associated with this language. In most of the companies he worked for, he researched new technologies to improve the performance, stability, and quality of the applications of each company.

In 2017 he started to find new ways to optimize the transference of data between applications to reduce the cost of infrastructure. He suggested some actions, some of them applicable in all the manual microservices and others in just a few. All this work concludes with the creation of a series of theoric-practical projects, which are available on the page Manning.com Recently he published a book on Apress about the last version of Scala. Also, he published a set of theoric-practical projects about uncommon ways of testing like architecture tests and chaos engineering.

He dictated internal courses to different audiences like developers, business analysts, and commercial people. Also, he participates as a Technical Reviewer on the books of the editorials: Manning, Apress, and Packt.

Technical Leader

#

Software Architecture

Andres Sacco has been working as a developer since 2007 in different languages, including Java, PHP, NodeJs, Scala, and Kotlin. Most of his background is in Java and the libraries or frameworks associated with this language. In most of the companies he worked for, he researched new technologies to improve the performance, stability, and quality of the applications of each company.

In 2017 he started to find new ways to optimize the transference of data between applications to reduce the cost of infrastructure. He suggested some actions, some of them applicable in all the manual microservices and others in just a few. All this work concludes with the creation of a series of theoric-practical projects, which are available on the page Manning.com Recently he published a book on Apress about the last version of Scala. Also, he published a set of theoric-practical projects about uncommon ways of testing like architecture tests and chaos engineering.

He dictated internal courses to different audiences like developers, business analysts, and commercial people. Also, he participates as a Technical Reviewer on the books of the editorials: Manning, Apress, and Packt.

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910 Foulk Road, Suite 201

Wilmington, DE 19803, USA

© 2025 Geekle. All rights reserved.

Questions?

Chat with Us!

910 Foulk Road, Suite 201

Wilmington, DE 19803, USA

© 2025 Geekle. All rights reserved.

Questions?

Chat with Us!

910 Foulk Road, Suite 201

Wilmington, DE 19803, USA

© 2025 Geekle. All rights reserved.