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Eventually, there was SOA, and CORBA reared its head like a dyslexic snake. There have been many software design patterns proclaimed to be The Best™ over the years, each one has evolved or been supplanted by the next. And now we have the so-called fad that is Microservice Architecture. Let’s explore these.
We are proud to have had a lineup of speakers from different nationalities, including: Mark Richards is an experienced, hands-on software architect involved in the architecture, design, and implementation of microservices architectures, service-oriented architectures, and distributed systems. Eswaran Thandi has over 2.5
He has been in the software industry since 1983 and has significant experience and expertise in application, integration, and enterprise architecture. Sonya Natanzon is an engineering leader and software architect with many years of experience. Softwareengineer by training, she’s worked in a number of different industries.
It’s been a few years since I first wrote The Seven Deadly Sins of Microservices after working on a few early microservices projects and noticing a number of common pitfalls. Indeed, quite a few of the anti-patterns we observe today on microservices projects are strongly related to how people approach the problem.
As part of this project they: evaluated a workflow tool, modeled the workflow, implemented the whole workflow solution, integrated it with their existing user interface, integrated it with their existing SOA infrastructure, exported relevant data into their data warehouse And set it live and operated it. Which brings us to microservices.
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