This event will be 2 talks, "Logging, instrumentation, dashboards, alerts and all that - for developers" by Henry Been and "Story Telling at the Heart of Civilization - How Event Modeling Makes Sense of Information Systems" by Adam Dymitruk
❗❗ 🌐 This is an online event, we'll be hosting the event on Zoom.
🔗 zoom.us
🔑 Password will be announced on the night
📅 Agenda
- 👋 Welcome
- 🗑️ Housekeeping
- 👨🏫 Logging, instrumentation, dashboards, alerts and all that - for developers with Henry Been
-👨🏫 Story Telling at the Heart of Civilization - How Event Modeling Makes Sense of Information Systems with Adam Dymitruk
- 🍻 Virtual Bar
👉 Logging, instrumentation, dashboards, alerts and all that - for developers
Embracing DevOps entails more than just shipping changes to production faster and faster. Your team is suddenly also responsible for monitoring your software in production and detecting and troubleshooting issues. To work together with operation specialists in your team or maybe even embrace a #NoOps approach, you as the developer, need to learn about monitoring.
Join Henry Been for a demo heavy session, including Azure Monitor and Application Insights to see how to implement all of the above from scratch. During this session, you will learn everything you need to know to start monitoring your solutions and never lose any sleep ever again!
👨🏫 About the speaker:
DevOps & Azure Architect | Microsoft MVP
Henry Been is an independent architect and developer from The Netherlands. He enjoys working with software development teams to create and deliver great software. His interests include the Azure cloud, Agile, DevOps, software architecture and the design and implementation of testable and maintainable software.
Besides his work he is a conference speaker at international conferences, is writing a book and creates online training courses for A Cloud Guru. To follow Henry you can go to his blog henrybeen.nl or look him up on Twitter (@henry_been)
- Twitter: twitter.com
- LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com
- Blog: www.henrybeen.nl
👉 Story Telling at the Heart of Civilization - How Event Modeling Makes Sense of Information Systems
In this talk, I go over how humans engage certain patterns in communication and how this impacts Informs Systems, the effects of Moore's Law in computing history and explain the nature of today's computing. Event Storming and Event Modeling are explorered as a more natural ways of working for humans in building systems collaboratively.
👨🏫 About the speaker:
Adam Dymitruk is an expert in Distributed Information Systems/Microservices with CQRS, Event Sourcing, Event Storming and Event Modelling
Over 3 decades experience in software development, information systems and architecture that defies the limitations of the industry's conventions - in the last 10 years focusing on data loss-less architectures around event streams. Top 1% of Stack Overflow contributors globally with over 6 million developers reached.
Bringing C-level management on the same path and understanding as development and others with vision, strategy and risk mitigation. Enabling start-ups to leverage open-sourcing strategies and sharing risk/TCO on non-competitive services with one another. Legacy code management, risk-management and exit strategy. Involvement with numerous groups and well connected to the industry leaders in the field of software development, architecture and modern methodologies. Introduced PAXOS to the CQRS development efforts which gave rise to a RAFT-like consensus implementation in Event Store. Contributed to Microsoft's Patterns and Practices book on CQRS.
- Twitter: twitter.com
- LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com
More details and tickets: www.meetup.com
Imported From: www.meetup.com
About dotnetsheff
dotnetsheff is a monthly user group focused on software development, particularly in the .NET ecosystem. We welcome people with interests in software development of all ages and levels of experience. Please get in touch via Twitter (@dotnetsheff) or email (organisers at dotnetsheff.co.uk) if you or someone you know may be interested in speaking.