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An airhacks.fm conversation with Graeme Rocher (@graemerocher) about: Graeme became a Jakarta EE committer, Micronaut supports large parts of CDI Lite, the Build Time Extension API, SessionScoped, RequestScoped and ApplicationScoped are going to be part of CDI Lite, splitting the BeanManager interface, the goal of CDI Lite, CDI and immutable infrastructure, using TestContainers to spin out micronaut instances, heavy kubernetes, Google Cloud Run, CDI Lite's main goal is memory efficiency and fast startups, using CDI Lite to write CLI apps, using CDI Lite for IoT, micronaut on IoT devices, Azure functions, AWS Lambda and GraalVM, Micronaut Launch as AWS Lambda, Helidon will use Micronaut Core for CDI Lite injection, Helidon will eliminate reflection with Micronaut contributions, Helidon will be able to use any Micronaut module, the micronaut's pom.xml was simplified, micrometer and MicroProfile, eclipse-ee4j CDI lite, separating business and technology metrics, the battle between standards and de-facto standards, OpenMetrics, OpenCensus and opentelemetry, moving fast and backward compatibility, Graeme Rocher on twitter: @graemerocher
An airhacks.fm conversation with Graeme Rocher (@graemerocher) about: Playing games with 286, playing digger, starting programming with quakec, programming custom explosions for rocket launcher with "shockman", working for a Apache Cocoon company, JavaScript and Java as second languages, programming learning management SYSTEMS with Java, publishing motivated by learning, programming over gaming, using JBoss on the backend, extracting content from Word with Apache POI and Groovy into XML, using XSLT to convert XML into HTML, data driven templates with XSLT, data-driven stylesheets is the way to go, starting with Visual Basic, the raise of Ruby on Rails, starting Groovy on Rails--Grails, groovy and the "method missing", "method missing" was heavily used in gorm, working on SpringData, SpringData and GORM are similar, joining Object Computing, staying small and be successful, with reflection you will use more memory at the runtime, micronaut was started by Graeme Rocher, micronaut is based on annotation processing, there is no "mobile native" development, on Android reflection is not used, better error messages was one of the design goals, micronaut comes with annotation-based introspector, micronaut generates a reflection-like API based on annotation processors, micronaut was announced in March 2018 and opensourced in May 2018, CDI was hard to implement without annotation, micronaut is similar to Spring, micronaut supports JSR-330 and is TCK-compliant, the Bean Validation module, micronaut supports micrometer, micronaut teams grows at Oracle, Visual Studio Code ships with GraalVM Extension Pack and Micronaut support, micronaut and Helidon are developed by multiple teams, Oracle actively supports micronaut, micronaut and GraalVM are great fit, micronaut is complex at compile time, but simple at runtime, helidon will be able to use the Micronaut Data, the JAX-RS with micronaut screencast, Object Computing, Google, Oracle are contributing to micronaut, Graeme Rocher on twitter: @graemerocher
An airhacks.fm conversation with Dmitry Kornilov (@m0mus) about: "What was your first computer?" - Dmitry's introduction, Helidon 2.0 supports GraalVM native compilation, Helidon CLI used Apache Maven Archetype, Helidon CLI is written in Java and cross-compiled to an executable file, the Helicon CLI source code and repository, watch and deploy: wad.sh - a primitive version of Helidon CLI, with Helidon you can compile MicroProfile applications and compile them to a native image, Helidon supports Weld and has full CDI compatibility, Helidon comes with MicroProfile Reactive Messaging and MicroProfile Reactive Operators, Reactive Operators were contributed by David Karnok, Quarkus is pragmatic and they are choosing the 80% approach, Helidon focuses on CDI and MicroProfile compatibility, Helidon uses Smallrye for OpenAPI, WebLogic license comes with Helidon support, Helidon supports WebSockets, JPA, Helidon is the natural choice for WebLogic customers, migrations from reasonable Java EE / Jakarta EE applications to MicroProfile are easy, Helidon with Oracle JDBC drivers and GraalVM support, next Helidon major release will come with additional cloud support, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure is going to be supported by Helidon, Helidon will support other cloud services as well, all clouds contributions are welcome, Java / Jakarta Messaging Service (JMS) on Microsoft Azure, Eclipse MicroProfile Azure implementation, JSON-B and JSON-P Jakarta EE 10 features, Java API for JSON Binding, Java Record and JSON-B, JEP 384: Records (Second Preview) in Java 15, preliminary support for Project Loom in Helidon, Jersey MVC Templates, Quarkus Templating Qute, performance and scalability is Helidon's focus, Helidon supports MicroProfile 3.3, Helidon tries to support the latest MicroProfile the fastest, possible Micronaut's impact on Helidion, Graeme Rocher works for GraalVM, Micronaut's extensions might be supported in Helidon, Micronaut Data and Bean Validation could be used in Helidon, Java SE vs. MicroProfile API stability, Helidon uses semantic versioning, a possible trend back to monoliths, Java EE, Jakarta EE and MicroProfile, Dmitry Kornilov on twitter: @m0mus, Dmitry's blog: https://dmitrykornilov.net
Ken Kousen talks to Graeme Rocher at the Oracle Code One conference in San Francisco, CA, in September 2019. Topics include recent and upcoming developments in #grailsfw, #micronaut, and more, as well as the current situation at OCI.
Phil’s guest on this episode of the IT Career Energizer podcast is Graeme Rocher. He is a co-founder of the Grails framework, the co-author of The Definitive Guide to Grails and Project Lead for the OCI Grails team. He has worked in the software field for more than 20 years and has expertise in Grails, Groovy, Web Development, Dynamic Languages and the Java Virtual Machine. He was awarded Oracle’s Groundbreaker Award in 2018 and has recently been named a Java Champion. In this episode, Phil and Graeme Rocher discuss how believing in yourself and becoming a lifelong-learner pushes you to make a real difference through the tech you work on. They also talk about the benefits of being involved in the open-source industry. As well as the future of IT and how you can tap into the latest trends to grow your career. KEY TAKEAWAYS: (4.39) TOP CAREER TIP You need to be passionate about what you do and be a lifelong learner. Every new technology progresses in a new and interesting way. So, it is worth keeping up with what is going on. (6.00) WORST CAREER MOMENT For many years, Graeme headed up the Groovy and Grails development team at Pivotal Software. In 2015, he and his team had to find a new home. Fortunately, they found a good one at OCI. But, the actual move was extremely stressful. It was a worrying time. But, it taught Graeme that open source technologies are important and, therefore, robust. They don’t get abandoned in the same way commercial software does. In the podcast, he explains why getting involved in Open Source is a good career move. (8.14) CAREER HIGHLIGHT Receiving the Groundbreaker award at Oracle Code in recognition of his contributions to Apache Groovy was a big moment for Graeme. From a technical standpoint, it is building Micronauts. (9.14) THE FUTURE OF CAREERS IN I.T The fact that IT is ever-changing and that the industry is becoming more diverse is exciting. This means there are so many more career paths available. He is also excited by the possibilities Micronauts opens up. It creates the opportunity to be able to build applications in a much more efficient way. In the podcast, Graeme provides several examples of what he means. (12.53) THE REVEAL What first attracted you to a career in I.T.? – Graeme got into programming through playing games, as a child. He started by working with QuakeC. What’s the best career advice you received? – Embrace open source. What’s the worst career advice you received? – Don’t bother investigating certain technologies. What would you do if you started your career now? – Right now, a lot of the innovation is happening in DevOps. So, there are lots of opportunities in that area. What are your current career objectives? – Progressing Micronauts so it can be used to build more efficient microservices and applications. What’s your number one non-technical skill? – Being artistic has made it easier for Graeme to think out of the box and stand out. How do you keep your own career energized? – Pushing boundaries is what keeps Graeme’s career energized. What do you do away from technology? – Graeme loves skiing, the beach, paddle boarding and spending time outdoors. (21.28) FINAL CAREER TIP Keep progressing yourself and do not listen to the naysayers. Believe in yourself, never give up and strive to make a real difference. BEST MOMENTS (5.01) – Graeme - “Be genuinely passionate about what you do and become a lifelong learner.” (8.04) – Phil - “Open source is always going to have a future.” (10.55) – Graeme - “The move towards more intelligent Java compilers and ahead of time compilation is going to be a big deal.” (15.30) – Graeme - “Expose yourself to new technologies and do so at an early stage.” (20.47) – Graeme - “Never accept that the solution is complete, there is always room for improvement.” (21.38) – Graeme - “Self-belief is really important. Don’t let others put you off.” ABOUT THE HOST – PHIL BURGESS Phil Burgess is an independent IT consultant who has spent the last 20 years helping organisations to design, develop and implement software solutions. Phil has always had an interest in helping others to develop and advance their careers. And in 2017 Phil started the I.T. Career Energizer podcast to try to help as many people as possible to learn from the career advice and experiences of those that have been, and still are, on that same career journey. CONTACT THE HOST – PHIL BURGESS Phil can be contacted through the following Social Media platforms: Twitter: https://twitter.com/philtechcareer LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/philburgess Facebook: https://facebook.com/philtechcareer Instagram: https://instagram.com/philtechcareer Website: https://itcareerenergizer.com/contact Phil is also reachable by email at phil@itcareerenergizer.com and via the podcast’s website, https://itcareerenergizer.com Join the I.T. Career Energizer Community on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/ITCareerEnergizer ABOUT THE GUEST – Graeme Rocher Phil’s guest on today’s show is Graeme Rocher. Co-founder of the Grails framework, the co-author of The Definitive Guide to Grails and Project Lead for the OCI Grails team. He has worked in the software field for more than 20 years and has expertise in Grails, Groovy, Web Development, Dynamic Languages and the Java Virtual Machine. He was awarded Oracle’s Groundbreaker Award in 2018 and has recently been named a Java Champion. CONTACT THE GUEST – Graeme Rocher Graeme Rocher can be contacted through the following Social Media platforms: Twitter: https://twitter.com/graemerocher LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/graemerocher/
Groovy Podcast, live from DevNexus in Atlanta, GA! Host Ken Kousen (@kenkousen) talks to Graeme Rocher (@graemerocher), Ryan Vanderwerf (@ryanvanderwerf), and James Kleeh (@schlogen) about #groovylang, #grailsfw, and #micronautfw
Vincent, Guillaume et Arnaud enfilent leur slip des cast codeurs par dessus leur pantalons pour vous parler d’AdoptOpenJDK, de Spring Boot, de Micronaut, de Kubernetes, de Google App Engine, des vieux pôts de l’écosystème java dans lesquels ont fait les meilleures soupes, de piscem vorat maior minorem et d’un long outil de l’épisode sur TestContainers. Enregistré le 6 novembre 2018 Téléchargement de l’épisode LesCastCodeurs-Episode–198.mp3 News Langages The AdoptOpenJDK Java 11 builds Présentations Java de Oracle Code One listées par Sharat Chandler Running Java code from the source, un article d’Andres Almiray montrant comment on peut lancer du code Java directement sans pré-compilation Focus sur les closures en JavaScript par Wassim Chegham qui continue sa série sur les bases de JavaScript Librairies Spring Boot 2.1.0 est sorti Micronaut 1.0 est sorti Présentation de Micronaut par Graeme Rocher à Oracle Code One et à Voxxed Days Microservices Tutoriel Micronaut sur InfoQ Tutoriel Micronaut sur Medium Infrastructure Kubernetes 1.12 (What’s new by Rancher) Comment dockeriser facilement des applis Java avec Jib (outil que nous avions couvert avec David Gageot) Cloud Github Actions: c’est un peu le IFTTT de Github pour le CI/CD, pour automatiser le workflow de développement Secrets in Serverless par Seth Vargo qui couvre différentes approches pour cacher des secrets (mots de passe, etc) quand on utilise des solutions Serverless . Node 10 sur Google App Engine sorti en beta en même temps que la release de Node 10 Go 1.11 sur Google App Engine également disponible en beta Data Redis modules forked pre-common clause. GoodFORM va-t’il (sur)vivre? MongoDB change sa licence pour tirer parti de la manne des installations cloud de MongoDB Le problème des licences avec Copyleft Outillage JVM Ecosystem Report 2018 - Quel est le plus gros concurrent à JenkinsCI ? Apache Maven 3.6.0 plus CI Friendly avec un usecase pour les releases incrémentales chez Jenkins Sécurité 50 millions de comptes compromis chez Facebook CERTFR–2018-ALE–011 - Vulnérabilité dans le client Git + Nombreux avis de sécurité sur CERT-FR Loi, société et organisation Publicis va acquérir Xébia France IBM va acquérir Red Hat VMware / Pivotal vont acquérir Heptio Outils de l’épisode TestContainers Rubrique débutant Apprendre Apache Maven, l’outil de gestion et d’automatisation de production des projets logiciels sur developpez.com (ou sur GitHub) Conférences DevFest Toulouse le 8 novembre 2018 - sold out. Bdx.io le 9 novembre 2018 - sold out. Devoxx Belgique du 12 au 16 novembre 2018 - sold out. DEVOPS D-DAY 2018 le 15 Novembre à Marseille. Codeurs en Seine le 22 novembre 2018. Snowcamp du 23 au 26 Janvier 2019. CfP DevFest Paris le 8 Février 2019 CfP ConFoo Montreal 2019 du 13 au 15 Mars 2019 CfP Greach (Madrid) du 28 au 30 Mars 2019 Le site du Paris JUG Le CFP de la soirée Young Blood VI Nous contacter Soutenez Les Cast Codeurs sur Patreon https://www.patreon.com/LesCastCodeurs Faire un crowdcast ou une crowdquestion Contactez-nous via twitter https://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs sur le groupe Google https://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs ou sur le site web https://lescastcodeurs.com/
An interview with Grails project leader Graeme Rocher about the recent version 3.1 release and other topics
A variety of conversation topics and whole lotta short stacks were served to the huge crowd that turned out for The New Stack's pancake breakfast at the SpringOne 2GX conference in Washington, D.C. For this edition of The New Stack Analysts podcast, recorded live at the event, Alex Williams spoke with Jon Schneider and Taylor Wicksell, senior software engineers at Netflix; Groovy programming language project lead Guillaume LaForge, and Graeme Rocher, Grails Project Lead at OCI; and James Watters, VP of Cloud Platform Group at Pivotal. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/eDbWoZydT5s Learn more at: https://thenewstack.io/tns-analysts-show-60-netflixoss-groovy-and-grails-and-all-things-cloud-native-at-springone-2gx/
The big news is Pivotal's announcement that they will no longer be sponsoring the Groovy and Grails projects as of the beginning of April. In this episode I talk to Guillaume Laforce and Graeme Rocher - the respective project leads - about the decision and what the future looks like for the two projects.* Groovy 2.4 is out - with Android support!* Grails 3 is progressing nicely with the first milestone due imminently* Gradle 2.3.0.RC1 due out 22nd January* Swiss Knife 1.2.1 released - view injection and threading library for Groovy on Android* First GrailsConf in India this monthConferences to put in your calendar:* GREACH 9 - 11 April* Spring I/O 29 - 30 April* GR8Conf EU 2 - 4 June* Gradle Summit 11 - 12 June* GR8Conf US 29 - 31 July
In der ersten Episode im neuen Jahr geht es mit vollem Elan in eine Menge an Themen. André erzählt über seine Erfahrungen mit der Google App/Compute Engine und der Go Programmiersprache von Google. Danach stehen die Live-Podcasts des 31c3 auf dem Programm. Im Programmierteil erzählt Tom vom Grails 3 Preview Vortrag von Graeme Rocher auf der Skillsmatter GGX 2014 und es wird ein wenig über die Vor- und Nachteile des Frameworks diskutiert. Im Ausklang wird über diverse Apps, Serien und Spiele gesprochen, also eine Vielzahl an Themen, die in dieser Beschreibung gar keinen Platz haben. Shownotes Timr - Time Tracking New Relic Google App Engine Go Development GAE Quotas Go Programming Language Go Packages Documentation Golang at GitHub 31c3 - Das Sendezentrum 31c3 - Freak Show Live 31c3 - Wir müssen reden 31c3 - NSFW Wrint Podcasts Die Wrintheit Skillsmatter - Groovy Grails Exchange 2014 Skillsmatter: Graeme Rocher - Grails 3.0 Preview Blog: Grails in Large Projects Skillsmatter: Modular Monoliths in Grails 3 and Spring Boot YouTube: CCCde Videos Crashlytics Workflow App IFTTT Zapier Slack Dark Souls II - [PlayStation 3] Space Age Crossy Road Ski Challenge 2014/2015 Wiki: Revenge Imdb: Suits Wiki: Suits Wiki: Orange is the New Black Wiki: House of Cards Netflix Cracks Down on VPN and Proxy Pirates
Podcast de audio, con una entrevista al creador de Grails: Graeme Rocher. En esta emisión escuchamos de viva voz del desarrollador como es que fue creado Grails y cuáles son sus opiniones de las comunidades que rondan su uso. Además un punto de vista más humano y cercano de quién esta desarrollando, que puede inspirar a cualquier otra persona que se encuentre en un proyecto con Grails.