Podcast appearances and mentions of marc fleury

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Best podcasts about marc fleury

Latest podcast episodes about marc fleury

Coin Stories
Amanda Cavaleri on Bitcoin For All, Caring For Our Nation's Aging Population, Orange Pilling D.C.

Coin Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 56:49


Cavaleri is a member of the Board of Directors of CleanSpark, a publicly traded Bitcoin mining company, and CEO of DRE. She is also the Managing Director of APRÉS TECH, a Bitcoin advisory firm and host of the Bitcoin Ski Summit. She is also the Board Chair of the Bitcoin Today Coalition, a nonprofit (c)(4) focused on Bitcoin and Bitcoin mining education in the Capital.   Cavaleri's entrepreneurial work resides at the intersection of emerging technology and wisdom. She has worked alongside world-renowned technology pioneers, Dr. David Chaum (founder of DigiCash & cryptographer) and Dr. Marc Fleury (professionalized open-source via JBoss). Cavaleri received her Master of Science in Technology Commercialization from the University of Texas at Austin's McCombs School of Business. Follow Amanda on Twitter https://twitter.com/amanda_cavaleri Partners: Coin Stories is powered by Swan Bitcoin the best way to build your Bitcoin stack with automated Bitcoin savings plans and instant purchases. Swan serves clients of any size, from $10 to $10M+. Visit https://www.swanbitcoin.com/nataliebrunell for $10 in Bitcoin when you sign up. If you are planning to buy more than $100,000 of Bitcoin over the next year, the Swan Private team can help.  BITCOIN 2023 by Bitcoin Magazine will be the biggest Bitcoin event in history May 18-20 in Miami Beach. Speakers include Michael Saylor, Lyn Alden and Michelle Phan, plus a Day 3 music festival. Nearly 30,000 people attended Bitcoin 2022. Get an early bird pass at a steep discount at https://b.tc/conference code HODL for 10% off your pass.   Fold is the best Bitcoin rewards debit card and shopping app in the world! Earn Bitcoin on everything you purchase with Fold's Bitcoin cash back debit card, and spin the Daily Wheel to earn free Bitcoin. Head to https://www.foldapp.com/natalie for 5,000 in free sats!  Health insurance needs an overhaul. The government and insurance companies have jacked the price, increased complexity, and made insurance almost unusable. You send your money to the health insurance black hole and never see it again. Then, when you get hurt you have to send them more money. The great news is now you have an alternative: CrowdHealth. It's totally different from insurance. Instead of sending your hard earned money to an insurance company, you hold your money in an account CrowdHealth helps you set up when you join. You can even convert dollars in that account into Bitcoin. When someone in the community has a health need, you help them out directly and if there is Bitcoin or $ left over in your account when you leave, you take it with you. https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/natalie    With iTrustCapital you can invest in crypto without worrying about taxes or fees, through an individual retirement account. IRAs are tax-sheltered accounts, which means all your crypto trading is tax-free and can even grow tax-free over time. The best part is it's totally free to open an account, and there are no hidden fees, monthly subscriptions or membership fees. Your account is FDIC insured up to $250,000. Get a $100 funding bonus if you open and fund an account. Go to https://itrust.capital/nataliebrunell to learn more and open a free account.   OTHER RESOURCES  Natalie's website https://talkingbitcoin.com/   VALUE FOR VALUE — SUPPORT NATALIE'S SHOWS Strike ID https://strike.me/coinstoriesnat/  Cash App $CoinStories  BTC wallet bc1ql8dqjp46s4eq9k3lxt0lxzh6f2wcu35cl6944d   FOLLOW NATALIE ON SOCIAL MEDIA Twitter https://twitter.com/natbrunell Instagram https://www.instagram.com/nataliebrunell Linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/nataliebrunell   Producer: Aron Bender https://www.linkedin.com/in/aron-bender/    DISCLAIMER This show is for entertainment purposes only and does not give financial advice. Before making any decisions consult a professional. #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #money

Market Weekly
Money market funds: “It is worth taking care of your cash”

Market Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023 10:29


In times of heightened market volatility and rising policy rates, money market funds offer  investors a haven, where they can park their cash safely in strategies offering liquidity and capital preservation, explains Marc Fleury, Head of Liquidity Solutions. On this Talking Heads podcast, Marc tells Chief Market Strategist Daniel Morris that money market funds now pay a 3-5% yield depending on the currency. For more insights, visit Viewpoint: https://viewpoint.bnpparibas-am.com/  Download the Viewpoint app: https://onelink.to/tpxq34  Follow us on LinkedIn: https://bnpp.lk/am  

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien
How Pulumi for Java Happened

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 84:45


An airhacks.fm conversation with Joe Duffy (@funcofjoe) about: HP 386, LILO - the linux loader, MBR and dual boot, first programming language - C, GNU Compiler Collection (gcc), g++, C++, circle mud, fascination with 3d, starting with Windows 95, running BBS, CGI, ASP and Java servlets, ATG (Art Technology Group) dynamo and jhtml, servlets are inverse JSP, airhacks.fm episode with Marc Fleury "#98 Walk the Path--How JBoss Happened", starting with .net, Borland Paradox - the form project longhorn, indigo and avalon, starting Pulumi, Pulumi for Java, Infrastructure as Code and terraform, Pulumi is written in Go, python + c = go, projects are stacks, pulumi is opensource, Mercedes-Benz and snowflake are using Pulumi, the AWS Cloud Control API, pulumi supports terraform providers, jsii CDK project, pulumi crosswalk, go runtime handles the state management, Java communicates with GO via grpc, a component resource in Pulumi is similar to custom construct in CDK, AWS Cloud Control API metadata for new AWS services is published immediately, Pulumi supports the most recent AWS resource API, ARM templates can be converted to Pulumi, a state of AWS account can be imported to Pulumi, then the IaC source can be generated, "#143 How Hudson and Jenkins happened", kubernetes in public clouds, ECS fargate before kubernetes, simultaneous deployments to azure and aws, conference talk: Hey Enterprise EJB Developers Now Is The Time To Go Serverless Joe Duffy on twitter: @funcofjoe, Joe's blog: joeduffyblog.com and company: pulumi.com

Crypto Voices
Show 112: Amanda Cavaleri - Bitcoin Regs & Privacy

Crypto Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2021 56:33


Show support appreciated: https://donations.cryptovoices.com Show Sponsor: https://hodlhodl.com/join/cryptovoices Matthew and Alec interview Amanda Cavaleri, investor and entrepreneur. We discuss Bitcoin surrounding the current language of the pending infrastructure bill in DC, regulation challenges, many pertinent privacy issues today, and more. Amanda Cavaleri runs APRÉS.TECH, a Wyoming-based Bitcoin startup, fund, and mining advisory. She is also COO of Pearl Snap Capital, an investment management firm currently focused on public structured equities in the technology sector. Ms. Cavaleri has worked with global and domestic Digital Asset Hedge Funds, Venture Equity Funds, and a Bitcoin Mutual Fund. Previously, she was also a startup executive in privacy and cybersecurity alongside Dr. David Chaum, cryptography pioneer and founder of DigiCash, and led global R&D and investor relations for Dr. Marc Fleury, founder of JBoss and open source development pioneer. Ms. Cavaleri holds a Master of Science in Technology Commercialization from the McCombs Business School of the University of Texas at Austin. Previously, she was an entrepreneur in health care, was an AARP Innovation Fellow in Washington, D.C., and held the role of Thought Leader with Carnegie Mellon University & UPMC's Quality of Life Technology Center. Ms. Cavaleri has guest lectured at domestic and international graduate schools about emerging technology as well as taught foreign diplomats about the geopolitical digital currency and privacy landscape via the U.S. Department of State's IVLP Exchange Program. Listen on to learn more. Links for more info: https://twitter.com/Amanda_Cavaleri https://www.apres.tech/ https://pearlsnapcap.com/about Show Sponsor: https://hodlhodl.com/join/cryptovoices Hosts: Matthew Mežinskis, Michel, Alec Harris Music: New Friend Music newfriendmusic.com/ Site: cryptovoices.com/ Podcast & information Bitcoin, privacy, cryptoeconomics & liberty Thanks for listening! Show content is not investment advice in any way.

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien
Writing Boring Software: From WebLogic over GlassFish to Quarkus

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2021 85:49


An airhacks.fm conversation with Antonio Goncalves (@agoncal) about: C 64 with tapes, writing thousands of Basic lines, the Power Cartridge and assembly, the "10 GOTO 10" trick, line renumbering with Power Cartridge, the arkanoid game, form BASIC to assembly, Peeks and Pokes, Pascal, prolog to modulog transpiler, programming chips in C++ for a telekom company, discovering Java and WebLogic, the amazing minitel, minitel was huge in France, building Java Server Pages on WebLogic in 1999, joining WebLogic in London, digging wholes to find water, Java EE 5 book with Glassfish in 2007, Java EE 7 book in 2013, talking at Devoxx about JUnit 4, moving from WebLogic to GlassFish, Java EE is the Esperanto of runtimes and servers, Marc Fleury at Paris JUG, the unknown student from Iran, paying back by reviewing a book, self-publishing books, the Java EE 8 drama, the politics in Java EE 8 were stronger than technical innovation, the Java Injection spec, JSR-330, CDI drama, the road to quarkus, Grame Rocher mitronaut talk, from Spring over Micronaut to Quarkus, Practicing Quarkus and Understanding Quarkus books, Quarkus hot reload is impressive, GraalVM with Quarkus is just -Pnative, at start everything is already optimized with Quarkus, Helidon is an interesting alternative to Quarkus, Helidon's CLI is useful, WebLogic customers get support for Helidon, Antonio Goncalves on twitter: @agoncal, Antonio's github account https://github.com/agoncal and blog antoniogoncalves.org

The Crypto Conversation
Hold, Yield, & Hedge - How professional investors catch the upside & protect the downside

The Crypto Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2021 59:44


Dr. Marc Fleury is the founder and CEO of Two Prime, a digital assets investment firm that invests in BTC and ETH. Marc has a PHD in theoretical physics and he is an open-source evangelist. Two Prime uses a variety of sophisticated hedging strategies to help high net worth individuals gain exposure to the upside potential of BTC and ETH but remain hedged against downside risk.  Why you should listen: Dr. Marc Fleury joins Andy for a fascinating and wide ranging discussion on why Bitcoin is the most important decentralized, open-source project on the planet. Marc explains why he is involved with the Mont Pèlerin Society, a group of economists and intellectuals advocating for an open society and economy driven by free-market principles, personal and political liberty, and freedom of expression. Marc shares his views on post-capitalism, UBI, a world of abundance, and how we evolve to a sci-fi future.  Supporting links: Two Prime Universal Paperclips Leverj Andy on Twitter  Brave New Coin on Twitter Brave New Coin If you enjoyed the show please subscribe to the Crypto Conversation and give us a 5-star rating and a positive review in whatever podcast app you are using.

Forkast.News
Is DeFi a $10 billion Ponzi scheme? (ft. Marc Fleury)

Forkast.News

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2020 32:06


Scammers are going to scam, but there's a real opportunity in DeFi for the financial world at large, says Two Prime CEO Marc Fleury. Listen to the full interview with Fleury and Forkast.News Editor-in-Chief Angie Lau as they discuss DeFi's challenges and opportunities, yields for investors and more.

Forkast.News
Is DeFi a $10 billion Ponzi scheme? (ft. Marc Fleury)

Forkast.News

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2020 32:06


Scammers are going to scam, but there's a real opportunity in DeFi for the financial world at large, says Two Prime CEO Marc Fleury. Listen to the full interview with Fleury and Forkast.News Editor-in-Chief Angie Lau as they discuss DeFi's challenges and opportunities, yields for investors and more.

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien
Walk the Path--How JBoss Happened

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2020 65:04


An airhacks.fm conversation with Marc Fleury (@docfleury) about: ZX 81 with the rubber keys and 14 years, writing the Death Mission game, sneaking out at night to develop games, the great Apple 2, rediscovering computers during the physics study, simulating lasers on Vax and C, internet over physics at MIT, in the 1990s studying software engineering was waste of time, interest in quantum entanglement, working with Java, SUN and SAP, JBoss was architected by Rickard Öberg, learning Java in 4 years after physics study, working as support engineer at Sun Microsystems, becoming Java evangelist at Sun Microsystems as an accident, nobody wanted to hire a PhD, the birth of JBoss, spending time at SAP research with Hasso Plattner, trying to apply WebLogic to SAP, Sun Microsystems and WebLogic rejected Marc, Marc started an opensource project called: EJBOSS, a letter from Sun lawyers, AOP and EJB were invented at the same time, meta programming and aspect oriented approaches are older than Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP), JBoss is implementation of the AOP architectural ideas, AOP happens also in nature, viruses can program the system without inheritance, EJB 1 was a piece of sh*t, Sun's standards efforts is what industry needed, crazy Rickard Öberg was an alien, opensource internet is the remedy, internet is from the planet to the planet, entering the École Polytechnique - a "special forces" time, opensource had to be free, JBoss was professional opensource, between IBM, SUN and the opensource fanboys, professional opensource: POS -> Piece of Sh*t, AWS in 1997 - 10 years too early, Scott Stark made a distributable product, "walk the path" mantra, Sascha Labourey wrote the JBoss clustering JBoss was developed in the first year by 10 people, great software started with small teams, increasing the team size can decrease the motivation and fun, why JBoss was sold, WildFly version 20 came out, studying system biology, learning about finance, how to keep money as investor, studying music and enjoying techno, working with professor of percussion who worked with Karlheinz Stockhausen, writing Monte Carlo simulations with Java 8 for fun, Java 15 fibers and project Loom, Robert G. Pickel worked for Gemstone, founding: twoprime.io Two Prime FF1 Token - the product was launched at the worst possible day, working with Alexander S. Blum coding keeps you young, writing physics simulations with Java, JBoss vs. WildFly, JBoss vs. Quarkus, shared deployments in microservice and cloud era, invoking the angels an linux diamonds, Marc Fleury on twitter: @docfleury and Marc's company: twoprime.io / @Two_Prime

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien
If You Get A Book, You Have To Start Reading

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2020 78:44


An airhacks.fm conversation with Max Rydahl Andersen (@maxandersen) about: C 64, green screens, Basic, GoTo, Rallye, animated sprites, peek and pokes, snake game's source code, Summer Olympics was a joystick destroyer, Word Perfect on Commodore, assembler and protective demo scene on Commodore Amiga, access to information was a battle, the Turbo Pascal Book about object oriented programming, fascination with databases, building an artwork management for a gallery app in MS Access, building a WYSIWYG tool in Visual Basic, working as tutor at school, installing SmallTalk VisualAge, great visual Delphi, Java was more open than Delphi was, medfork and the trifork application server, writing an electronic medical journal, Trifork supported hot reload, JAOO became GOTO, writing dependency management system with Python on a Dell Laptop, emacs was the main IDE, writing a Swing application which talks to trifork backend, using Apache OJB, session sharing with Apache OJB, hibernate always understood transactions, working with Christian Bauer and Gavin King, writing the first version of hbm2ddl tool, extending hibernate to support native queries, getting fixes for enterprise software without paying, Gavin was hired by Marc Fleury, moving to Switzerland and working for Sascha Labourey, RichFaces Exadel acquisition, JBoss IDE became JBoss Tools, what became JBoss Studio, which became RedHat Studio, which became Code Ready, frustration with Java 9, Go has some power, but doesn't have Java's ecosystem, Go legalized formatting, Swing over SWT, Swing API is awesome, SWT had nice native integration, JFace is more like Swing, a successful opensource project has to accept patches fast, Eclipse JDT is an amazing piece of technologies, Eclipse is great for browsing big code bases, the memory is not a problem, the perceived performance is, NetBeans and Eclipse have difference strategies, Eclipse tries to understand everything, NetBeans don't, overuse of OSGi, microservices and modules, start with a monolith first, quarkus takes the good parts of Jakarta EE and MicroProfile and further improves them, GraalVM native compilation is not the main feature, tree-shaking with Quarkus, JBang - Java for scripting, quarkus is hard to kill, Max Rydahl Andersen on twitter: @maxandersen

Untold Stories
What's Pushing Bitcoins' Momentum? Marc Fleury, CEO of Two Prime, Compares the 90's Internet With Today's Crypto and Reveals How an Open Source Financial System is Possible

Untold Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2020 77:09


Marc Fleury, Founder and CEO of Two Prime, joins Charlie Shrem on this week’s episode of Untold Stories. They begin by talking about the open source movement and why it is so attractive for developers. Marc continues with comparisons between crypto today and internet and software development in the 90's and makes an amazing alien reveal. Charlie and Marc agree that Bitcoin showed resilience surviving the Mt. Gox debacle. Charlie asks if the earlier open source movement has evangelists like crypto today and Marc discusses the duality of these movements as well as declaring crypto is not about the tech as much as a psychological hurdle holding it back. Marc further states that the killer apps are already here and discusses bringing back the ICO with an improved model, the CTO or Continuous Token Offering. They finish up with a deep dive into the physics of Proof of Work and mining energy expenditures and end on a positive prediction. --- BitPay gives you the tools to live life on crypto. Whether you want to send crypto to friends, use crypto to buy video games or computer parts, or turn crypto into gift cards for more than 100 mainstream brands, the BitPay app has you covered. You can hold your own private keys in a secure wallet while accessing the best of crypto commerce. Get started at bitpay.com/wallet. --- Bitpanda is a fintech based in Vienna, Austria founded in 2014 by Eric Demuth, Paul Klanschek and Christian Trummer. The company is a firm believer in the innovative power of cryptocurrencies, digitised assets and blockchain technology. Bitpanda’s mission is to tear down the barriers to investing and bring traditional financial products to the 21st century. Today, Bitpanda has more than 1 million users and 120 team members. With a PSD2 payment service provider license, state-of-the-art security and streamlined user experience, Bitpanda has grown into a popular trading platform for newbies and experts alike. Users can currently trade Bitcoin, Ethereum, gold and over 20 other digital assets. --- Pepo was founded by Jason Goldberg, who has been building user experiences for creators and communities for decades. Jason has worked at AOL, Jobster, Social Median, and more recently he connected designers at Hem and Fab. Visit us at Pepo.com/stories for more information. --- If you enjoyed this conversation, share it with your colleagues & friends, rate, review, and subscribe.This podcast is presented by BlockWorks Group. For exclusive content and events that provide insights into the crypto and blockchain space, visit them at: https://www.blockworksgroup.io

Untold Stories
What's Pushing Bitcoins' Momentum? Marc Fleury, CEO of Two Prime, Compares the 90's Internet With Today's Crypto and Reveals How an Open Source Financial System is Possible

Untold Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2020 77:09


Marc Fleury, Founder and CEO of Two Prime, joins Charlie Shrem on this week’s episode of Untold Stories. They begin by talking about the open source movement and why it is so attractive for developers. Marc continues with comparisons between crypto today and internet and software development in the 90's and makes an amazing alien reveal. Charlie and Marc agree that Bitcoin showed resilience surviving the Mt. Gox debacle. Charlie asks if the earlier open source movement has evangelists like crypto today and Marc discusses the duality of these movements as well as declaring crypto is not about the tech as much as a psychological hurdle holding it back. Marc further states that the killer apps are already here and discusses bringing back the ICO with an improved model, the CTO or Continuous Token Offering. They finish up with a deep dive into the physics of Proof of Work and mining energy expenditures and end on a positive prediction. --- BitPay gives you the tools to live life on crypto. Whether you want to send crypto to friends, use crypto to buy video games or computer parts, or turn crypto into gift cards for more than 100 mainstream brands, the BitPay app has you covered. You can hold your own private keys in a secure wallet while accessing the best of crypto commerce. Get started at bitpay.com/wallet. --- Bitpanda is a fintech based in Vienna, Austria founded in 2014 by Eric Demuth, Paul Klanschek and Christian Trummer. The company is a firm believer in the innovative power of cryptocurrencies, digitised assets and blockchain technology. Bitpanda’s mission is to tear down the barriers to investing and bring traditional financial products to the 21st century. Today, Bitpanda has more than 1 million users and 120 team members. With a PSD2 payment service provider license, state-of-the-art security and streamlined user experience, Bitpanda has grown into a popular trading platform for newbies and experts alike. Users can currently trade Bitcoin, Ethereum, gold and over 20 other digital assets. --- Pepo was founded by Jason Goldberg, who has been building user experiences for creators and communities for decades. Jason has worked at AOL, Jobster, Social Median, and more recently he connected designers at Hem and Fab. Visit us at Pepo.com/stories for more information. --- If you enjoyed this conversation, share it with your colleagues & friends, rate, review, and subscribe.This podcast is presented by BlockWorks Group. For exclusive content and events that provide insights into the crypto and blockchain space, visit them at: https://www.blockworksgroup.io

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien
KISS and No Dependencies in JGroups

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2020 78:40


An airhacks.fm conversation with Bela Ban belaban.blogspot.com about: C64 wasn't real, Atari was the way to go, Atari ST vs. Amiga wars, Pascal, Modula-2 and Modula 3, Atari had a nice IDE with 1MB RAM, War Games movie, contact list application as "hello, world", fixing Epson printer hexcodes, chess and tennis over programming, learning C was a step down from Modula, system programming and the fascination with immediate feedback, writing CORBA to CMIP bridges in GDMO, C++ templates are an own language, "C++ is crap", Java at the first World Wide Web conference in 1995 in ...Darmstadt, starting with oak, applets and NCSA Mosaic, Netscape server, extracting data from mainsframes with Java over JNI, Cornell University research with Sun's Java 1.0, working with Ken Birman, Robbert van Renesse, Werner Vogels, Ensemble in Ocaml, replacing Ocaml with Java the "Java Groups", Jim Waldo was leading the JINI project, Sun Microsystems and Cornell worked together to make Java Intelligent Network Infrastructure (JINI) reliable using Java Groups, leasing JINI was revolutionary, JINI message was changed several times, there was no elevator pitch for JINI, Sun tried to keep the JINI / Java Groups cooperation secret, A Note on Distributed computing by Jim Waldo, the Eight Fallacies of Distributed Computing, JGroups on Sourceforge in 2000 (and still on available), revival of JGroups at Fujitsus's Network Management System, the Sacha Labourey and Marc Fleury contact, writing JBoss Cache on unpaid vacation in 6 weeks, the Blue and Red Papers from Mark Fleury, the EJB Open Source System, Mark Fleury and paratroopers, JBoss Cache started as tree and became a distributed map, meeting Manik Surtani in a Taxi, JBoss Cache became Infinispan, JGroups is the communication layer of Infinispan, the CP of CAP interests resulted in RAFT, JGroups RAFT is used in production, there are many Paxos implementations Raff is a Paxos simplification, RAFT for kids in JBoss Distributed Singletons, useless but consistent systems, vector clocks is an inconvenient reconciliation system, JGroups is using RocksDB and MapDB, JGroups makes UDP and other protocols like RDMA reliable, JGroups is particularly efficient with many nodes, JGroups and Sun Cluster Lab in Switzerland, running JGroups on 2000+ nodes at Gcloud, Project Loom and Fibers, mini sabaticals for hype chasing, back to easy request response to Project Java's Loom and Fibers, injecting JChannel in Quarkus, JGroups runs on Quarkus in native mode, KISS and JGroups - No Dependencies in JGroups, Bela's blog: belaban.blogspot.com

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien
Quarkus is the Opposite of Wildfly

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2019 62:29


An airhacks.fm conversation with Dimitris Andreadis (@dandreadis) about: Amstrad CPC 484, but Commodore had better games, learning BASIC driven by lack of games, hacking game loaders, C is the favourite language, with C you have the full control, C is concise, ISO DEE, writing ISO network layers in Ireland, writing reactive code in 1994, beautiful C code, processing bibliographic data with DSLs, maintaining passion and fun at indexdata.dk, enjoying the time at navy, clueless mainframe operators, writing programs in COBOL instead of queries, PDP 11 as simulator for naval training, writing application servers in C++ for telecom, EJB-like components in C++, Java UIs in 1998, Java should be good enough for writing service provisoning platforms, accidental discovery of Java Management Extension (JMX), first Java impression was not as good, JBoss was a heavy JMX user, JBoss was always manageable because of JMX, Rickard Öberg was a genious, dynamic kernel with dynamic extensions, Marc Fleury started JBoss, JBoss 2 was a rewrite, JBoss 2 kernel was the base for project "Junction" renamed to Action Streamer, JBoss became more interesting than the day job, core JBoss developer since 2004, CORBA / CSIv2 skills were needed for J2EE certification, transferring transactions and security context with CORBA extensions, JBoss was the first J2EE certified server, Dimitris was project lead for JBoss 4 and 5, later manager, now responsible for Thorntail, Vertx and Quarkus, in JBoss CORBA objects were dynamically generated, the paper: "The JBoss Extensible Server" from brazilian professor, Thrift, gRPC and Co. are CORBA, just reinvented, CORBA network layer is very efficient, EJBs killed CORBA, JBoss unified the web container and EJB container in a single JVM to prevent remote communication, microservices are distributed, sometimes unnecessarily, EJBs and WebContainers had to split into separate JVMs back then as well, Quarkus is the exact opposite of WildFly, Quarkus and WildFly also have different goals, the WildFly.next discussions at RedHat, Jason Greene and Bob McWhirter had WildFly discussions, Emanuel proposed a single runtime for everyone, the one base runtime for everyone prototype, SubstrateVM produced the best native code, Hibernate on Quarkus was a break-through, Quarkus is a collective, interdisciplinary effort at RedHat, Quarkus started in spring 2018, Quarkus pushes the Java EE deployment model further and the optimisations are collateral, Quarkus looks and feels like Java EE or MicroProfile, Quarkus does not require proprietary imports, Quarkus went for native optimization, and optimized HotSpot JVM as well, Quarkus build makes code less memory hungry at HotSpot, Quarkus takes have of the memory with fast startup time, Quarkus comes also with runtime improvements in HotSpot and native mode, the idea for build-time optimizations started at WildFly, with pre-computing the deployment model, Quarkus extension model allows the integration of 3rd-party code for native compilation, Quarkus development mode comes with scripting-like experience, Quarkus FatJars aren't fat, nor self-contained, Quarkus runner-jars are optimized for Docker and so clouds, Quarkus offers imerative and reactive APIs, Netty, Vert.x and Undertow are unified inside Quarkus, Panache ORM is an experiment, but could become a MicroProfile or Jakarta EE standard, working with standards is difficult, Quarkus pushes standards further, developers hack the code first, then standard comes, writing Kubernetes operators with Quarkus Dimitris Andreadis on twitter: @dandreadis, an dandreadis.blogspot.com

Momenta Edge
#62 Smart Cities, Open Source, Crypto, Physics and Music: How They All Relate

Momenta Edge

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2019 67:47


Marc Fleury is a technologist, physicist, investor, musician and something of a Renaissance man. We discuss the history of the open source company he founded, JBoss, which was sold to Red Hat, along with some of the advantages, challenges and insights that came from building a business around an open source enterprise middleware product. We then dive into Marc’s focus on Smart Cities and the role that cryptocurrencies and blockchain could play into the future as a critical funding mechanism for Smart Cities projects. He shares is insights comparing and contrasting the current state of the industry in Smart Cities along with the blockchain/crypto community. Lastly he shares his work around the Church of Sound, which combines his deep interest in physics, music and consciousness. Marc is a deep thinker with a broad range of interests that he weaves together in a fascinating conversation.

airhacks.fm podcast with adam bien

A conversation with Jason Greene @jtgreene about HotJava on Sparc, increasing productivity, Tomcat, OrionServer, JBoss, Jigsaw W3C's Server, JavaServer Web Development Kit, flat network assumptions, SOAP and XML vs. IIOP, grpc, thrift, DTO bloat, Infinispan, Marc Fleury, POJO Cache, JBoss Cache, caching and concurrency, clustering, JBoss/WildFly clustering under the hood, using Infinispan as JMS provider, WildFly 13 provisioning infrastructure, WildFly as a platform, pruning CORBA, the danger of profiles, dying SOAP, WildFly 12 and Java EE 8, Hibernate 6 query optimization, quarterly WildFly releases, EAP release cadence, community enterprise and supported WildFly, EAP for developers, Java EE productivity and the declarative model, Java EE concurrency model, WildFly's killer features, undertow and wildfly.

DevSecOps Podcast Series
Security as Part of Continuous Delivery with Sacha Labourey

DevSecOps Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2016 17:58


Continuing the theme of integrating security in DevOps processes, I spoke with Sacha Lebourey, CEO of Cloudbees, during a stop at CD Summit in London. As one of the main players in the software supply chain for DevOps, I was interested in Sacha's perspective on how automated security fit into that supply chain. We start the discussion with "What is continuous delivery" followed by the place for security in the modern developer environment. About Sacha Labourey Sacha was born in Neuchâtel, Switzerland and graduated in 1999 from EPFL. It was during Sacha’s studies in 1996 that he started his first consulting business - Cogito Informatique. In 2001, he joined Marc Fleury’s JBoss project as a core contributor and implemented JBoss’ original clustering features. In 2003, Sacha founded the European headquarters for JBoss and, as GM for Europe, led the strategy and partnerships that helped fuel the company’s growth in that region. While in this position, he led the recruitment of some of JBoss’ key talent and acquisition of key technology. In 2005, he was appointed CTO of JBoss, Inc. and oversaw all of JBoss engineering. In June 2006, JBoss, Inc. was acquired by Red Hat (NYSE:RHT). After the acquisition, Sacha remained JBoss CTO and played a crucial role in integrating and productizing JBoss software with Red Hat offerings. In 2007, Sacha became co-General Manager of Red Hat’s middleware division. He ultimately left Red Hat in April 2009 and founded CloudBees in April 2010.

Les Cast Codeurs Podcast
Les Cast Codeurs Podcast - Episode 16 - Le seul podcast Java cette semaine qui ne parle PAS du webcast de Snoracle

Les Cast Codeurs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2010 59:29


Enregistre le 25 janvier 2010 Nouvelles La communaute Europeenne vote oui a la fusion de Oracle et Sun http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/01/21/europe_clears_oracle/ Le blog de James Gosling (800 commentaires et ca continue) http://blogs.sun.com/jag/entry/so_long_old_friend Le blog de Marc Fleury sur Monty et MySQL http://www.thedelphicfuture.org/2010/01/save-mysql.html SpringSource donne le code du dm server a la fondation Eclipse http://www.informationweek.com/news/services/saas/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=222301518&cid=RSSfeed_IWK_ALL http://blog.springsource.com/2010/01/12/dm-server-project-moves-to-eclipse-org/ NoSQL: la premiere reunion en France https://sites.google.com/a/octo.com/nosql/home NoSQL humoristique http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhnGarRsKnA HornetQ 2.0 est sorti http://hornetq.blogspot.com/2010/01/hornetq-200ga-is-released.html ModeShape http://www.jboss.org/modeshape Le standard de benchmark SPECjEntreprise2010 pour Java EE 5 http://www.theserverside.com/news/thread.tss?thread_id=59161 Le TPC-C benchmark dont Vincent parlait http://www.tpc.org/tpcc Yahoo vend Zimbra a VMWare http://news.cnet.com/8301-30684_3-10433478-265.html?tag=newsLatestHeadlinesArea.0 Hibernate 3.5 Beta 3 et Beta 4 http://in.relation.to/Bloggers/Hibernate350Beta3Release http://in.relation.to/Bloggers/Hibernate350Beta4Release Spring Roo 1.0 http://www.springsource.org/node/2273 Les JUGs et conferences 2e anniversaire du Paris JUG http://parisjug.org/xwiki/bin/view/Meeting/20100209 Red Hat Summit et JBoss World 2010 http://www.redhat.com/promo/summit/2010/ Les outils de l'episode La police de caractere inconsolata http://www.levien.com/type/myfonts/inconsolata.html Police Deja Vu http://dejavu-fonts.org Vincent: Psi (Jabber) - supporte ban + ne pas rendre le chat liste http://psi-im.org/ Les mains dans le cambouis: Maven edition Maven pluging Version de chez Codehaus Mojo http://mojo.codehaus.org/versions-maven-plugin/ Livre d'Arnaud http://livre.fnac.com/a2748495/Nicolas-de-Loof-Apache-Maven