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Ted Neward is sometimes referred to as “The Dude of Software,” owing to both his remarkable (some say frightening) resemblance to the Jeff Bridges character from “The Big Lebowski,” and his ordination as a Dudeist Minister of the Church of the Latter-Day Dude, but he's also been called the ”Dr. Gregory House of Software,” owing to his tendency to pull no punches when talking about software and how to deliver it successfully. He's comfortable answering to either title, as well as a few others. He's familiar with more programming languages than most people knew existed and hasn't found one yet that he couldn't turn into a “mission-critical” application when asked. Topics of Discussion: [4:36] Ted talks about building a tribe and developing a community. [6:48] Leveraging the “who you know” network. [7:21] Tips for keeping track of your network. [9:44] Effective software team management. [13:10] The importance of shifting perspective from individual success to team success. [16:16] The component of compassion in management. [17:53] Managers should actually want to be managers. [18:43] Retaining employees and realizing that management skills need to be recognized and developed. [27:02] The tipping point of needing to hire a full-fledged IT department. [32:34] Advice for managers on the people side. [34:08] Team success metrics, weekly one-on-ones, and building psychological safety. [38:32] Importance of team happiness and direct communication with executives for successful software development. [43:52] Developing the skills of leadership. [44:39] Remembering that not all management is evil. Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! C# In a Nutshell ted.neward@gmail.com Ted Neward LinkedIn Neward Associates Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
"Jak mamy pozyskać świetnych architektów, jeśli w swojej karierze będą mieli okazję ją tworzyć mniej niż pół tuzina razy?". Dokładnie takie pytania postawił Ted Neward, szukając sposobu na doskonalenie umiejętności tworzenia architektury. I trudno się tu nie zgodzić, patrząc jak często w zespołach duże projekty powstają od samego początku. Istnieje jednak prosty sposób na rozwiązanie tego problemu.Sesje Architectural Kata pozwala jednak zdobywać potrzebne doświadczenie znacznie szybciej. Tym bardziej, jeśli feedbacku na temat twojego designu udzielają Mark Richards i Jacqui Read, autorzy książek poświęconych architekturze oprogramowania. W tym roku, kolejną edycję O'Reilly Software Architecture Katas wygrywa po razy pierwszy zespół z Polski, w którego skład wchodzą Artur Kruszewski, Wojciech Kasa, Sebastian Dąbkowski i Piotr Filipowicz, mój dzisiejszy gość.Razem z Piotrem rozmawiamy dziś między innymi o:czym jest Architectural Kata i jak może wspomóc Cię w procesie projektowania architekturysześciu perspektywach, które można wziąć pod uwagę szukając właściwej dla projektu architekturycharakterystykach architektonicznych, ograniczeniach, macierzy styli Marka Richardsakomunikowaniu architektury różnym jej odbiorcom, nie tylko zespołowi developerskiemukonkretnych przykładach Fitness Function z architektury ewolucyjnejZapraszam!Materiały dodatkowe:Fundamentals of Software Architecture: An Engineering Approach, książka Marka Richardsa i Neala FordaSoftware Architecture: The Hard Parts: Modern Trade-Off Analyses for Distributed Architectures, kolejna pozycja, której współautorami są Mark Richards i Neal FordThe Architecture Kata Log, repozytorium Jacqui Read z listą zwycięzców poszczególnych edycji konkursu O'Reilly Software Architecture KatasStayHealthy.MonitorMe, repozytorium z wspominanym w rozmowie opisem architekturyArchitectural Katas, katalog różnych kat Teda NewardaZapraszam także do obserwowania profilu Piotra na LinkedIn.
in tihis episode, I'm joined by programming language archaeologist Ted Neward
Databases continue to evolve! Carl and Richard talk to Ted Neward about multi-model data stores - which, these days, are most databases! Ted talks about how SQL and NoSQL are not that different - it's only a query engine. But how do you store your data? Today multi-model databases store data with multiple storage engines, and so can store your data in the most appropriate form. There are lots of choices, and it's worth digging deeper into your existing data stores, as well as the new ones available!This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5634793/advertisement
Databases continue to evolve! Carl and Richard talk to Ted Neward about multi-model data stores - which, these days, are most databases! Ted talks about how SQL and NoSQL are not that different - it's only a query engine. But how do you store your data? Today multi-model databases store data with multiple storage engines, and so can store your data in the most appropriate form. There are lots of choices, and it's worth digging deeper into your existing data stores, as well as the new ones available!
A few weeks ago, Ted Neward published a post in which he reviewed the predictions he made one year ago and added a long list of predictions for 2023. In this Foojay Podcast episode, we talk about these predictions, and we even found an analogy between what has happened at Twitter in the last months and the history of Java!GuestsTed Neward (@tedneward@hachyderm.io, @tedneward)Podcast hostFrank Delporte (@frankdelporte@foojay.social, @frankdelporte)Content00'00 Intro and music 00'13 About the topic of this podcast 00'28 Introduction of Ted and Frankhttp://blogs.newardassociates.com/blog/2023/2023-tech-predictions.html 01'40 Goal of the predictions03'53 Looking back at the predictions of 202205'30 "Work-from-home will become normalized as part of the landscape"13'00 "Microservices start to give way back to deliberate monoliths"http://blogs.newardassociates.com/blog/2023/you-want-modules-not-microservices.html19'40 "Demand for full-stack developers will continue to leave companies high-and-dry"https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/comments/jo4b6s/recruiters_be_like/Be hungry, humble, and smart! 26'39 "2023 will be the year we try to figure out what to do with all this AI stuff"Devoxx Belgium 2022 AI intro movie: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_Y6VqKVjuM37'49 "Hiring will accelerate at the end of 1Q/2023"46'03 "BOLD TWITTER TAKE: Elon will sell Twitter (perhaps involuntarily) at the end of 2023, to another tech firm (like Microsoft or Oracle)"https://foojay.io/today/foojay-mastodon-service-here-it-is/Comparing to the history of Java when it got bought by Oracle.54'37 "Cloud will begin to shift"1:04'32" Looking for an engineering or devrel manager? Hire Ted!1:05'16" What will be the next "oriented"?Functional versus or combining services programming?Low-code and no-code?https://ballerina.io/?1:13'51" Conclusion
What does philosophy have to do with software development? More than you might think! In this episode, hosts Kadi and Omar sit down with Technologist, Ted Neward and Developer Advocate, Steve Poole to discuss how philosophy is at the heart of everything. Ted provides great insight as to how his background has influenced his outlook on software development and why developers should be asking themselves the hard questions. As Ted puts it, “It is the hard questions that are usually the good ones that will lead you to a positive outcome.”
Ted is a self-described geek who takes great pride and joy in making other geeks into bigger and better (and hopefully more highly rewarded) geeks. Having recently stepped into a management role, Ted has been looking for more and more ways to leverage his skills as a “force multiplier” across his entire team to not only better the team itself — but the entire organization as a whole. Topics of Discussion: [5:04] Microsoft is probably going to look for ways to do the summit in person, but the pandemic has shown us we can also use remote options for those that don't want to or can't travel. [6:14] Ted discusses some tools that make getting the information at conferences easier and more accessible. [13:15] We all want to find that tribe; to find that group of people where we feel like we fit in. [23:10] Ted talks about why he doesn't love that a lot of conferences are kind of trying to combine professional development and family vacation. [25:10] Remember that you are at a professional event, and you represent your company. Don't lose sight of why you are there. [28:20] What Ted has been playing with these days. [34:56] The problem with low-code solutions is that they're designed for hobbyists. [40:26] The emergence of low-code and no-code tools. Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's YouTube Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Programming with Palermo programming@palermo.network Episode 135 http://www.lolcode.org/ — lolcode: transpiler, compiler https://github.com/justinmeza/lci https://ballerina.io/ http://www.cs.uni.edu/~okane/source/MUMPS-MDH/MumpsTutorial.pdf Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Hi, Spring fans! In this installment, [I (@starbuxman)](https://twitter.com/starbuxman) talk to my old friend, world-famous polyglot, code curmudgeon, software philosopher, industry veteran, and legend of ecosystems aplenty, [Ted Neward (@tedneward)](https://twitter.com/tedneward)
Managing a team's performance is more than just firing those who don't behave well and promoting those that do. It's nurturing and growing your team to help them perform at their best. Ted Neward, co-founder of Solidify/US talks about his experiencing managing the performance of software teams.
Huge shoutout to my guest, Ted Neward ! Like what you hear? Connect with me- Website: www.taylordesseyn.com LinkedIn: Taylor Desseyn Tweet me: @tdesseyn Tik Tok: @tdesseyn Pics of the life, wife, daughter & dog: @tdesseyn
Ted Neward has been a friend of mine for several years. We have explored the streets of Athens, Greece together, hung out in the Netherlands, and we've spoken at numerous domestic tech conferences together. His background in stoicism, history, and philosophy means I can always count on him for sage advice in times when I've contemplated the trajectory of my career or struggled with depression. Recently I caught up with Ted to talk about his current job hunt, board games, and organizational design. I hope you enjoy this episode of "1 Luckygirliegirl" with my good friend, Ted Neward. Learn more: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tedneward/ https://twitter.com/tedneward http://www.newardassociates.com/ In this episode: Conway's Law - https://www.melconway.com/Home/Conways_Law.html Patrick Lencioni Books - https://www.tablegroup.com/books/ Taylor Dessyn Podcast interview - https://www.linkedin.com/posts/taylordesseyn_guidance-counselor-20-a-tale-of-hiring-activity-6884916126694932480-dTAl Lorelink - https://lorelink.com/
Today's Full Stack Journey delves into developer advocacy: what is it, why do organizations have this role, and what makes a good developer advocate? Host Scott Lowe has invited four practitioners to tackle these questions. He speaks with Jacquie Grindrod, Jeremy Meiss, Josh Wulf, and Ted Neward. The post Full Stack Journey 053: Exploring Developer Advocacy And Developer Relations appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Full Stack Journey delves into developer advocacy: what is it, why do organizations have this role, and what makes a good developer advocate? Host Scott Lowe has invited four practitioners to tackle these questions. He speaks with Jacquie Grindrod, Jeremy Meiss, Josh Wulf, and Ted Neward.
Today's Full Stack Journey delves into developer advocacy: what is it, why do organizations have this role, and what makes a good developer advocate? Host Scott Lowe has invited four practitioners to tackle these questions. He speaks with Jacquie Grindrod, Jeremy Meiss, Josh Wulf, and Ted Neward.
Today's Full Stack Journey delves into developer advocacy: what is it, why do organizations have this role, and what makes a good developer advocate? Host Scott Lowe has invited four practitioners to tackle these questions. He speaks with Jacquie Grindrod, Jeremy Meiss, Josh Wulf, and Ted Neward. The post Full Stack Journey 053: Exploring Developer Advocacy And Developer Relations appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Twenty-five years ago, in a meeting with his manager, Ted Neward swore he'd never step away from coding. Yet he is now a senior executive in an almost entirely non-technical role. What happened? What does it mean to go to the Dark Side? Why would he think you might want to do the same? Watch the YouTube HERE: https://youtu.be/PaeHBmxwlZM ABOUT OUR GUEST Ted is a big geek. You can learn more about him here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tedneward Don't forget to subscribe to Educative Sessions on YouTube! ►► https://bit.ly/39sIrUN ABOUT EDUCATIVE Educative (educative.io) provides interactive and adaptive courses for software developers. Whether it’s beginning to learn to code, grokking the next interview, or brushing up on frontend coding, data science, or cybersecurity, Educative is changing how developers continue their education. Stay relevant through our pre-configured learning environments that adapt to match a developer’s skill level. Educative provides the best author platform for instructors to create interactive and adaptive content in only a few clicks. More Videos from Educative Sessions: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCT_8FqzTIr2Q1BOtvX_DPPw/ Episode 59: "I Am A Developer Manager (And That's Okay)" with Ted Neward of Quicken Loans | Educative Sessions
This week Jeffrey is joined by a fantastic return guest, Ted Neward! Ted is the Director of Technology Culture at Quicken Loans (where he has held several previous positions at). He is a self-described geek who takes great pride and joy in making other geeks into bigger and better (and hopefully more highly rewarded) geeks. Having recently stepped into a management role, Ted has been looking for more and more ways to leverage his skills as a "force multiplier" across his entire team to not only better the team itself — but the entire organization as a whole. In the conversation with Ted today, he and Jeffrey talk all about development leadership and stepping into a managing position. How do you become a better leader? What can you do as a manager to bump up the effectiveness of your team? What does it really mean to be a team lead? How do you measure if your current plan and strategies are actually effective? What are the should-do’s and the should-not do’s of leading a team? Tune in to find out! Topics of Discussion: [:38] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes. [:50] About The Azure DevOps Podcast, Clear Measure, the new podcast Architect Tips, and Jeffrey’s offer to speak at virtual user groups. [1:20] About today’s episode with Ted Neward! [1:35] Jeffrey welcomes Ted back to the podcast! [4:00] Ted introduces himself and shares about his current role with Quicken Loans. He also explains what Quicken Loans does and what some of his previous roles looked like. [9:18] How they measure the productivity of their developers at QL. Ted also shares advice on how you can determine if a program or activity is successful. [14:23] What can a manager do to bump up the effectiveness of their team? [18:54] What it really means to be a team lead. [19:59] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [20:29] Why “rewriting” and replacing everything is almost NEVER the answer. [27:29] Why do we keep making the same mistakes? [28:30] What many development teams don’t understand. [29:38] How often do teams make true architectural decisions? [32:11] Talking reactionary architectural changes. [34:27] Why you don’t want to teach your team an entirely new programming language. [41:01] Jeffrey thanks Ted for joining the podcast! [41:15] Ted shares some resources, advice, and how you can personally get in touch with him. Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! Jeffrey Palermo’s Youtube Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! The Azure DevOps Podcast’s Twitter: @AzureDevOpsShow The Azure DevOps Podcast Ep. 30: “Ted Neward on the ‘Ops’ Side of DevOps” Ted Neward’s LinkedIn @TedNeward on Twitter Blogs.TedNeward.com Neward & Associates “The Simple Idea That Became Intel’s Secret Weapon Against Motorola” “Chesterton’s Fence: A Lesson in Second Order Thinking” The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering, by Frederick Brooks Jr. George Santayana Quicken Loans TedNeward@QuickenLoans.com The Azure DevOps Podcast Ep. 134: “Sudhanva Huruli on Azure Sphere” Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
For the first episode of the podcast Woody has the famous (or is it infamous) Ted Neward! The two of them discuss Ted’s history into the speaker community and what Ted has been doing all of these years. Ted Neward is a programming language, virtual machine, and enterprise-scale architect. He has written a dozen books and hundreds of articles on .NET, Java, enterprise systems, mobile development, and programming languages. He resides in the Pacific Northwest, and can be found on the Internet at www.tedneward.com, www.itrellis.com, @tedneward on Twitter, and blogs at blogs.tedneward.com.
Your host, Jeffrey Palermo, is excited to bring you this week’s episode with his guest, Ted Neward! Ted is an Independent Consultant and Architect, as well as a long-time columnist of CODE Magazine. He also teaches Android Development (using Java) and iOS Development at the University of Washington as a Guest Lecturer. In this week’s episode, Ted and Jeffrey are going to be talking about the ‘Ops’ (AKA the operations) side of DevOps. They discuss how operations is implemented in the DevOps movement, the role of operations, how Dev and Ops should work together, what companies should generally understand around the different roles, where the industry is headed, and Ted’s many recommendations in the world of DevOps. Topics of Discussion: [:44] About this week’s episode with Ted Neward. [1:55] About the MVP Global Summit in Ted’s hometown! [3:10] Ted’s take on how ‘operations’ is getting implemented in this DevOps movement. [9:48] Ted’s small tangent about the making of Office Space. [10:45] Ted’s thoughts on using the Cloud with operations. [12:35] Ted discusses the role of operations, gives a recent example from his position at Smartsheet, and compares Dev and Ops and how they should be working together. [21:14] Jeffrey and Ted discuss where the industry is headed, and the value of Ops. [27:10] What should companies and teams (QA, Devs, and Ops) know, put in place for their regular applications, and learn and understand around this space? [29:16] A word from The Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [29:42] Jeffrey and Ted’s recommendations for mastering C# and .NET development, as well as Ted’s hopes for the future of coding schools and what developers should be taught. [34:49] Talking DevOps diagnostics and general rules of thumb for developer teams for configuring and building an effective enterprise system. [43:00] The benefit of including the Ops and the QA team as a part of the project discussions with the Dev team. [49:40] What Ted recommends listeners follow-up after today’s podcast. [52:08] Where to find Ted online. Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) Ted Neward (LinkedIn) MVP Global Summit CODE Magazine iSchool at the University of Washington Office Space (Film, 1999) Smartsheet LinkedIn Learning CLR via C# (Developer Reference), by Jeffrey Richter CoreCLR page on GitHub Shared Source CLI Essentials, by David Stutz, Ted Neward, and Geoff Shilling Douglas E. Comer’s Amazon Book Page Richard Steven’s Amazon Book Page Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment, by W. Richard Stevens and Stephen A. Rago The Azure DevOps Podcast episode: “Eric Hexter on DevOps Diagnostics” Effective Enterprise Java, by Ted Neward Windows Management Instrumentation The Pragmatic Programmer: From Journeyman to Master, by Andrew Hunt and David Thomas @TedNeward on Twitter Blogs.TedNeward.com Neward & Associates Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Join us for Episode of The Confessions of Angry Programmers podcast! In this episode David and Woody talk about: Dogfooding: David talks about issues & feature ideas for Microsoft PowerPoint. WTF Were They Thinking?: Woody discusses the recent Azure and Amazon Web Services television ads. Guest We are joined by our guest Ted Neward. Ted discusses the switch from developer to manager, speaking and more! Ted Neward is sometimes referred to as "The Dude of Software", owing to both his remarkable (some say frightening) resemblance to the Jeff Bridges character from "The Big Lebowski", and his ordination as a Dudeist Minister of the Church of the Latter-Day Dude, but he's also been called the "Dr. Gregory House of Software", owing to his tendency to pull no punches when talking about software and how to deliver it successfully. He's comfortable answering to either title, as well as a few others. He's familiar with more programming languages than most people knew existed, and hasn't found one yet that he couldn't turn into a 'mission-critical' application when asked Resources Presentation Patterns: Techniques for Crafting Better Presentations David McCarter's Books on Amazon Next Episode The next episode will feature Dogfooding and WTF Where They Thinking along with a guest.
In this episode David and Woody talk about: Dogfooding: David revisits the Netflix app on Amazon Fire TV. WTF Were They Thinking?: David discusses backward software practices. Guest We are joined by our guest Nuri Halperin. Nuri discusses the “The Done Kind Of Done”. Nuri Halperin is a software architect and speaker. He helps companies develop scalable systems, websites, and business applications. He’s been turning projects into success stories for over 2 decades. Nuri specializes in Azure and MongoDB. He was founding CTO of online-dating pioneer JDate.com building out the platform from scratch and propelling it from start-up to hugely profitable cash cow in the portfolio of the company. He architected and implemented multi-lingual, multinational portal for millions of members of a global nutrition company which is responsible for large share of company revenue. He’s been helping companies shift their practice to deliver value early by embracing DevOps, cloud, and agile methodologies. Next Episode The next episode will feature guest Ted Neward. Have a comment or suggestion? Want to be a guest on the show? Click here to contact us.
Ted Neward is an industry professional of twenty years' experience. He speaks at conferences all over the world and writes regularly for a variety of publications across the Java, .NET, and other ecosystems. He currently resides in the Pacific Northwest with his wife, two sons, dog, four cats, eight laptops, seven tablets, nine phones, and a rather large utility bill.
Jeremy Miller is using Jasper to distribute computing. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet. Show Notes: Nancy (NancyFx) was mentioned FubuMVC was mentioned too. TIBCO webMethods RabbitMQ as a "store and forward" queue (video) Azure Service Bus NServiceBus (from Particular Software) More on the Happy Meal metaphor from Jimmy Bogard The Oatmeal (comic) Jasper website - Jasper on Gitter Book: Enterprise Integration Patterns For more on Akka, check out episode 062 with Ted Neward Jeremy Miller is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!
Ted Neward is an industry professional with over 20 years’ experience. He speaks at conferences all over the world and writes regularly for a variety of publications across the Java, .NET and other ecosystems. He currently resides in the Pacific Northwest with his wife, two sons, dog, four cats, eight laptops, seven tablets, nine phones, and a rather large utility bill. In this episode Ted talks about psychology and philosophy in I.T. and why empathy, sympathy and compassion will help you in your career. Ted also tells us why failures provide great lessons and why he believes technology has become embedded into western society. To find out more about this episode, visit the show notes page at www.itcareerenergizer.com/e37
Ted Neward is transpiling other languages to JavaScript. Show Notes: CFront, a C++ to C transpiler. I found an interview with Bjarne Stroustrup (archive.org link) that mentions CFront on its 30 year anniversary Emscripten / asm.js WebAssembly CoffeeScript / Ruby on Rails Microsoft and Google collaborate on Angular 2 Anders Hejlsberg Kotlin can transpile to JavaScript (check out Episode 057 with Michael Yotive on Kotlin) Fantom Dart NaCl (and PNaCl) for Chrome TypeScript Smartsheet (Smartsheet Developer Portal) Book: Compilers: Principles, Techniques, & Tools (aka "The Dragon Book") ANTLR Ted Neward is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Theme music is "Crosscutting Concerns" by The Dirty Truckers, check out their music on Amazon or iTunes.
Ted Neward is using the actor model with Akka. Show Notes: Akka.io Erlang Scala Actor Model (c2) java.lang.Thread Book: Java Concurrency in Practice by Brian Goetz (and others) Jonas Bonér (from Lightbend) Episode 009 - Correl Roush on Erlang RabbitMQ Microsoft's Orleans JErlang - Erlang for the JVM RetLang Smalltalk / Objective-C Joe Armstrong SmartSheet Ted Neward is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Theme music is "Crosscutting Concerns" by The Dirty Truckers, check out their music on Amazon or iTunes.
Guest: Ted Neward @tedneward Full show notes are at https://developeronfire.com/podcast/episode-233-ted-neward-philosophy-for-programmers
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Building an architecture that can adapt to change.In the first episode of our new O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk about software architecture and the concept of “evolutionary architecture” with Neal Ford, director, software architect, and meme wrangler at ThoughtWorks, a global IT consultancy that focuses on end-to-end software development and delivery. Ford is presenting two sessions at OSCON 2017, O’Reilly’s Open Source Convention, and he is a co-author of the forthcoming O’Reilly book Building Evolutionary Architectures.Discussion points: Software architecture’s increasing popularity over the last few years; Ford says that “companies such as Netflix and Amazon showed that if you do software architecture really well, you build a competitive advantage over everybody else.” The non-functional requirements and soft skills needed to successfully implement software architecture. How evolutionary architecture enables you to adapt to the future rather than predict it; Ford notes the pitfalls of “trying to do predictive planning against an incredibly dynamic ecosystem.” Why guided change and incremental change are the two characteristics of an evolutionary architecture. The difference between evolutionary and adaptive systems. I also talk with Ally MacDonald, O’Reilly editor and a program chair of O’Reilly’s Fluent Conference, June 19-22, 2017, in San Jose, California, about the topics of the event’s sessions and training courses. Other links: Ted Neward’s presentation “Architectural Katas” at the 2016 O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference Aaron Bedra’s keynote on security at the 2017 O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference The video series Software Architecture Fundamentals Understanding The Basics and Software Architecture Fundamentals Beyond The Basics, by Neal Ford and Mark Richards OSCON, the O’Reilly Open Source Convention, May 8-11, 2017, in Austin, Texas The O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference, October 16-18, 2017, in London
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Building an architecture that can adapt to change.In the first episode of our new O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk about software architecture and the concept of “evolutionary architecture” with Neal Ford, director, software architect, and meme wrangler at ThoughtWorks, a global IT consultancy that focuses on end-to-end software development and delivery. Ford is presenting two sessions at OSCON 2017, O’Reilly’s Open Source Convention, and he is a co-author of the forthcoming O’Reilly book Building Evolutionary Architectures.Discussion points: Software architecture’s increasing popularity over the last few years; Ford says that “companies such as Netflix and Amazon showed that if you do software architecture really well, you build a competitive advantage over everybody else.” The non-functional requirements and soft skills needed to successfully implement software architecture. How evolutionary architecture enables you to adapt to the future rather than predict it; Ford notes the pitfalls of “trying to do predictive planning against an incredibly dynamic ecosystem.” Why guided change and incremental change are the two characteristics of an evolutionary architecture. The difference between evolutionary and adaptive systems. I also talk with Ally MacDonald, O’Reilly editor and a program chair of O’Reilly’s Fluent Conference, June 19-22, 2017, in San Jose, California, about the topics of the event’s sessions and training courses. Other links: Ted Neward’s presentation “Architectural Katas” at the 2016 O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference Aaron Bedra’s keynote on security at the 2017 O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference The video series Software Architecture Fundamentals Understanding The Basics and Software Architecture Fundamentals Beyond The Basics, by Neal Ford and Mark Richards OSCON, the O’Reilly Open Source Convention, May 8-11, 2017, in Austin, Texas The O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference, October 16-18, 2017, in London
Welcome to a podcast of epic proportions. Here we cover software technology, developer problems, and solutions. We'll feature great guests and cover technologies that are changing the world. From episode to episode we'll keep you glued to your headphones and speakers, so stay tuned to the Yellow Duck Podcast. In this episode, we'll talk about: How to grow as a developer; the mindset of companies and that of developers; deadlines; and evolution of technologies. We have a great guest with us today, Mr Ted Neward, a java specialist, speaker at many conferences and blogger. Find links to Ted in the description of the episode below and learn more about what he's doing. But most of all, enjoy the show. Find out more about Ted Neward at: http://www.newardassociates.com/#/ http://blogs.tedneward.com/ Find us at: https://devskiller.com/
We made it! After taking a short flight, and re-assembling the crew in Atlanta, we finally made it to DevNexus, the conference run by Atlanta Java User Group. DevNexus is not just a great conference in itself, but it's a great place to run and talk to top tier speakers without breaking the bank. We did our own talking by running into Ted Neward (@tedneward) and Chris Richardson (@crichardson)! We actually manage to sucker-punch them into playing a little game of Trivia with us! At the end, we explore if the Cloud the new Mainframe, and came to some interesting conclusions. An episode like no other, you definitively need to listen to this one! DO follow us on twitter @offheap SHA1 collition Who wants to be a Byte-o-naire
Guest: Ted Neward @tedneward Full show notes are at https://developeronfire.com/podcast/episode-032-ted-neward-presence-and-values
While at the NSBConf in Brooklyn, New York, Carl and Richard moderated a panel of Udi Dahan, Ted Neward, Oren Eini and Yves Goeleven about the future of the service bus. And the future is bright! Without much contention, the panel focused in on the advantages of message passing and creating coherent boundaries between application layers to make scaling and management much easier when building large applications. There is also a discussion about rendering the update of components asynchronous, so that not everyone has to be ready to upgrade at the same time - less big bang, more continuous delivery!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
While at the NSBConf in Brooklyn, New York, Carl and Richard moderated a panel of Udi Dahan, Ted Neward, Oren Eini and Yves Goeleven about the future of the service bus. And the future is bright! Without much contention, the panel focused in on the advantages of message passing and creating coherent boundaries between application layers to make scaling and management much easier when building large applications. There is also a discussion about rendering the update of components asynchronous, so that not everyone has to be ready to upgrade at the same time - less big bang, more continuous delivery!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Ted is currently the CTO of iTrellis, a team of experienced technology professionals who promote the Continuous Delivery of high quality new services. He is an authority in Java and .NET technologies, particularly in the areas of Java/.NET integration (both in-process and via integration tools like Web services), back-end enterprise software systems, and virtual machine/execution engine plumbing. He is the author or co-author of several books, including Effective Enterprise Java, C# In a Nutshell, SSCLI Essentials, Server-Based Java Programming, and a contributor to several technology journals. Ted is also a Microsoft MVP Architect, BEA Technical Director, INETA speaker, former DevelopMentor instructor, frequent worldwide conference speaker, and a member of various Java JSRs. He lives in the Pacific Northwest with his wife, two sons, and eight PCs.
In this found video (I found it on my Windows 7 Phone, oops!) Scott is at Qdoba with Phil Haack, Ted Neward and two other gentlemen whose names escape me. As I recall, the conversation became so interesting that I had to pull out my phone and start recording the raw footage. That footage is here, remainging raw. We talk about Testing, Culture, Microsoft, Agile and Tacos.
Recorded during the summer, No Fluff, Just Stuff speaker Ted Neward talks .Net lessons for the Java world, alternative languages on the CLR, why Eclipse is the one IDE the Visual Studio team fears, closed source versus open source, Microsoft's cloud platform Azure, and why he thinks Apple is the next target of the U.S. Department of Justice.
This week on developerWorks, plus a chat with Java authority Ted Neward the latest entry in his developerWorks series "5 Things You Didn't Know About ..." This time part 2 looking at the Java Collections API.
In this episode we start by talking to Andrew Brust on Microsoft’s move to kill the Oracle Data Provider and how the world is not coming to an end. Then, Peter and I talk again about his trip to JavaOne including HTML 5 vs. RIA applications (like Silverlight). Finally, we jump into Peter's JavaOne interview with Ted Neward on Project Stonehenge and interoperability between Java and .NET.
Ted Neward, popular speaker and author on Java, .NET, XML services, and other platforms, talks about his developerWorks article series on Scala and Twitter.
Hear from Ted Neward, Kate Gregory and David Kelly about responding to customer feedback, how to choose from the available UI technologies and how to enable the Vista experience in your applications.
Check out Scott Davis and Ted Neward, two popular speakers from the No Fluff Just Stuff Tour, jamming as much quality stuff a possible into a dynamic 42 minutes on whether Java is on it's way out.
Guest: Ted Neward Host: Daniel Steinberg Anyone who develops software for a living, or who works for an organization that does, knows the challenge of keeping up with changes in technology. Tools change. Methodologies change. Frameworks change. Languages change. For us, change is a central fact of life. Even when a software developer is not being driven by change, she faces a daunting task. The world of computer science is big, as is the world of software development. No matter how much we know, there is more to know. So you've mastered OOP -- what about functional programming or logic programming? You are a Java or Smalltalk guru, but what about Scheme or Erlang? The more tools we have in our toolbox, the better prepared we are for our next task. The more kinds of things we know, the better we can use use the tools in our toolbox. Ted Neward is a software developer facing these challenges head-on. He has been aggressively learning several new languages of late, expanding his repertoire. Later this month, he'll be at ooPSLA, too. Anyone who has ever attended ooPSLA knows that it is the best conference around for adding tools to your toolbox and new ideas to your thinking. This year is no exception. Neward himself is contributing to the mix od new ideas at ooPSLA with two tutorials: one with Erik Meijer on LINQ, and one with Martin Odersky and Gilles Dubochet on Scala. Each of these tutorials teaches new tools, as well as new ways of thinking. Listen to this podcast to hear Daniel Steinberg of DimSum Thinking talk with Neward about aggressively learning new ideas, about adding tools to your tool box, and about why he likes Scala so much.
Guest: Ted Neward Host: Daniel Steinberg Anyone who develops software for a living, or who works for an organization that does, knows the challenge of keeping up with changes in technology. Tools change. Methodologies change. Frameworks change. Languages change. For us, change is a central fact of life. Even when a software developer is not being driven by change, she faces a daunting task. The world of computer science is big, as is the world of software development. No matter how much we know, there is more to know. So you've mastered OOP -- what about functional programming or logic programming? You are a Java or Smalltalk guru, but what about Scheme or Erlang? The more tools we have in our toolbox, the better prepared we are for our next task. The more kinds of things we know, the better we can use use the tools in our toolbox. Ted Neward is a software developer facing these challenges head-on. He has been aggressively learning several new languages of late, expanding his repertoire. Later this month, he'll be at ooPSLA, too. Anyone who has ever attended ooPSLA knows that it is the best conference around for adding tools to your toolbox and new ideas to your thinking. This year is no exception. Neward himself is contributing to the mix od new ideas at ooPSLA with two tutorials: one with Erik Meijer on LINQ, and one with Martin Odersky and Gilles Dubochet on Scala. Each of these tutorials teaches new tools, as well as new ways of thinking. Listen to this podcast to hear Daniel Steinberg of DimSum Thinking talk with Neward about aggressively learning new ideas, about adding tools to your tool box, and about why he likes Scala so much.
Guest: Martin Odersky Host: Markus Völter Many programmers know that there are paths to increased productivity that are orthogonal to objects. Language designer Martin Odersky is in the vanguard that studies how to augment OOP with techniques from the world of functional programming. His most recent work is on Scala, a programming language that "tries to achieve a fusion of object-oriented and functional programming, while remaining compatible with mainstream platforms such as Java and .NET. At ooPSLA, Martin is offering a tutorial with colleagues Ted Neward and Gilles Dubochet titled The Scala Experience: Programming with Functional Objects. This tutorial will give an introduction to Scala, highlighting its main innovative features: closures, pattern matching, type abstraction, and mixins. In this podcast, Martin joins Markus Völter of SE Radio to talk about what it's like to program in Scala.
Guest: Martin Odersky Host: Markus Völter Many programmers know that there are paths to increased productivity that are orthogonal to objects. Language designer Martin Odersky is in the vanguard that studies how to augment OOP with techniques from the world of functional programming. His most recent work is on Scala, a programming language that "tries to achieve a fusion of object-oriented and functional programming, while remaining compatible with mainstream platforms such as Java and .NET. At ooPSLA, Martin is offering a tutorial with colleagues Ted Neward and Gilles Dubochet titled The Scala Experience: Programming with Functional Objects. This tutorial will give an introduction to Scala, highlighting its main innovative features: closures, pattern matching, type abstraction, and mixins. In this podcast, Martin joins Markus Völter of SE Radio to talk about what it's like to program in Scala.
Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers
In this Episode we talk to Ted Neward. Since Ted is active in the .NET and Java universes, we started out by discussing some of the differences between the two platforms. The main discussion, however, focussed on new features in the C# 3.0 language. These include LINQ (language-integrated query). A very interesting discussion about extension methods, lamda expression, typing (dynamic, duck, compiler) and other language "tricks" follows. We also visited the topic of language development on the .NET and Java platforms in general, also looking at topics such as concurrency and the Scala language.
Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers
In this Episode we talk to Ted Neward. Since Ted is active in the .NET and Java universes, we started out by discussing some of the differences between the two platforms. The main discussion, however, focussed on new features in the C# 3.0 language. These include LINQ (language-integrated query). A very interesting discussion about extension methods, lamda expression, typing (dynamic, duck, compiler) and other language "tricks" follows. We also visited the topic of language development on the .NET and Java platforms in general, also looking at topics such as concurrency and the Scala language.
Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers
In this Episode we talk to Ted Neward. Since Ted is active in the .NET and Java universes, we started out by discussing some of the differences between the two platforms. The main discussion, however, focussed on new features in the C# 3.0 language. These include LINQ (language-integrated query). A very interesting discussion about extension methods, lamda expression, typing (dynamic, duck, compiler) and other language "tricks" follows. We also visited the topic of language development on the .NET and Java platforms in general, also looking at topics such as concurrency and the Scala language.
Ted Neward makes a rallying call for developers to do everything they can to automate software development, from Continuous Integration to automatic testing and feedback.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Ted Neward discusses the present state and future of interoperability. Java and .NET compatability are disucssed, Ted touches on a wide range of topics ranging from XML's shortcomings as a messenger format to proprietary systems in .NET 3.0.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Ted Neward and Oren Eini agreed to discuss Object Relational Mapping practices at DevTeach in Montreal, Quebec May 16, 2007. This is a slightly longer show than usual, but we think you'll agree it was worth it.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Ted Neward is back to tell us his ideas around the recent downpour of language technology. He also answers a few questions left over from Carl's interview of his Java-developer brother, Jay Franklin, in show #326.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard host a panel comprised of Oren Eine, Ted Neward, and Scott Belware at the DevTeach conference in Toronto. What started out as a discussion about the future turned into a discussion about Microsoft's development tools.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Ted Neward and Joel Pobar talk about Rotor, the open source .net framework reference implementation. Ted and Joel have written a book on Rotor 2.0Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Ted Neward and Amanda Laucher about their work with F# and separate truth from fiction about functional languages.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Ted Neward about Sun being bought by Oracle, and other musings in the Java space.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard talk to Ted Neward during the Live Weekend. They cover the acquisition of Sun by Oracle and the potential for Oracle to muster a significant move in the development marketplace. Ted also talks about his exploring of other languages, including Objective-C for the iPhone. The conversation also explores how Oracle will have to rationalize their collection of databases: Oracle, MySQL and Postgres.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
While at DevCon in London, Carl and Richard hosted a discussion with guests Ted Neward and Dierk Konig about the differences and similarities between .NET and the JVM. The discussion ranges over the different languages that are implemented against the platform, how the ownership model of the platforms differs and how that impacts the evolution, right down to how to make the two platforms work and play well with each other.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard catch up with Ted Neward - it had been too long since he was on! The conversation starts off talking about the maturity of .NET and how unimpressed Ted is with Async and Await. Ted also talks about Javascript and Ruby and the evolution of languages as a whole. Finally, NoSQL makes an appearance with a discussion around the issues of ORM. Has Ted Neward become a grumpy old man?Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Ted Neward talk to Richard and Carl about Scala and other languages on stage at Oredev in Malmo, Sweden. Oren Eini was in the audience and got a good question in.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations