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March 16 - 17, 2010

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Telephone: +46 31 703 31 85
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Neal Ford

Neal FordNeal Ford is Software Architect and Meme Wrangler at ThoughtWorks, a global IT consultancy with an exclusive focus on end-to-end software development and delivery. He is also the designer and developer of applications, instructional materials, magazine articles, courseware, video/DVD presentations, and author and/or editor of 5 books spanning a variety of technologies. He focuses on designing and building of large-scale enterprise applications. He is also an internationally acclaimed speaker, speaking at over 100 developer conferences worldwide, delivering more than 600 talks.

Check out his web site at http://www.nealford.com. He welcomes feedback and can be reached at .

Track abstract - Development Process & Methodology

Emergent Design

Most of the software world has realized that BDUF (Big Design Up Front) doesn't work well in software, but lots of developers struggle with this notion when it applies to architecture and design. Surely you can't just start coding, right? You need some level of understanding before you can start work. This session describes the current thinking about emergent design, including both proactive (test-driven development) and reactive (refactoring, composed method) approaches to discovering design. The goal of this talk is to provide nomenclature, strategies, and techniques for allowing design to emerge from projects as they proceed, keeping you code in sync with the problem domain.

Track abstract - Development Process & Methodology

How Agility Allows Us to Build One of the World's Biggest Rails App

While others have been debating whether Rails can scale to enterprise levels, we've been demonstrating it. ThoughtWorks is running one of the largest Rails projects in the world, for an Enterprise. This session discusses tactics, techniques, best practices, and other things we've learned from scaling rails development. I discuss infrastructure, testing, messaging, optimization, performance, and the results of lots of lessons learned, including killer rock-scissors-paper tricks to help you avoid babysitting the view tests!

Track abstract - Java

Construction Techniques for Domain Specific Languages

Domain specific languages have been the Next Big Thing for years now, but they have quietly started penetrating the development world. This talk covers language techniques in Java, Groovy, and Ruby on how and why to create DSLs. This session demonstrates with motivation for converting APIs into DSLs, and various patterns, anti-patterns, and best practices for how to achieve the optimum effect. This talk also covers the very important topic of implicit context, and how language constructs can allow you to write less verbose and more expressive code.

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