GOTO Amsterdam (June 17-19, 2015) is a vendor independent international software development conference with more that 50 top speakers and 500 attendees. The conference covers topics such as AngularJS, Disruption, Docker, Drones, Elasticsearch, Hadoop, Microservices & Scrum.
Fabian Förster, TweetPolyglot Java DevOps Software Engineer
Biography: Fabian Förster
I am a Software engineer who cares about the quality of the products which I help building. My definition of quality spans from writing clean code and meaningful tests to maintainability and how the software behaves in its natural habitat, i.e. not in my IDE but in production.
When not building backend components of distributed systems or APIs, I care about my family, martial arts and medieval archery. I am enthusiastic about polyglot programming, DevOps and Science Fiction. I work for Deutsche Post E-Post Development as a software engineer building public facing APIs.
Twitter: @ffoers
Presentation: TweetUnusual Talks
The Art of Standing Up / 13:20 - 13:35
This talk explores the journey of an introvert and nerdy software engineer into the world of standup comedy. How he applies SOLID principle in composing his act. The speaker believes that there's a comedian inside every software engineer or developer that's why Windows exist.
A quick, fun, tight-hearted glance on how funny engineers can be at times.
What Can We Really Learn From Martial Arts? / 13:40 - 13:55
As software geeks we live in a culture which displays a certain affinity towards terminology of martial arts. Particularly Japanese Martial Arts seem to offer a certain fascination. We execute Katas, attend Dojos, and perform Randoris.
Are these terms even accurate? Can we maybe learn more from the world of martial arts?
In this talk I will present the experiences I have made during two decades of learning and teaching different martial arts and explore how they might apply to learning, teaching and the practice of software development.
The Tale of the Never-ending On-Call Shift / 14:00 - 14:15
Imagine the worst on-call shift you've ever had. Remember how relieved you were when it ended? As on-call engineers, we understand what it takes to care for and nurture our services: feed them (compute and storage), let them play in the sandbox, wake up late at night when they're screaming and need some TLC.
In this session, we'll look at 10 practical tips for improving your on-call life through the lens of being a parent: the never-ending (until they're 18) on-call experience.
by Dave Cliffe