GOTO Berlin is a vendor independent international software development conference with more that 60 top speakers and 600 attendees. The conference covers topics such as Java, Open Source, Agile, Architecture, Design, Web, Cloud, New Languages and Processes.
Past GOTO Event
GOTO Night: Micro Services - Smaller is Better?
Eberhard Wolff dived into the benefits and challenges of Micro Services. Eberhard is a regular speaker at several international conferences, author of over 100 articles and several books.
GOTO Night: From the Monolith to Microservices
Using examples from Google, eBay, and other large-scale sites, this talk outlines the pros and cons of these different stages of evolution, and makes practical suggestions about when and how other organizations should consider migrating to microservices. andy has worked as a senior technology leader and executive in Silicon Valley at companies ranging from small startups, to mid-sized places, to eBay and Google.
GOTO Night: Making sense of your data
Elasticsearch, together with its cousins Logstash and Kibana, provide you with a great environment to analyse your data. In this talk, we will jump into how the different projects work together, moving from taking a dataset from scratch through to a nice dashboard. Did you ever wonder how your logs look? How to analyse wikipedia? Your subversion repository? etc. If you have too much data, but not enough time, this is your talk.
GOTO Night: Immutable Infrastructure
This talk is for developers and architects wishing to radically improve and simplify how they deploy their applications. It takes Continuous Delivery to a level far beyond what you've seen today. Welcome to Immutable Infrastructure generation. This is the new black.
GOTO Night: Microservices
June 22, 2015 - 7pm @ Kaufhof, Cologne
This GOTO Night was all about "Microservices" with Dennis Traub, Stefan Tilkov & Dave Thomas on behalf of GOTO Berlin in Cologne / Köln.
GOTO Night: Microgames for Wetware Developers
This talk will show you that microgames implement the idea that the wetware of our brain develops best when we are alert, link our learning to our day-to-day work, learn with positive emotions and distribute small learning units over time.
GOTO Night: Prototyping all the things
Humans are incredibly bad at predicting the future yet increasingly complex environments require us to do just that in order to avoid costly and even dangerous mistakes. To try and understand the future of our apps, our products, even entire businesses, we make risky guesses and estimations which — not rarely — end up being far from reality.link our learning to our day-to-day work, learn with positive emotions and distribute small learning units over time.
GOTO Night: Neo4j Worst Practices
This talk will show ways to make sure to fall in all of these traps: data modelling, testing, configuration or tuning. The presentation of anti patterns is supposed to be informative but also amusing. This session will be rounded up by some andecdotes for customer projects and the open source community of Neo4j which Stefan is in close touch with for the last 3 years as field engineer with Neo Technology.
GOTO Night: Building Games with Akka FSM
October 7, 2015 - 7pm @ GameDuell
In this talk, you will learn how to extract the Finite State Machine (FSM) hidden behind a game and how this can be easily modeled using Akka FSM actors. Furthermore, it will be shown how important it is to take possible failure scenarios into account when building your game in order to make it more resilient.
GOTO Night: Vagrant, Ansible, Docker for Developers and Architects
October 13, 2015 - 7pm @ KOSMOS
This talk provides an overview of where the different tools fit in the continuous delivery process and what costs and benefits are associated with introducing them.
GOTO Night: Data Modeling for Elasticsearch
October 22, 2015 - 7pm @ Hypoport
In this talk you will explore how Elasticsearch stores its data and learn about the basic principles of index based search. We will look at some of the algorithms and data structures that are responsible for making Elasticsearch as blazingly fast as it is and see examples of how we can benefit from them in our projects.