You are viewing details from a past event. Please check our upcoming event schedule if you are looking for current content.

Baruch Sadogursky

Principal Developer Productivity Engineering Advocate, Gradle

Baruch Sadogursky (@jbaruch) did Java before it had generics, DevOps before there was Docker, and DevRel before it had a name. He started DevRel at JFrog when it was ten people and took it all the way to a successful $6B IPO by helping engineers solve problems. Now Baruch keeps helping engineers solve problems but also helps companies help engineers solve problems. He is a co-author of the “Liquid Software” and “DevOps Tools for Java Developers” books, serves on multiple conference program committees, and regularly speaks at numerous most prestigious industry conferences, including Kubecon, JavaOne (RIP), Devoxx, QCon, DevRelCon, DevOpsDays (all over), DevOops (not a typo) and others. After a tenure of eleven years in JFrog DevRel, Baruch is the Principal Developer Productivity Engineering Advocate at Gradle.

Presentations

Coding Fast and Slow: Applying Kahneman's Insights to Improve Development Practices and Efficiency

8:30 AM MDT

Embark on an exciting journey into the intersection of psychology, software development, and Developer Productivity Engineering (DPE) as we explore how Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman's groundbreaking work on the psychology of judgment and decision-making can optimize your development practices while conserving cognitive resources. Discover the impact of System 1 and System 2 thinking on the software development process, and learn to strike the perfect balance between “fast” intuitive thinking and “slow” deliberative reasoning.

We'll delve into practical DPE strategies for reducing mental fatigue and minimizing context switches, focusing on techniques like build system performance optimization, test parallelization, AI-powered test selection, and developer productivity observability. By leveraging these best practices, you'll enhance your and your team's productivity and maintain focus on high-value tasks.

Whether you're an experienced developer seeking to boost your performance or a curious newcomer eager to learn about the connections between the human mind, software development, and DPE, this talk is for you. Join us for an exhilarating adventure into the fast and slow worlds of coding, and uncover new ways to maximize your cognitive resources.

Surviving the Techpocalypse: Empowering Survivors with Developer Productivity Engineering

10:30 AM MDT

In these perplexing times, when jobs vanish like ice cream on a hot summer day, tech professionals must find the sweet spot between concern for their affected colleagues and the pressing need to scoop up progress.

Discover Developer Productivity Engineering (DPE), the secret sauce that helps both individuals and companies navigate the labyrinth of layoffs and limited resources with flair. Join us as we trek through a landscape teeming with dispirited engineers and floundering companies, showcasing DPE's power to transform even the most disenchanted developer into a productivity maestro.

By adopting DPE's clever approach, we can face economic instability with unity and a dash of wit, turning sour lemons into a refreshing lemonade of success.

Books

DevOps Tools for Java Developers: Best Practices from Source Code to Production Containers

by Stephen Chin, Melissa McKay, Ixchel Ruiz, and Baruch Sadogursky

With the rise of DevOps, low-cost cloud computing, and container technologies, the way Java developers approach development today has changed dramatically. This practical guide helps you take advantage of microservices, serverless, and cloud native technologies using the latest DevOps techniques to simplify your build process and create hyperproductive teams.

Stephen Chin, Melissa McKay, Ixchel Ruiz, and Baruch Sadogursky from JFrog help you evaluate an array of options. The list includes source control with Git, build declaration with Maven and Gradle, CI/CD with CircleCI, package management with Artifactory, containerization with Docker and Kubernetes, and much more. Whether you're building applications with Jakarta EE, Spring Boot, Dropwizard, MicroProfile, Micronaut, or Quarkus, this comprehensive guide has you covered.

Liquid Software: How to Achieve Trusted Continuous Updates in the DevOps World

by Fred Simon, Yoav Landman, and Baruch Sadogursky

Software affects everything in our lives.Imagine that software could be constantly updated without our involvement! No need to figure out hardware specifications. Nothing to interrupt our digital activities. No waiting for lengthy downloads and reboots. What if it all just happened in the background, and we could simply enjoy the benefits?

Liquid Software explores a future in which developers code high-quality applications that securely flow to end-users with zero downtime. The authors bring insights from their more than 50 years of collective experience in building software in modern development environments. They explain that what sounds like Software Utopia is possible and practical!

We’re at the dawn of the next great leap forward in computing – the achievement of continuous software updates. The Liquid Software revolution has begun!