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Title (Wild)Fly far and away: the evolution of the JBoss Application Server
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Author(s) Andreadis, Dimitris (speaker) (Red Hat)
Corporate author(s) CERN. Geneva
Imprint 2015-09-18. - Streaming video.
Series (CERN Computing Seminar)
Lecture note on 2015-09-18T11:00:00
Subject category CERN Computing Seminar
Abstract

It was year 1999 when EJBoss made it's debut as an alternative opensource J2EE implementation. 15+ years is more than a lifetime in technology terms and yet the JBoss Application Server project, renamed in 2013 into WildFly has managed to survive and thrive in an ever changing environment, helping developers focus on their real business problems, be productive and stop re-inventing the wheel.

This talk hopes to shed some light on the history behind JBoss/WildFly and the technological transformations that it went through, explaining the strong architectural aspects of it and some of its many innovations, as well as providing the current state of the union and a roadmap of future developments in application server technology, the Java EE space and the Cloud. About the speaker

Dimitris is the Engineering Manager of the WildFly / JBoss Enterprise Application Server team at Red Hat, based out of Neuchâtel. He served as the JBoss AS project lead for several years and he has been a JBoss addict and contributor from the early start-up days. He worked previously at Intracom and Motorola in the areas of NMS/OSS, designing reusable frameworks and distributed systems. Dimitris studied computer science at the Technological Educational Institute of Athens and received an M.Sc. by research from University College Dublin, Ireland.

Copyright/License © 2015-2024 CERN
Submitted by miguel.marquina@cern.ch

 


 Record created 2015-09-18, last modified 2022-11-02


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