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Nathaniel Schutta
SPEAKER 9 SESSIONS 4 BOOKS

NathanielSchutta

ARCHITECT AS A SERVICE
01 / BIOGRAPHY

Nathaniel T. Schutta is a software architect and Java Champion focused on cloud computing, developer happiness and building usable applications. A proponent of polyglot programming, Nate has written multiple books, appeared in countless videos and many podcasts. He’s also a seasoned speaker who regularly presents at worldwide conferences, No Fluff Just Stuff symposia, meetups, universities, and user groups. In addition to his day job, Nate is an adjunct professor at the University of Minnesota, where he teaches students to embrace (and evaluate) technical change. Driven to rid the world of bad presentations, he coauthored the book Presentation Patterns with Neal Ford and Matthew McCullough, and he also published Thinking Architecturally and Responsible Microservices available from O’Reilly. His latest book, Fundamentals of Software Engineering, is currently available in early release.

02 / PRESENTATIONS AT ARCHCONF'23
Wed Dec 13 · 5:00 PM
Analyzing and Critiquing Architectures

Software architecture is having a moment, from best selling books to packed classes, the software industry acknowledges the importance of the parts of software resistant to internet searches. Ample pixels have been spilt talking about patterns, decomposition, styles, diagrams and more and all to good ends!

Wed Dec 13 · 1:30 PM
Architecting Cloud Native Applications

By now your organization has planted a flag in “the Cloud” and it up to you to figure out just what that means to your application portfolio. Should everything be a microservice? Wait, what *is* a microservices anyway? How do you deal with massively distributed applications? How can event storming fix the gap between your business problems and domain model?

Wed Dec 13 · 3:15 PM
Architecting Cloud Native Applications

By now your organization has planted a flag in “the Cloud” and it up to you to figure out just what that means to your application portfolio. Should everything be a microservice? Wait, what *is* a microservices anyway? How do you deal with massively distributed applications? How can event storming fix the gap between your business problems and domain model?

Wed Dec 13 · 9:00 AM
Spring For Architects

With globally distributed applications (and teams!) the job of software architect isn’t getting any easier; applications are growing increasingly complex and architects are spread thin. You can’t be involved with every decision, you must empower your teams while ensuring they are making good choices. How do you do that? How can frameworks like Spring not only make your life easier but help your teams deliver robust applications to production? Spring Cloud has a veritable plethora of sub projects from circuit breakers to functions simplifying the task of building cloud native applications while making it easy for developers to adhere to best practices. At the same time it can be overwhelming to get your head wrapped around all the features Spring offers. This talk will show how Spring allows architects to focus on the critical design decisions they need to make while ensuring developers are empowered to implement critical business use cases. Today’s cloud native applications have similar pitfalls, luckily Spring is here to help you resolve them!

Mon Dec 11 · 9:00 AM
Succeeding With Microservices

These days, you can’t swing a dry erase marker without hitting someone talking about microservices. Developers are studying Eric Evan’s prescient book Domain Driven Design. Teams are refactoring monolithic apps, looking for bounded contexts and defining a ubiquitous language. And while there have been countless articles, videos, and talks to help you convert to microservices, few have spent any appreciable time asking if a given application should be a microservice. In this talk, I will show you a set of factors you can apply to help you decide if something deserves to be a microservice or not. We’ll also look at what we need to do to maintain a healthy micro(services)biome.

Tue Dec 12 · 1:00 PM
Developer To Architect

Becoming a software architect is a longed-for career upgrade for many software developers. While the job title suggests a work day focused on technical decision-making, the reality is quite different. In this workshop, software architect Nathaniel Schutta constructs a real world job description in which communication trumps coding.

Tue Dec 12 · 3:00 PM
Developer To Architect

Becoming a software architect is a longed-for career upgrade for many software developers. While the job title suggests a work day focused on technical decision-making, the reality is quite different. In this workshop, software architect Nathaniel Schutta constructs a real world job description in which communication trumps coding.

Tue Dec 12 · 8:30 AM
Paved Roads - Architecting for Distributed Teams

As we migrate towards distributed applications, it is more than just our architectures that are changing, so too are the structures of our teams. The Inverse Conway Maneuver tells us small, autonomous teams are needed to produce small, autonomous services. Architects are spread thin and can’t be involved with every decision. Today, we must empower our teams but we need to ensure our teams are making good choices. How do we do that? How do you put together a cohesive architecture around distributed teams?

Tue Dec 12 · 5:00 PM
Production Hardened Services

By now I bet your company has hundreds, maybe thousands of services, heck you might even consider some of them micro is stature! And while many organizations have plowed headlong down this particular architectural path, your spidey sense might be tingling...how do we keep this ecosystem healthy?

All signal.
Zero fluff.
DECEMBER 11 - 14, 2023 · OPAL SANDS RESORT · CLEARWATER, FL