際際滷shows by User: ertmanb / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: ertmanb / Tue, 18 Sep 2018 13:23:46 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: ertmanb Microservices Gone Wrong! /slideshow/microservices-gone-wrong/115191340 microservicesgonewrong-180918132346
With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon, using microservices-based architectures seems to be the killer approach to twenty-first-century architecture. This session goes over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a microservices-based architecture. What impact does it have on your organization, your applications, and dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare?]]>

With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon, using microservices-based architectures seems to be the killer approach to twenty-first-century architecture. This session goes over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a microservices-based architecture. What impact does it have on your organization, your applications, and dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare?]]>
Tue, 18 Sep 2018 13:23:46 GMT /slideshow/microservices-gone-wrong/115191340 ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) Microservices Gone Wrong! ertmanb With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon, using microservices-based architectures seems to be the killer approach to twenty-first-century architecture. This session goes over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a microservices-based architecture. What impact does it have on your organization, your applications, and dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare? <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/microservicesgonewrong-180918132346-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon, using microservices-based architectures seems to be the killer approach to twenty-first-century architecture. This session goes over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a microservices-based architecture. What impact does it have on your organization, your applications, and dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare?
Microservices Gone Wrong! from Bert Ertman
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Serverless - The Future of the Cloud?! /ertmanb/serverless-the-future-of-the-cloud serverlessjavazone17-170913134135
Are you still using Docker in production? Get over it! Serverless is the NEW future of the Cloud. But since the Cloud is still someone else's computer, that needs to be managed too. And if it is sitting idle, you probably have to pay for it whether you like it or not. No server can be more easily managed than no server. Therefore: meet Serverless, a new paradigm that truly approaches the Pay-as-You-Go philosophy once promised by the Cloud. This session explores Serverless, its impact on existing architectures, and assesses it's usability for Mobile Back-ends as a Service (MBaaS), Functions-as-a-Service (FaaS) and also for Microservices based architectures hosted in the cloud.]]>

Are you still using Docker in production? Get over it! Serverless is the NEW future of the Cloud. But since the Cloud is still someone else's computer, that needs to be managed too. And if it is sitting idle, you probably have to pay for it whether you like it or not. No server can be more easily managed than no server. Therefore: meet Serverless, a new paradigm that truly approaches the Pay-as-You-Go philosophy once promised by the Cloud. This session explores Serverless, its impact on existing architectures, and assesses it's usability for Mobile Back-ends as a Service (MBaaS), Functions-as-a-Service (FaaS) and also for Microservices based architectures hosted in the cloud.]]>
Wed, 13 Sep 2017 13:41:35 GMT /ertmanb/serverless-the-future-of-the-cloud ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) Serverless - The Future of the Cloud?! ertmanb Are you still using Docker in production? Get over it! Serverless is the NEW future of the Cloud. But since the Cloud is still someone else's computer, that needs to be managed too. And if it is sitting idle, you probably have to pay for it whether you like it or not. No server can be more easily managed than no server. Therefore: meet Serverless, a new paradigm that truly approaches the Pay-as-You-Go philosophy once promised by the Cloud. This session explores Serverless, its impact on existing architectures, and assesses it's usability for Mobile Back-ends as a Service (MBaaS), Functions-as-a-Service (FaaS) and also for Microservices based architectures hosted in the cloud. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/serverlessjavazone17-170913134135-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Are you still using Docker in production? Get over it! Serverless is the NEW future of the Cloud. But since the Cloud is still someone else&#39;s computer, that needs to be managed too. And if it is sitting idle, you probably have to pay for it whether you like it or not. No server can be more easily managed than no server. Therefore: meet Serverless, a new paradigm that truly approaches the Pay-as-You-Go philosophy once promised by the Cloud. This session explores Serverless, its impact on existing architectures, and assesses it&#39;s usability for Mobile Back-ends as a Service (MBaaS), Functions-as-a-Service (FaaS) and also for Microservices based architectures hosted in the cloud.
Serverless - The Future of the Cloud?! from Bert Ertman
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Microservices for Mortals /slideshow/microservices-for-mortals/54813884 microservicesformortalsjfall15reduced-151106092638-lva1-app6892
Microservices is the new popular kid on the block. Crowd pleaser at many conferences. With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon it seems to be the killer approach to 21st century architectures, right? But is this stuff only for Hollywood Coders pioneering on the bleeding edge of our profession? Or is this stuff ready to be used for your projects and your customers? This presentation is a warning. Microservices don't fix broken organizations and distributed computing is still hard. I will go over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a Microservices based architecture. What impact does it have on your applications, on dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your systems landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare.]]>

Microservices is the new popular kid on the block. Crowd pleaser at many conferences. With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon it seems to be the killer approach to 21st century architectures, right? But is this stuff only for Hollywood Coders pioneering on the bleeding edge of our profession? Or is this stuff ready to be used for your projects and your customers? This presentation is a warning. Microservices don't fix broken organizations and distributed computing is still hard. I will go over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a Microservices based architecture. What impact does it have on your applications, on dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your systems landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare.]]>
Fri, 06 Nov 2015 09:26:38 GMT /slideshow/microservices-for-mortals/54813884 ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) Microservices for Mortals ertmanb Microservices is the new popular kid on the block. Crowd pleaser at many conferences. With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon it seems to be the killer approach to 21st century architectures, right? But is this stuff only for Hollywood Coders pioneering on the bleeding edge of our profession? Or is this stuff ready to be used for your projects and your customers? This presentation is a warning. Microservices don't fix broken organizations and distributed computing is still hard. I will go over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a Microservices based architecture. What impact does it have on your applications, on dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your systems landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/microservicesformortalsjfall15reduced-151106092638-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Microservices is the new popular kid on the block. Crowd pleaser at many conferences. With popular poster children such as Netflix and Amazon it seems to be the killer approach to 21st century architectures, right? But is this stuff only for Hollywood Coders pioneering on the bleeding edge of our profession? Or is this stuff ready to be used for your projects and your customers? This presentation is a warning. Microservices don&#39;t fix broken organizations and distributed computing is still hard. I will go over the benefits, but more so the pitfalls, of using a Microservices based architecture. What impact does it have on your applications, on dealing with scale and failures, and how do you prevent your systems landscape from becoming an unmaintainable nightmare.
Microservices for Mortals from Bert Ertman
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VJUG - Building Modular Java Applications in the Cloud Age /slideshow/vjug-building-modular-java-applications-in-the-cloud-age/46005810 modularityvjug-150318145104-conversion-gate01
Modularity is an architectural theme that you'll hear about more and more. Being able to deal with change in a codebase is not something trivial and requires some serious thought. In this talk I will show you that it is actually pretty easy to achieve a modular architecture using OSGi, and the right set of tools. Of course everything will be demonstrated using live coding! In this presentation you will learn how to create modular, robust, and durable enterprise Java applications fit for the Cloud Age. Using a modular development approach with Java, OSGi, and a wealth of open source components, you will be shown how to combine these into coherent applications without locking into one of the existing PaaS providers. Finally, we will focus on deployment, introducing Apache ACE, that allows to centrally manage and distribute software components to target systems in the cloud or on premise. The presenter of this talk authored the book 'Building Modular Cloud Apps with OSGi' and is using these techniques in high profile production applications on a daily basis.]]>

Modularity is an architectural theme that you'll hear about more and more. Being able to deal with change in a codebase is not something trivial and requires some serious thought. In this talk I will show you that it is actually pretty easy to achieve a modular architecture using OSGi, and the right set of tools. Of course everything will be demonstrated using live coding! In this presentation you will learn how to create modular, robust, and durable enterprise Java applications fit for the Cloud Age. Using a modular development approach with Java, OSGi, and a wealth of open source components, you will be shown how to combine these into coherent applications without locking into one of the existing PaaS providers. Finally, we will focus on deployment, introducing Apache ACE, that allows to centrally manage and distribute software components to target systems in the cloud or on premise. The presenter of this talk authored the book 'Building Modular Cloud Apps with OSGi' and is using these techniques in high profile production applications on a daily basis.]]>
Wed, 18 Mar 2015 14:51:03 GMT /slideshow/vjug-building-modular-java-applications-in-the-cloud-age/46005810 ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) VJUG - Building Modular Java Applications in the Cloud Age ertmanb Modularity is an architectural theme that you'll hear about more and more. Being able to deal with change in a codebase is not something trivial and requires some serious thought. In this talk I will show you that it is actually pretty easy to achieve a modular architecture using OSGi, and the right set of tools. Of course everything will be demonstrated using live coding! In this presentation you will learn how to create modular, robust, and durable enterprise Java applications fit for the Cloud Age. Using a modular development approach with Java, OSGi, and a wealth of open source components, you will be shown how to combine these into coherent applications without locking into one of the existing PaaS providers. Finally, we will focus on deployment, introducing Apache ACE, that allows to centrally manage and distribute software components to target systems in the cloud or on premise. The presenter of this talk authored the book 'Building Modular Cloud Apps with OSGi' and is using these techniques in high profile production applications on a daily basis. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/modularityvjug-150318145104-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Modularity is an architectural theme that you&#39;ll hear about more and more. Being able to deal with change in a codebase is not something trivial and requires some serious thought. In this talk I will show you that it is actually pretty easy to achieve a modular architecture using OSGi, and the right set of tools. Of course everything will be demonstrated using live coding! In this presentation you will learn how to create modular, robust, and durable enterprise Java applications fit for the Cloud Age. Using a modular development approach with Java, OSGi, and a wealth of open source components, you will be shown how to combine these into coherent applications without locking into one of the existing PaaS providers. Finally, we will focus on deployment, introducing Apache ACE, that allows to centrally manage and distribute software components to target systems in the cloud or on premise. The presenter of this talk authored the book &#39;Building Modular Cloud Apps with OSGi&#39; and is using these techniques in high profile production applications on a daily basis.
VJUG - Building Modular Java Applications in the Cloud Age from Bert Ertman
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Migrating from Spring Applications to Java EE 6 [CHINESE VERSION] /slideshow/migrating-from-spring-applications-to-java-ee-6-chinese-version/24841796 con1177jia-con1177csrcnreviewed-edited-130801100929-phpapp01
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Thu, 01 Aug 2013 10:09:29 GMT /slideshow/migrating-from-spring-applications-to-java-ee-6-chinese-version/24841796 ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) Migrating from Spring Applications to Java EE 6 [CHINESE VERSION] ertmanb <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/con1177jia-con1177csrcnreviewed-edited-130801100929-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
Migrating from Spring Applications to Java EE 6 [CHINESE VERSION] from Bert Ertman
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Building Modular Cloud Applications in Java - Lessons Learned /slideshow/building-modular-cloud-applications-in-java-lessons-learned/21395873 geeconcloudlessonslearnedreduced-130518073111-phpapp01
Over the past couple of years we have been building large scale Java applications and deployed them in the cloud. While dealing with typical cloud issues such as auto scaling, failover, and incremental deployments we meanwhile had to refactor them for significant functional changes. Being able to deal with change and dynamics are important reasons for companies to resort to the cloud for application development. Short time to market and rapidly changing requirements can lead to experimental software design however. Dealing with constant change in a codebase is non-trivial. In order to facilitate much change a modular codebase is of great importance. In this talk we will show you what we have learned on how to create modular Java applications and how to deploy them in the cloud using an Open Source approach without locking into one of the PaaS providers. We will discuss OSGi, scalable web application architecture, and Apache ACE for deployment and provisioning.]]>

Over the past couple of years we have been building large scale Java applications and deployed them in the cloud. While dealing with typical cloud issues such as auto scaling, failover, and incremental deployments we meanwhile had to refactor them for significant functional changes. Being able to deal with change and dynamics are important reasons for companies to resort to the cloud for application development. Short time to market and rapidly changing requirements can lead to experimental software design however. Dealing with constant change in a codebase is non-trivial. In order to facilitate much change a modular codebase is of great importance. In this talk we will show you what we have learned on how to create modular Java applications and how to deploy them in the cloud using an Open Source approach without locking into one of the PaaS providers. We will discuss OSGi, scalable web application architecture, and Apache ACE for deployment and provisioning.]]>
Sat, 18 May 2013 07:31:11 GMT /slideshow/building-modular-cloud-applications-in-java-lessons-learned/21395873 ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) Building Modular Cloud Applications in Java - Lessons Learned ertmanb Over the past couple of years we have been building large scale Java applications and deployed them in the cloud. While dealing with typical cloud issues such as auto scaling, failover, and incremental deployments we meanwhile had to refactor them for significant functional changes. Being able to deal with change and dynamics are important reasons for companies to resort to the cloud for application development. Short time to market and rapidly changing requirements can lead to experimental software design however. Dealing with constant change in a codebase is non-trivial. In order to facilitate much change a modular codebase is of great importance. In this talk we will show you what we have learned on how to create modular Java applications and how to deploy them in the cloud using an Open Source approach without locking into one of the PaaS providers. We will discuss OSGi, scalable web application architecture, and Apache ACE for deployment and provisioning. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/geeconcloudlessonslearnedreduced-130518073111-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Over the past couple of years we have been building large scale Java applications and deployed them in the cloud. While dealing with typical cloud issues such as auto scaling, failover, and incremental deployments we meanwhile had to refactor them for significant functional changes. Being able to deal with change and dynamics are important reasons for companies to resort to the cloud for application development. Short time to market and rapidly changing requirements can lead to experimental software design however. Dealing with constant change in a codebase is non-trivial. In order to facilitate much change a modular codebase is of great importance. In this talk we will show you what we have learned on how to create modular Java applications and how to deploy them in the cloud using an Open Source approach without locking into one of the PaaS providers. We will discuss OSGi, scalable web application architecture, and Apache ACE for deployment and provisioning.
Building Modular Cloud Applications in Java - Lessons Learned from Bert Ertman
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Modular Java EE in the Cloud /slideshow/modular-java-ee-in-the-cloud/15329291 devoxxmodularity-reduced-121124123242-phpapp02
Java EE 6 is an awesome platform, but how do you design a system that can evolve for many years in production? And how do we run this stuff in the cloud? Designing a system that can evolve without creating a maintenance nightmare is far from trivial. A service oriented, modular architecture will help a lot to replace parts of a system without breaking others. The only mature modularity approach for Java is OSGi - a framework that enables low-level modularity and services, but you still need APIs to create web applications, use transactions, access data sources etc. Without these APIs you will have a hard time building applications. Unfortunately OSGi and Java EE did not interoperate well in the past; But what if we want modularity in our architecture but also the ease-of-use of Java EE 6? In this university you will: 1. Understand the benefits of a modular code base 2. Learn how to mix OSGi and Java EE 3. Manage modular cloud deployments using Apache ACE ..and of course there will be lots of live coding! ]]>

Java EE 6 is an awesome platform, but how do you design a system that can evolve for many years in production? And how do we run this stuff in the cloud? Designing a system that can evolve without creating a maintenance nightmare is far from trivial. A service oriented, modular architecture will help a lot to replace parts of a system without breaking others. The only mature modularity approach for Java is OSGi - a framework that enables low-level modularity and services, but you still need APIs to create web applications, use transactions, access data sources etc. Without these APIs you will have a hard time building applications. Unfortunately OSGi and Java EE did not interoperate well in the past; But what if we want modularity in our architecture but also the ease-of-use of Java EE 6? In this university you will: 1. Understand the benefits of a modular code base 2. Learn how to mix OSGi and Java EE 3. Manage modular cloud deployments using Apache ACE ..and of course there will be lots of live coding! ]]>
Sat, 24 Nov 2012 12:32:40 GMT /slideshow/modular-java-ee-in-the-cloud/15329291 ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) Modular Java EE in the Cloud ertmanb Java EE 6 is an awesome platform, but how do you design a system that can evolve for many years in production? And how do we run this stuff in the cloud? Designing a system that can evolve without creating a maintenance nightmare is far from trivial. A service oriented, modular architecture will help a lot to replace parts of a system without breaking others. The only mature modularity approach for Java is OSGi - a framework that enables low-level modularity and services, but you still need APIs to create web applications, use transactions, access data sources etc. Without these APIs you will have a hard time building applications. Unfortunately OSGi and Java EE did not interoperate well in the past; But what if we want modularity in our architecture but also the ease-of-use of Java EE 6? In this university you will: 1. Understand the benefits of a modular code base 2. Learn how to mix OSGi and Java EE 3. Manage modular cloud deployments using Apache ACE ..and of course there will be lots of live coding! <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/devoxxmodularity-reduced-121124123242-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Java EE 6 is an awesome platform, but how do you design a system that can evolve for many years in production? And how do we run this stuff in the cloud? Designing a system that can evolve without creating a maintenance nightmare is far from trivial. A service oriented, modular architecture will help a lot to replace parts of a system without breaking others. The only mature modularity approach for Java is OSGi - a framework that enables low-level modularity and services, but you still need APIs to create web applications, use transactions, access data sources etc. Without these APIs you will have a hard time building applications. Unfortunately OSGi and Java EE did not interoperate well in the past; But what if we want modularity in our architecture but also the ease-of-use of Java EE 6? In this university you will: 1. Understand the benefits of a modular code base 2. Learn how to mix OSGi and Java EE 3. Manage modular cloud deployments using Apache ACE ..and of course there will be lots of live coding!
Modular Java EE in the Cloud from Bert Ertman
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JavaOne 2011: Migrating Spring Applications to Java EE 6 /slideshow/javaone-2011-migrating-spring-applications-to-java-ee-6/9620358 ts24423final-111009142120-phpapp01
The Spring Framework has no-doubt played a major role in evolving the way we write enterprise applications on the Java platform today. However, it is still a proprietary framework owned by a single company. The age of having to rely on such proprietary frameworks in order to develop decent enterprise applications is now over and Java EE 6 has become an even easier way to develop enterprise applications based on standards which makes it the best choice for any enterprise application. In this session you will experience how to migrate a typical full stack Spring application to a standards based, completely portable, Java EE 6 application including integration tests.]]>

The Spring Framework has no-doubt played a major role in evolving the way we write enterprise applications on the Java platform today. However, it is still a proprietary framework owned by a single company. The age of having to rely on such proprietary frameworks in order to develop decent enterprise applications is now over and Java EE 6 has become an even easier way to develop enterprise applications based on standards which makes it the best choice for any enterprise application. In this session you will experience how to migrate a typical full stack Spring application to a standards based, completely portable, Java EE 6 application including integration tests.]]>
Sun, 09 Oct 2011 14:21:19 GMT /slideshow/javaone-2011-migrating-spring-applications-to-java-ee-6/9620358 ertmanb@slideshare.net(ertmanb) JavaOne 2011: Migrating Spring Applications to Java EE 6 ertmanb The Spring Framework has no-doubt played a major role in evolving the way we write enterprise applications on the Java platform today. However, it is still a proprietary framework owned by a single company. The age of having to rely on such proprietary frameworks in order to develop decent enterprise applications is now over and Java EE 6 has become an even easier way to develop enterprise applications based on standards which makes it the best choice for any enterprise application. In this session you will experience how to migrate a typical full stack Spring application to a standards based, completely portable, Java EE 6 application including integration tests. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ts24423final-111009142120-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The Spring Framework has no-doubt played a major role in evolving the way we write enterprise applications on the Java platform today. However, it is still a proprietary framework owned by a single company. The age of having to rely on such proprietary frameworks in order to develop decent enterprise applications is now over and Java EE 6 has become an even easier way to develop enterprise applications based on standards which makes it the best choice for any enterprise application. In this session you will experience how to migrate a typical full stack Spring application to a standards based, completely portable, Java EE 6 application including integration tests.
JavaOne 2011: Migrating Spring Applications to Java EE 6 from Bert Ertman
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-ertmanb-48x48.jpg?cb=1584452986 As a Fellow within the Luminis Group I'm responsible for stimulating innovation, knowledge sharing, coaching, technology choices and presales activities. Currently I'm involved and committed to building a new Luminis Core in the Rotterdam Area. Besides my day job I have been a Java User Group leader for NLJUG, the Dutch Java User Group (4000+ members) for over 10 years (2004 - 2014). I'm a frequent speaker on Java (SE/EE) and Software Architecture related topics as well as an author and member of the editorial advisory board for Dutch software development magazine Java Magazine. I was honored by being awarded the coveted title of Java Champion by an international panel of Java leader... http://bertertman.wordpress.com https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/microservicesgonewrong-180918132346-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/microservices-gone-wrong/115191340 Microservices Gone Wrong! https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/serverlessjavazone17-170913134135-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds ertmanb/serverless-the-future-of-the-cloud Serverless - The Futur... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/microservicesformortalsjfall15reduced-151106092638-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/microservices-for-mortals/54813884 Microservices for Mortals