Mastering Chaos - A Netflix Guide to Microservices

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2017-02-22に共有
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Josh Evans talks about the chaotic and vibrant world of microservices at Netflix. He starts with the basics- the anatomy of a microservice, the challenges around distributed systems, and the benefits. Then he builds on that foundation exploring the cultural, architectural, and operational methods that lead to microservice mastery.

Download the slides & audio at InfoQ: bit.ly/2m1dqeA

コメント (21)
  • Can't express how high quality this talk is. Wonder if he was a teacher before!
  • One of the best technical talks I've ever seen.
  • One of the best talks I have seen on building systems of high scale, high availability, failure resilient and agility in undergoing change.
  • @tidal4774
    One of, if not the most comprehensive and analogous talks on the subject with relevant, real world stories from someone who has lived it. Thank you.
  • Great talk, which is still relevant in 2020! Especially the practical examples, and the solutions they applied. Loved the analogy with the human body. Thnx Josh!
  • 1:51 "how amazing the human body is and how something as simple as an act of breathing or interacting with the world is actually a pretty miraculous thing. And it’s actually an act of bravery to a certain extent. There are so many forces in the world, so many allergens and bacterial infections and various things that can cause problems for us." - watching this on Feb 12, 2021 makes me admire this guy and the company he dedicated part of his miraculous life.
  • @OliFubar
    I am sad I found this 3 years late, I've been developing microservices for the past 3+ years but I still learnt a lot from this. A huge belated thanks to you Josh!
  • This is a really informative talk on microservices, with real challenges and real solutions. The human body analogies make a lot of sense, there's a lot we can learn from nature...
  • As someone who doesn't deal with this side of architecture, this is a fantastic talk. Micro-services are just a division scheme, not really an architecture. To get things really running smoothly this provides some great insight to where the real work starts.
  • This talk is amazing. I'm far from being a system architect but this gives me a bigger perspective on how amazing systems like Netflix is built.
  • what I've learnt important from this video is keeping perfecting your tools & architecture.
  • @bdpyne
    Really fantastic talk. He used analogies well, making abstract concepts more concrete. My most important takeaway was the evolving nature of architectures. Architectures are challenged both by external factors (customers) and internal factors (operations, customer support, etc.).
  • @jonopens
    Such a fantastic metaphor to communicate the intent of microservices. As a younger programmer, that really resonated with me.
  • Few years into corporate job and I had forgotten how many things are there in Computer Science. This talk brought me back to college.
  • @LesterFD
    copying and learning from nature is always something beautiful. natural sciences like physics, chemistry do it since centuries. It's a good time for computer science to learn from methods, that are applied for many thousands of years.
  • @Mike.e
    Excellent talk. Envious of your delivery! Thank you!
  • @sirnawaz
    Brilliant talk! ... and the references to the various biological systems of the human body, throughout the talk, makes it even more interesting. It is amazing to see how various aspects of microservice architecture find similarities with other things created by the nature itself. On a microscopic level, we can draw analogies to the multiple-core, memory fences and cache-coherence as well.
  • @markmd9
    I just realized that on the globe we have more than 2 millions people that have interest in microservice architecture
  • this beast is ONLY working for netflix for the last +20 years, that's pretty amazing! thank you for this video, great presentation!