Pre Conference Workshop: Software Architecture: The Hard Parts
DDD Europe - Workshop (2 days)
- Speakers
Mark Richards

- Date
- June 8-9
- Description
Pre-conference workshops have limited capacity and are sold separately from conference tickets.
Architects often look harried and worried because they have no clean, easy decisions: everything is a terrible tradeoff. Architecture has lots of difficult problems, which this workshop highlights by investigating what makes architecture so hard. In this hand-on platform-agnostic architecture workshop we go beyond the fundamentals of software architecture and focus on the really hard problems. We'll focus on areas surrounding modularity verses granularity, the challenges of event-driven architectures (including difficult error handing issues), why reuse doesn't work anymore, how to do tradeoff analysis, and how to decouple services to achieve proper granularity. Architecture is full of hard parts; by tracing the common reasons and applying lessons more universally, we can make it softer.
Prerequisites
A basic understanding of distributed architectures such as microservices, service-based architecture, and event-driven architecture.
About Mark Richards
Mark Richards is an experienced, hands-on software architect involved in the architecture, design, and implementation of microservices architectures, service-oriented architectures, and distributed systems. He has been in the software industry since 1983 and has significant experience and expertise in application, integration, and enterprise architecture. Mark is the founder of DeveloperToArchitect.com, a website devoted to helping developers in the journey to software architect. He is the author of numerous technical books and videos, including several books on Microservices (O'Reilly), the Software Architecture Fundamentals book and video series (O’Reilly), Enterprise Messaging video series (O’Reilly), Java Message Service, 2nd Edition (O’Reilly), and a contributing author to 97 Things Every Software Architect Should Know (O’Reilly).