Hi all,
You are probably also tired of writing monolithic applications, right? Join Dennis Doomen when he talks about using the Open Web Interface for .NET to decompose a monolith into microservices on Tuesday the 10th April 2018.
We are still looking for interesting short presentations for our usergroup meetings. Short presentations are the ideal format to give away your insights about the latest tools and techniques you use in your daily job. It is also a very good platform to sharpen your presenter skills. Send us an email to urs dot enzler at dotnet-zentral.ch or daniel dot marbach at dotnet-zentral.ch. Take the chance: you can give it in German or English!
Agenda
1. Introduction
2. Main: Using the Open Web Interface for .NET to decompose a monolith into microservices with Dennis Doomen
3. Knowledge Exchange/Apéro
Location
bbv Software Services AG, Blumenrain 10, Luzern, 1. Stock
(Details siehe http://www.dotnet-zentral.ch/?page_id=98)
Time
6 PM – 8:30/9:00 PM (After that apero)
- #dotznt (Hashtag-Usergroup)
- ddoomen
Using the Open Web Interface for .NET to decompose a monolith into microservices
If I have to name a single hype in software architecture land then I would have to mention the micro-service architecture. Microservices are supposed to be small, have a very focused purpose, can be deployed independently, are completely self-supporting and loosely coupled. Ideally, microservices are technology agnostic, but hey, we’re in the .NET space, aren’t we? And they are not a goal, but a means to an end. In fact, a microservice architecture has many benefits and are a great strategy for decomposing a monolith. So how do you build a microservice? What technologies does the .NET realm offer for us? And what if you don’t want to deploy them independently? In this talk, I’ll show you some of the pros and cons of microservices and how you can leverage Event Sourcing, OWIN and .NET to move your monolith into a bright new future.
Dennis Doomen
Dennis is an agile .NET architect with a broad interest in modern software development, Domain Driven Design, CQRS, Event Sourcing and everything agile. He specializes in designing enterprise solutions based on the .NET technologies as well as providing coaching on all aspects of designing, building and maintaining enterprise systems. He is the author of www.fluentassertions.com, an assertion framework for fluently asserting the outcome of unit tests and he has publishing coding guidelines for C# 3.0, C# 4.0 and C# 5.0 on www.csharpcodingguidelines.com since 2001. He also maintains a blog on his everlasting quest for better solutions at www.continuousimprover.com. You can reach him on twitter through @ddoomen.
Registration
Register on meetup.com. Attention: Seats are limited!
Come and visit the next meeting of the .NET Usergroup Zentralschweiz.
Urs Enzler and Daniel Marbach