JavaScript is a client-side script language, but we can use it on server side programming now. However, it is still difficult to write server-side application for front-end developer.
Here we try to find a solution to write server-side script that developer only need to understand and have client-side experience.
This is how we build www.attictv.com with NodeJS, and the development philosophies we adopted as a startup.
AtticTV is a music video website that is going to the the MTV of the Internet. Just get on www.attictv.com and music video starts playing, no searching, no waiting.
The slide notes are in Chinese because I presented the slide at NodeJS Party Taiwan at Taipei. If you have any questions, feel free to buzz me at @conancat on Twitter!
JavaScript is a client-side script language, but we can use it on server side programming now. However, it is still difficult to write server-side application for front-end developer.
Here we try to find a solution to write server-side script that developer only need to understand and have client-side experience.
This is how we build www.attictv.com with NodeJS, and the development philosophies we adopted as a startup.
AtticTV is a music video website that is going to the the MTV of the Internet. Just get on www.attictv.com and music video starts playing, no searching, no waiting.
The slide notes are in Chinese because I presented the slide at NodeJS Party Taiwan at Taipei. If you have any questions, feel free to buzz me at @conancat on Twitter!
muCon 2016: Authentication in Microservice Systems By David BorsosOpenCredo
Software security is hard. Software security in Microservice Systems is even harder. Microservice-style software architectures have steadily been gaining popularity in recent years. They offer many benefits over traditional monolithic software products, however they also introduce new challenges - one of these being security.
In recent years David has worked on this problem in several independent projects, and this talk will draw on his learnings within the topic of authenticating end-users. David will describe, compare and evaluate several authentication options from the perspective of how secure they are and how well they comply with the qualities of a well-designed microservice system. You will leave the talk with suggested evaluation criteria and guidance for implementation based on their use cases.
muCon 2016: Authentication in Microservice Systems By David BorsosOpenCredo
Software security is hard. Software security in Microservice Systems is even harder. Microservice-style software architectures have steadily been gaining popularity in recent years. They offer many benefits over traditional monolithic software products, however they also introduce new challenges - one of these being security.
In recent years David has worked on this problem in several independent projects, and this talk will draw on his learnings within the topic of authenticating end-users. David will describe, compare and evaluate several authentication options from the perspective of how secure they are and how well they comply with the qualities of a well-designed microservice system. You will leave the talk with suggested evaluation criteria and guidance for implementation based on their use cases.