What i learned from translation of the sre ryuji tamagawaRakuten Group, Inc.
I have translated the SRE book. It took 1 year to finish to translate the 500 pages-long book and I learned a lot not only from the contents of the book but also from the interaction with 4 SREs who reviewed the text. In this session, I will talk about what I have learned.
Life of an Engineer at Rakuten Osaka" is a presentation that aims to give prospective new Rakuten engineers a taste of what it's like to work in the Osaka Branch Office of Rakuten from a personal perspective. I cover "Typical Day" and "Non-Typical Day", including things like Asakai, Tech Shimekai, Social Events and Code Reviews.
"What does it take to transform a legacy mainframe COBOL system to state-of-the-art Java EE platform? How the Apache Spark clustering framework fits in all of this? Attend this session to find out, with concrete solutions to some of the major problems of turning a procedural program object-oriented, and parallelizing sequential processing."
Value Delivery through RakutenBig Data Intelligence Ecosystem and TechnologyRakuten Group, Inc.
Rakuten, Inc. is one of the world's leading Internet services companies and offering a wide variety of services for consumers and businesses with the focus on e-commerce, finance and digital contents. Therefore, Rakuten, Inc. has extremely valuable data asset covering different fields. In order to make better use of these data asset cross the whole Rakuten group and delivery data value to meet various business needs, Data Science Department is founded to enhance our group-wide data platform to provide better business decision support through BI and develop better data science solutions to improve our servers or even create new services. For today's presentations, I will give an introduction to how this big data intelligence ecosystem is building and show some example of how we are delivering values by meeting business needs.
Computers surround us in our daily lives, but the most powerful ideas of computing go beyond the sleek silver containers and glowing boxes. What are these ideas? And how do we prepare our kids for a world where more and more of the problems around us look like computers?
To find out, we'll travel back in time: from a jacquard loom maker with his punch cards, an inventor obsessed with cogs and steam, an electrical engineer who combined laws of electrical circuits with eccentric English mathematical logic and countless other philosophers, material scientists, artists, dreamers and tinkerers. Technology is about humans and big their ideas.
Linda Liukas will talk about how we can move towards a more humane tech industry and identifies what it means to approach technology from the unique perspective.