Raju is a software craftsman with almost 20 years of hands-on experience scoping, architecting, designing, implementing full stack applications.
He provides a 360 view of the development cycle, is proficient in a variety of programming languages and paradigms, experienced with software development methodologies, as well an expert in infrastructure and tooling.
He has long been in the pursuit of hermeticism across the development stack by championing immutability during development (with languages like Clojure), deployment (leveraging tools like Docker and Kubernetes), and provisioning and configuration via code (toolkits like Ansible, Terraform, Packer, everything-as-code).
Raju is a published author, internationally known public speaker and trainer.
Raju can be found on Twitter as @looselytyped.
In his spare time, you will find Raju reading, playing with technology, or spending time with his wonderful (and significantly better) other half.
Teams can often get dysfunctional. Even for leaders with the best of intentions—without knowing what signs to look for, and how to avoid to avoid them, can create teams that over time start fail to be cohesive, and delivering on their expectations. Add to that the ever changing landscape of the enterprise, the revolving door of attrition—all of which add to making this a real challenge for any leader.
This session will dive into some of the signs of a dysfunctional team, and provide guidance on what a leader can do to not just build, but maintain a high functioning team.
Enterprise Architecture (EA) has long been misunderstood as a bottleneck to innovation, often labeled the “department of no.” But in today’s fast-paced world of Agile, DevOps, Cloud, and AI, does EA still have a role to play—or is it a relic of the past?
This session will highlight the need for Enterprise Architecture in the modern enterprise. It will show how EA can help provide line-of-sight from business to IT assets and management. Leaders will learn how to build out a future-proof version of EA that thrives in the modern landscape.
As organizations leverage more and more generative AI to augment the SDLC, the need for strategizing on how this ought to be leveraged, and how to govern the scope of change becomes more and more pertinent.
Enterprises are leaning more and more towards accelerating the SLDC with the support of Generative AI. But this raises several new questions. Are we in a new world where the LLM is the compiler and entire systems will be regenerated for every change? What does one need to think about if that is the case? Is that even sustainable?
On the other hand, if we wish to limit the scope of change—what is that scope? How do we ensure that the blast radius of a change is contained?
This session will attempt to highlight what needs to be thought through as enterprises embark on scaling out Gen AI to assist system development. We will take a journey understanding what makes great systems, how the architectural quanta has a role to play, and what has emphemerality go to do with the conversation.
Enterprise Architecture (EA) has long been misunderstood as a bottleneck to innovation, often labeled the “department of no.” But in today’s fast-paced world of Agile, DevOps, Cloud, and AI, does EA still have a role to play—or is it a relic of the past?
This session reimagines the role of EA in the modern enterprise, showcasing how it can evolve into a catalyst for agility and innovation. We’ll explore the core functions of EA, its alignment with business and IT strategies, and how modern tools, techniques, and governance can transform it into a driver of value. Attendees will leave with actionable insights on building a future-ready EA practice that thrives in an ever-changing technological landscape.
JavaScript has finally grown up. Armed with a slew of new features, JavaScript now makes writing the code that powers your applications elegant, concise, and easy to understand. This book is a pragmatic guide to the new features introduced in JavaScript, starting with Edition 6 of ECMAScript, and ending with Edition 9.
Using a "compare and contrast" approach, each chapter offers a deep dive into new features, highlighting how best to use them moving forward. As you progress through the book, you'll be offered multiple opportunities to see the new features in action, and in concert with one another.
Backed by an example-driven writing style, you'll learn by doing, and get ready to embrace the new world of JavaScript.
What You'll Learn
Who This Book Is For
New and experienced developers who wish to keep abreast of the changes to JavaScript and deepen their understanding of the language.