The Irish Software Show August 26th-28th, 2009, Dublin

What is it all about?

epicenter is four days of software excellence — it's a conference for learning, it's an expo for researching, it's a place for meeting! It's for software architects, CTO's and developers of all knowledge and experience levels.

The Irish Software Show is organised by IrishDev.com providing online News, Events and Jobs for Irish Software Developers.

1 Event, 4 Days, 74 Sessions

  • TuesdayBusiness, Best Practice & Tools
  • WednesdayClient Server
  • ThursdayWeb
  • FridayCloud & Mobile
imtc 2009
Ireland, we're proud to say, has built an enviable reputation as a talent tank of software excellence.

Despite the current calls for more Maths and Science in our schools, our universities are producing some excellent software graduates who have the ambition and the desire to spring board in to the commercial engineering world.

Today, in the Best Practice and Tools, you can hear from evangelists discussing the principles of software lifecycle and architecture, and even the horror stories when/if it all goes wrong.
The conference was part of IxTC series 2008, provided the Irish Java software development community with a platform to meet, listen to and learn from some of the world's leading authorities on Java technologies delivered sixteen content packed session.

Complexity Theory and Software Development

by Tim Berglund at 11:00, Tuesday, 8th June

Some of the systems we face are too large to be understood entirely by any one human mind. They are composed of a diverse array of individual components capable of interacting with each other and adapting to a changing environment. As systems, they produce behavior that differs in kind from the behavior of their components. Complexity Theory is an emerging discipline that seeks to describe such phenomena previously encountered in biology, sociology, economics, and other disciplines.

Beyond new ways of looking at ant colonies, fashion trends, and national economies, complexity theory promises powerful insights to software development. The Internet — perhaps the most valuable piece of computing infrastructure of the present day — may fit the description of a complex system. Large corporations in which some developers are employed have complex characteristics. In this session, we'll explore what makes a complex system, what advantages complexity has to offer us, what challenges it poses, and how to manage complexity in the systems we build and in the ways we interact with the people around us. What started as an interesting interdisciplinary idea may have the potential to revolutionize the way you think about your place of employment and the software you write.

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