Everyone wants to work more effectively, smarter, and get more done. We developers want to focus on what adds value, increase our development speed, and cut out all the cumbersome, boring and repetitive tasks.
This session shows principles on how to accomplish the goal of being more effective and efficient as a developer. We’ll see how to automate the boring parts of our job, what big and small tips and tricks help us, which mindsets to follow, why we have the best job ever, and how to enjoy our work even more. This hopefully entertaining talk is not limited to specific tools or technologies, yet it’ll provide helpful examples and experiences.
This session shows principles on how to accomplish the goal of being more effective and efficient as a developer. We’ll see how to automate the boring parts of our job, what big and small tips and tricks help us, which mindsets to follow, why we have the best job ever, and how to enjoy our work even more. This hopefully entertaining talk is not limited to specific tools or technologies, yet it’ll provide helpful examples and experiences.
Sebastian Daschner
Sebastian Daschner is a self-employed Java consultant, author and trainer and is enthusiastic about programming and Java. He is the author of the book “Architecting Modern Java EE Applications”. Sebastian is participating in open source standardization processes such as the JCP or the Eclipse Foundation, helping forming the future standards of Enterprise Java, and collaborating on various open source projects. For his contributions in the Java community and ecosystem he was recognized as a Java Champion, Oracle Developer Champion, and JavaOne Rockstar. Besides Java, Sebastian is a heavy user of cloud native technologies and anything related to enterprise software. Sebastian evangelizes computer science practices on https://blog.sebastian-daschner.com, in his newsletter, podcast, and videos, and on Twitter via @DaschnerS. Sebastian kickstarted the JOnsen and jSpirit unconferences that connect Java developers throughout the globe. When not working with technology, he also loves coffee and to travel the world.