Is this thing on? Microservices and microfrontends


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Etter et langt og ufrivillig opphold prøver vi oss med litt sosialt samvær igjen. Capgemini åpner dørene sine for oss og byr på pizza og faglig påfyll. Det blir pizza og mingling 17:00-18:00 og talere fra 18:00-19:00. Da har vi to godbiter til dere:
Ali Akbar Rehman
Ali is a full stack developer and an aspiring data scientist working as a developer in Capgemini, Stavanger. He has had the opportunity to work with Micro-Frontend architecture recently and would love to share his experience with the rest of this amazing community.
Microservices have been around for some time. Now we can leverage the said architecture to manage and mature our frontend code as well. In any modern application the frontend code gets just as complicated and hard to maintain as the backend code, if not more, and with Micro-Frontends we can split our application into micro-applications with a number of advantages.
Eugene Romero
Eugene is a Senior DevOps Engineer at Capgemini Norge. He has been in the software development world for 13 years, and has worked for companies in Norway, the United States, Mexico and Spain. When he is not busy destroying cloud infrastructure, he can be found enjoying videogames, football, or Formula 1.
Show and Tell: Automating the build and deploy of .NET microservices to Kubernetes
In this talk, I will demonstrate how we build and deploy .NET microservices for a public sector customer. Our microservices are automatically built, tested, packed, and deployed to different environments running on Azure Kubernetes Services. By leveraging Azure DevOps, Terraform, and Helm, we are able to have changes in production in as little as 10-15 minutes.
This talk will be an opportunity for seeing how this process works, what some of the challenges have been, and how to get started implementing a similar process in your own projects.

Is this thing on? Microservices and microfrontends