Learn how to do Specification by Example
I’m speaking here:
- Agile Practitioners 2012, Tel Aviv, Israel, 30-31 January 2012
- Software Passion Summit, Göteborg, Sweden, March 19-20, 2012
- Scandinavian Developers conference, Göteborg, Sweden, April 17, 2012
- Dutch Testing Conference, Bussum, NL, 18 April
- Testing and Finance, London, 17 May 2012
ddd Archive
-
Improving performance and scalability with DDD
Posted on June 23, 2009 | 3 CommentsDistributed systems are not typically a place where domain driven design is applied. Distributed processing projects often start with an overall architecture vision and an idea about a processing model which basically drives the whole thing, including object design if it exists at all. Elaborate object designs are thought of... -
Eric Evans: Why do efforts to replace legacy systems fail?
Posted on June 19, 2009 | 4 CommentsAt the DDD Exchange conference today in London, Eric Evans presented on “The good, the bad and the ugly” aspects of strategic design. Talking about several efforts to replace legacy systems he has encountered in past, he suggested that these were “traps that good and smart software people are more... -
QCon London 2009: Eric Evans – What I’ve learned about DDD since the book
Posted on March 12, 2009 | 7 CommentsAt the QCon London 2009 conference today, Eric Evans presented recent advancements in Domain Driven Design in the talk titled What I’ve learned about DDD since the book. Evans started the presentation by saying that it has been five years since the DDD book was published, and projects which he... -
DDD event postponed to Jan 27th
Posted on December 13, 2008 | No CommentsThe DDD and deployment challenges event that was supposed to take place this Wednesday in London is postponed for the 27th of January. For more info, see the event page. -
Beware of the second worst programmer
Posted on October 7, 2008 | 7 CommentsI attended a Domain Driven Design course on Monday at Skills Matter offices. Eric Evans led the course and put forward a very interesting theory that the quality of a software system is proportional to the skills of the second worst programmer.

