Really fun presentation. I was just talking about how threading creates non-deterministic complexity today with someone who claimed that computer programs are deterministic. I should force them to watch this.
"It means that we must maintain a state that lets us determine whether we have seen it before" - kinda sounds familiar, umm, oh yeah! It's called deduplication. "What if we receive the events out of order? You know step 1 has occurred and step 3 has occurred, what do you do? You wait for 2 to occur" - that's called sequencing. I mean give me an effing break.
Bathtub story reminds me of Donald Norman rant. I also noticed that the only thing to hold on to is a glass door. Classic crap design of an everyday thing.
awesome, thanks for the talk.
Much thanks for uploading this great lecture!
I was thoroughly underwhelmed.
i think the Powerful tools of DDD are : bounded context , ubiquitous language, domain, domain service , domain events .
Really fun presentation. I was just talking about how threading creates non-deterministic complexity today with someone who claimed that computer programs are deterministic. I should force them to watch this.
That person doesn't have a lot of experience, does he/she? Even without threading, programs can be non-deterministic.
@@CrapE_DM Especially if they're written by my clients. lol
Great talk!
"It means that we must maintain a state that lets us determine whether we have seen it before" - kinda sounds familiar, umm, oh yeah! It's called deduplication. "What if we receive the events out of order? You know step 1 has occurred and step 3 has occurred, what do you do? You wait for 2 to occur" - that's called sequencing. I mean give me an effing break.
It's very strange that Mr. Vernon actually endorses Tuple, in fact this is what most DDD experts hate as obscures what is inside.
The bathtub story seems far removed from useful content.
I felt talk was not cohesive. I respect speaker but somehow unable to follow his thoughts. May be it is because of my limitations.
is the code available somewhere?
I'm an American, and I've never seen a big flat on the floor shower except for in hotels.
Speed it up by at least 1.5x if you don't want to fall asleep.
Rude. It's a fascinating talk
Bathtub story reminds me of Donald Norman rant. I also noticed that the only thing to hold on to is a glass door. Classic crap design of an everyday thing.