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Tuesday, April 1
 

09:45 CEST

🇬🇧 The Long Journey of Legacy Modernization
Tuesday April 1, 2025 09:45 - 10:45 CEST
The Long Journey of Legacy Modernization

Modernizing legacy systems allows your business to scale and innovate faster.
It's a long journey that requires constant focus - not just a few workshops followed by executing a simple, rigid plan.

In this talk I will share my experiences of the real issues that arise on a day-to-day basis, like new features vs modernization prioritization, and how to navigate them.




Sum up the session in only 1 sentence
I will do my best to share the realities of what it really takes to do legacy modernization successfully from a whole organization perspective.

What are the 3 top takeaways from your session or workshop?
1. Legacy modernization is about forming good habits and sticking to them for multiple years 2. You have to expect things to go wrong, and be able to deal with them and learn from the failures 3. You need high alignment up and down and across the org chart for the entire journey

Speakers
avatar for Nick Tune

Nick Tune

Staff Engineer, PayFit
Who are you?Nick TuneWhat do you do for a living?At the moment - a very hands-on staff engineer at PayFit. In the past - principal consultant, principal engineer, lead...What are you going to talk about at FlowCon?I will talk about modernizing legacy systems from a whole organization... Read More →
Tuesday April 1, 2025 09:45 - 10:45 CEST
Fast Flow - Auditorium
 
Wednesday, April 2
 

14:00 CEST

🇬🇧 Power Structures and their Impact on Software
Wednesday April 2, 2025 14:00 - 15:00 CEST
Title: Power Structures and Their Impact on Software
Abstract: Code is literally knowledge made manifest, and therefore offers a history of knowledge; it is a record of how people understood a problem over an extended period of time.

But code is also power, and the ability to write/approve/deploy it can be used for ill or good, (intentionally or unintentionally). In so doing, code solidifies power structures; embedding that which is inevitably unequally distributed (unintentionally or intentionally) but embedded all the same.

Code is therefore also a geology (genealogy?) of power structures. Code forms the landscape where records of our old ways of (dis)organising, and ideas that won, continue to shape everything because this code is where teams live *now*.

We experience this “code-as-knowledge-and-power” every day; our freedom to act restricted or permitted.

In this talk I’ll dissect what is at play here. I’ll consider what is happening with “code-as-knowledge-and-power” and show how to work with it intentionally, instead of suffering/benefitting disproportionately at the hands of it.

Your code, and your life, will be better as a result.

Sum up the session in only 1 sentence
“We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings.” Ursula K. Le Guin

What are the 3 top takeaways from your session or workshop?
1) Societal power structures make our code bad - code is structured knowledge and power 2) To see where the power lies, pay attention to who has control - of punishment, information, and who is charismatic 3) Fight uneven power distributions - by protecting everyone's freedom to reorganize, move and disobey.
Speakers
avatar for Andrew Harmel-Law

Andrew Harmel-Law

Technical Principal, ThoughtWorks
Who are you?A highly enthusiastic, self-starting and responsible Tech Principal; Andrew specialises in Java / JVM technologies, agile delivery, build tools and automation, and domain driven design. Experienced across the software development lifecycle and in many sectors including... Read More →
Wednesday April 2, 2025 14:00 - 15:00 CEST
Fast Flow - Auditorium