RetlangThis is a featured page

with Ian Cartwright

This event will be held in the Kilburn Building, University of Manchester at 6:45pm on Wednesday 31st March 2010. The venue requires a list of names in advance so, if you'd like to come along, please register. If you have an upcoming.com username that is recognisable as your real name, you can register by saying "I'm coming" on our upcoming page. Alternatively you can just register by completing this form.

Retlang is a .net based concurrency framework based on asynchronous message passing. The purpose of Retlang is to make the development of concurrent applications easier, in particular removing the need for explicit locking and the consequent worries about deadlocks.

In this talk Ian will explore how to use Retlang to address concurrency problems encountered with windows forms when writing multi-threaded code.

This talk should be of interest to developers working with .net in multithreaded environments, and more generally to people interested in developing concurrent applications.

About the author

Ian Carwright has over 15 years experience in the software development industry, much of it using Agile techniques, and he is currently a Principal Technical Consultant and Enterprise Architect at Thoughtworks. Ian provides organizational and architectural advice to some of the worlds best known companies. He also provides Technical Assurance for ThoughtWork's UK projects and serves as a member of the ThoughtWorks Technical Advisory Board which helps set technical direction for the company as a whole.

Ian has particular expertise in messaging, integration and asynchronous event driven systems.


We'd like to thank the university for allowing us to use their facilities.



No user avatar
AndyRobinson
Latest page update: made by AndyRobinson , Apr 1 2010, 7:40 AM EDT (about this update About This Update AndyRobinson Moved from: The secret art of agile Javascript - AndyRobinson

No content added or deleted.

- complete history)
More Info: links to this page
There are no threads for this page.  Be the first to start a new thread.