MatthijsvdVeer / MondrianMuse

MIT License
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[Abstract]: Legacy stuff #14

Open desjoerd opened 2 months ago

desjoerd commented 2 months ago

1. Who do you think this talk is for?

.NET Developers & Architects

2. What do you think you'll learn from this talk?

I am developing on a legacy old application and it just feels like spaghetti code and a big ball of mud. I think I will learn how to improve or re-architect the application to make it great again.

3. What's something you'll be able to accomplish with the information gained from this talk?

After this talk I will be able to go into that old application and set a clear direction in how to improve and transform the application implementation and architecture.

4. What is the two-sentence summary of the talk?

This talk will look into how to work with big old applications and continue developing in it. It will come with methods including examples on how to isolate parts of the system and improve. It will provide you the reasons why you should improve the application instead of going for rebuilding. And most importantly, why it's fun to work on a legacy system, running in production for years, even with it's problems, like performance, bugs, slow-development and loads of dependencies.

github-actions[bot] commented 2 months ago

Breathing New Life into Legacy .NET Applications

In this session, you will discover effective strategies to tame the chaos of legacy .NET applications and transform them into robust, maintainable systems. Learn practical techniques for isolating parts of your existing codebase, improving architecture, and overcoming performance and dependency issues, all while maximizing the intrinsic value of your long-standing software.

This talk is for .NET Developers and Architects eager to rejuvenate their old applications. Expect insightful examples and proven methods that will empower you to set a clear path for modernization and find enjoyment in refining legacy systems.