Friday Dec 13
11:30 –
12:15
Green Room
Ant Farm Entropy: Sugar Powered Encryption
Randomness is essential for important applications such as the encryption of information. We know computers are bad at generating randomness, therefore much effort has been put into finding strategies to do this reliably and securely. These strategies can range from clever, to complex, to just outright silly. In this talk, we'll cover a research project that aims to answer the question of whether an ant colony can serve as a source for seeding OpenSSL's random number generator. The process, challenges, and findings will be candidly discussed, with something in this presentation for everyone to take away.
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Developer Productivity With IntelliJ IDEATrisha GeeThursday Dec 12 @ 14:15
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A New Era for Legacy ModernisationRachel LaycockThursday Dec 12 @ 10:30
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Adaptive Architectures - Building API Layers that Build ThemselvesMarty PittThursday Dec 12 @ 13:15
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Ant Farm Entropy: Sugar Powered EncryptionSuz HintonFriday Dec 13 @ 11:30
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Microservices on Unison Cloud: Statically Typed, Dynamically DeployedRúnar BjarnasonFriday Dec 13 @ 14:15
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GitHub Copilot - How It Works, How We Got Here, Where It's GoingDamian BradyThursday Dec 12 @ 15:30
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Understanding Distributed Architectures - The Patterns ApproachUnmesh JoshiFriday Dec 13 @ 13:15
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Concerto for Java and AI - Building Production-Ready LLM ApplicationsThomas VitaleThursday Dec 12 @ 11:30
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Tradeoffs, Bad Science, and Polar Bears – The World of Java OptimisationHolly CumminsFriday Dec 13 @ 10:30