Speaker

Kyle Aure

Kyle Aure

Software Developer @IBM

Red Wing, Minnesota, United States

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Kyle Aure is a Software Developer at IBM, where he contributes to the development of Open Liberty and plays an active role in shaping the Jakarta Concurrency and Jakarta Data specifications. With a passion for modern data access technologies and a commitment to promoting diversity and inclusion within the developer community, Kyle has been an up and coming developer in the modernization of enterprise Java standards.

Kyle holds a degree in Computer Science from Winona State University and has a wealth of experience in building cloud-native applications. This year, he returns to DevNexus to share his insights on the future of data persistence with Jakarta Data. In his free time, Kyle enjoys honing his craft as a master knitter, often seen wearing his signature hand-knit sweaters.

Area of Expertise

  • Finance & Banking
  • Information & Communications Technology

Topics

  • Database
  • Test Automation
  • DevOps & Automation
  • Agile Mindset
  • Software Development
  • Containerization
  • Jakarta EE

Exploring the Data Universe: Portability with Jakarta Data and Open Liberty

We live on a data-driven planet where data can be accessed from relational databases, non-relational databases, message streams, and more. Often our enterprise Java applications are restricted by the back-end datastore they were written to access. Let us explore a new universe where data is captured, accessed, and persisted without such restrictions.

The unity and standardization of data access and persistence was the catalyst for the Jakarta Data project. The Jakarta Data specification provides a modern persistence model focused on the stable and portable needs of the modern enterprise application developer. Using Jakarta Data on Open Liberty offers developers a cloud-native platform to prototype, test, and deploy applications.

In this session, we will showcase the domain-driven repository pattern of the Jakarta Data project to persist data to the relational database. We will highlight the query mechanism to utilize sorting, streaming, and paging. Once our application is written, we will swap out the relational database for a non-relational database to highlight just how easy this can now be with Jakarta Data.

Kyle Aure

Software Developer @IBM

Red Wing, Minnesota, United States

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