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Adam Cuppy
Ahmed Omran
Alan Ridlehoover
Amit Zur
Andrew Mason
Andrew Nesbitt
Andy Andrea
Andy Croll
Asia Hoe
Avdi Grimm
Ben Greenberg
Bhavani Ravi
Brandon Carlson
Brittany Martin
Caleb Thompson
Caren Chang
Chiu-Ki Chan
Christine Seeman
Cody Norman
Devon Estes
Eileen Uchitelle
Emily Giurleo
Emily Samp
Enrico Grillo
Espartaco Palma
Fito von Zastrow
Frances Coronel
Hilary Stohs-Krause
Jalem Raj Rohit
Jemma Issroff
Jenny Shih
Joel Chippindale
Justin Searls
Katrina Owen
Kevin Murphy
Kudakwashe Paradzayi
Kylie Stradley
Maeve Revels
Maryann Bell
Matt Bee
Mayra Lucia Navarro
Molly Struve
Nadia Odunayo
Nickolas Means
Noah Gibbs
Olivier Lacan
Ramón Huidobro
Richard Schneeman
Rizky Ariestiyansyah
Saron Yitbarek
Sean Moran-Richards
Shem Magnezi
Srushith Repakula
Stefanni Brasil
Stephanie Minn
Sweta Sanghavi
Syed Faraaz Ahmad
Tekin Suleyman
Thomas Carr
Tom Stuart
Ufuk Kayserilioglu
Valentino Stoll
Victoria Gonda
Vladimir Dementyev
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### Abstract We tend to create the false illusion about how good and performant our process implemented on Ruby is. One trick can make the difference: use and test that process daily, every minute is possible on a limited resource computer, the older and slower, the better. ### Details Every time my manager ask me if I need a new computer I answer the same: this is fine, is 5 years old but works as expected, I want to be the first to notice if the processing is getting slower. I consider that getting benchmarks are a must, but I've seen that usually is a one time process. I propose this idea on constant be benchmarks on our own daily flow as a way to improve ourselves as developers and professionals. Once we 'suffer' on our own flesh the degrading performance, the how and why we can make it better for traction. ### Pitch A limited resources computing could change our perception on what is fast, how can improve and why is not working as expected. Been working with data processing on multiple technologies, plataforms the last 15 years using closed and open source languages and libraries. ### Speaker Information A Senior Software Engineer now applying Ruby as a daily basis, having a full conversation with datasets, collections and queries all day long. Reviewing code and learning how to debloat the unbloatable. I have been programming on many languages, like ancient xBase (Visual FoxPro), C# and Python; on every change I’ve learn not only the technology behind the language also the culture, I’ve learn how to implement what I have been using on C# and Python into Ruby.
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