Congratulations again to Kin Lane and everyone at 3Scale for a very successful and fulfilling API Strategy Conference. There were a lot of great presentations and panels as well a many very interesting hallway conversations.
And I was exited to be able to speak at the event! Embedded below are the slides from my presentation, complete with copious notes on each slide to provide the context of what I said during the talk.
The focus of the presentation was on API revolutions. We have seen a number of them in the recent years, but there have been significant and substantial changes for Netflix and for some others that warrant discussion. The question that remains is: Are these changes specific to a small handful of companies or are these companies representing things to come for the API world as a whole?
-Daniel
Revolutions have a common pattern in technology and this is no different for the API space. This presentation discusses that pattern and goes through various API revolutions. It also uses Netflix as an example of how some revolutions evolved and where things may be headed.
Last Friday (February 8th), I spoke at the Intelligent Content Conference 2013. When Scott Abel (aka The Content Wrangler) first contacted me to speak at the event, he asked me to speak about my content management and distribution experiences from both NPR and Netflix. The two experiences seemed to him to be an interesting blend for the conference. And when I got to the conference, I was absolutely floored by the number of people who had already heard about NPR’s COPE model!
I have to admit, it had been a while since I last thought that much about the NPR days, but doing so brought back a lot of interesting memories. When more deeply considering those experiences alongside my Netflix experience, I was able to see commonalities in practice, philosophy, execution and results (although at different scales).
At any rate, embedded below are the slides from my presentation. I spent a good chunk of time commenting each slide as my presentations tend to be very image-heavy, which often results in lost context. The comments have added that context back in.
Thanks again, Scott, for having me at the conference. And thanks to all of the attendees with whom I spoke before and after my talk. The event was a lot of fun!
-Daniel
On February 8, 2013, I spoke at the Intelligent Content Conference 2013. When Scott Abel (aka The Content Wrangler) first contacted me to speak at the event, he asked me to speak about my content management and distribution experiences from both NPR and Netflix. The two experiences seemed to him to be an interesting blend for the conference. These are the slides from that presentation.
I have applied comments to every slide in this presentation to include the context that I otherwise provided verbally during the talk.