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    <title>marius a. eriksen</title>
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      <title>Taming Concurrency</title>
      <description>Concurrency has assumed a center-stage position in modern systems building -- it is a stubborn source of complexity for many programs, but our tools aren't always equal to the job. Scala provides fertile grounds for new (and old) concurrency constructs--actors, futures, &amp; STM among them--and in this talk I'll look at some of these--where they are valuable, but also where they fall short--and examine how we might reconcile this messy, concurrent world of ours with the ideals espoused by functional programming.</description>
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      <content:encoded>Concurrency has assumed a center-stage position in modern systems building -- it is a stubborn source of complexity for many programs, but our tools aren't always equal to the job. Scala provides fertile grounds for new (and old) concurrency constructs--actors, futures, &amp; STM among them--and in this talk I'll look at some of these--where they are valuable, but also where they fall short--and examine how we might reconcile this messy, concurrent world of ours with the ideals espoused by functional programming.</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Sat, 03 Aug 2013 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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