
"I also consider that it is a very interesting time for us to be working in tech because we are solving very interesting problems: new problems and exciting problems. Some of them are not necessarily exciting, because there's a lot of work, there's a lot to learn. For the particular theme that we're going to discuss here, which is integration, I would like us to do a trip on the memory lane about whoever remembers this book, "Enterprise Integration Patterns"."
"When you start integrating things, you start creating some experiences that were not possible before, when you start connecting things. That book basically delineated my entire career since I started, back in the days. I'm going to list some names here, and let me know if you've heard them, like BizTalk, Sonic ESB, TIBCO Rendezvous, something like this, all of those."
Integration remains a central field in software engineering, solving new and enduring problems by connecting systems to create experiences that isolated applications cannot provide. Core integration techniques include messaging middleware, file transfers, and system replication, with vendor examples such as BizTalk, Sonic ESB, and TIBCO Rendezvous. A canonical set of integration patterns captured the essence of these challenges up through about 2015. Integration work often involves significant effort and learning but yields high value by enabling interoperability across services. As microservices proliferate, integration responsibilities spread to every developer rather than a dedicated integration team.
 Read at InfoQ
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