This session will be focusing on building a working knowledge of available AI tooling that can help developers be more productive in their day-to-day work, with a focus on existing applications and their evolution (including old applications). We'll be talking about techniques and methods to refactor and update your applications, while keeping things manageable, readable and to the level of code quality that is expected from an enterprise application.
We'll also be discussing the MCP protocol and how it can be used in order to supercharge your developer tooling even further. We'll be exploring how to use existing resources in order to e.g. obtain better information for your design, code implementation, API endpoints, etc. Then we'll also explore what it takes to build one of these servers in case you need to offer an MCP server to the rest of your colleagues.
All of these topics will be introduced through short presentations, then participants will have the option of working on illustrative examples on their own.
We'll also be discussing the MCP protocol and how it can be used in order to supercharge your developer tooling even further. We'll be exploring how to use existing resources in order to e.g. obtain better information for your design, code implementation, API endpoints, etc. Then we'll also explore what it takes to build one of these servers in case you need to offer an MCP server to the rest of your colleagues.
All of these topics will be introduced through short presentations, then participants will have the option of working on illustrative examples on their own.
Cristian Schuszter
CERN
Dr. Cristian Schuszter holds a PhD in Systems Engineering with a focus on distributed fault-tolerant software architectures and machine-learning based failure prediction. In his day-to-day, he is somewhere between a Data and Full-stack Software Engineer, with a wide range of tech & job exposure both in academia and industry.
For the past 8 years he's been working with various teams in CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research). Currently he's focusing on the architectural directions of the CERN business computing group, with an emphasis on enterprise Java systems and UI.
For the past 8 years he's been working with various teams in CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research). Currently he's focusing on the architectural directions of the CERN business computing group, with an emphasis on enterprise Java systems and UI.