spring boot event driven microservices
When Your Machines Start Talking Too Much: A Story About Quiet PowerSo, you’ve got this brilliant setup—servos humming, gears turning, a who...
building event driven microservices pdf
The Servo Whispers: When Your Machines Need to TalkYou know the feeling. The line halts, not with a crash, but with a confused silence. A se...
event driven microservices
When servo motors meet "event-driven": a conversation about flexibility, do you know? Sometimes, machines, just like people, need not only instructions, but also "perception". Imagine that your equipment is running—perhaps a robotic arm in a factory, or a steering gear in a precision instrument. Everything is running according to the preset program, until something unexpected happens: a sensor data suddenly jumps, an external signal breaks in, or...
spring event driven microservices
Imagine you’ve got everything set up—servos humming, gears turning, sensors detecting. Yet somehow, the coordination feels off. Delays creep...
distributed architecture vs microservices
Why is your servo always stuck? Maybe it’s time to change your architecture idea. Have you ever encountered this situation: The robotic arm on the production line always runs like an old gear without oil? Obviously the parameters of a single servo motor are very beautiful and the response of the servo is fast enough, but the whole system is not smooth enough. After a long time of troubleshooting, it was not a hardware problem or a program bug. The problem may lie deeper - maybe you...
event driven microservices architecture
When Servo Motors Meet Event Driven: A Smarter Way to Collaborate Think about those servo motors and servos in your workshop. They are precise and reliable, performing complex movements day after day. But do you occasionally feel that they are like a group of highly skilled but independent musicians? Each piece of equipment executes its own score perfectly, but when the entire production line needs to improvise to respond to a sudden order, or quickly adjust process parameters, coordination...
domain driven design microservices
When Servo System Meets Complex Architecture: A Dialogue About Order Imagine that your mechanical device is running smoothly - the servo rotates accurately and the motor outputs torque smoothly. Everything looks perfect. But when you try to extend functionality, add new modules, or integrate different systems, things start to get tricky. The code becomes bloated, a small change ripples across the board, and maintenance becomes a guessing game. Does this feel familiar? The problem is...