In person Rust October 2025 at AWS in Tel Aviv
2025.10.20 In person Rust October 2025 at AWS in Tel Aviv
registerPresentations
Mingling
Length: 30 minutesMemorix: A Next-Generation In-Memory ORM Written in Rust for Microservices and IoT (Hebrew)
In distributed systems, developers face significant challenges managing in-memory data stores like Redis and message brokers like Kafka across multiple programming languages while maintaining type safety. While tools like GraphQL, Swagger, Prisma have solved persistent data management and messaging layers, the in-memory layer has been largely overlooked.
This presentation introduces Memorix, an open-source in-memory ORM written in Rust that addresses this gap. Memorix uses a schema-first approach to generate fully-typed client code for multiple programming languages, enabling seamless communication with microservices and IoT devices regardless of their implementation language.
What you'll see:
- The problem: type safety challenges in distributed in-memory systems
- Memorix overview: schema-first, multi-language code generation
- Live demo: creating a schema and using it across TypeScript, Python, and Rust
- Why Rust: how Rust’s features make this tool possible (performance, macros, and more)
The talk includes practical examples and live coding to show how Memorix brings the same developer experience to in-memory data that modern ORMs provide for databases.
Project: https://uvop.github.io/memorix/
Speakers
Break
Length: 15 minutesCursed Rust (English)
A talk about abusing Rustlang's formal grammar rules.
Rust, chaos, and a chance to win your very own Ferris.
Come see what happens when programming is about fun, not clean code.
Programming isn’t always about writing the cleanest, most production-ready code. Sometimes, it’s about experimenting, breaking things, and making colleagues confused about what the heck you just wrote and why does it compile.
In this talk, we’ll take a playful look at what happens when you push Rust (and your brain cells) in unusual directions. Along the way, we’ll celebrate clever design choices in Rust, dabble in some esoteric examples, and remind ourselves that programming should be fun.
Come for the Rust, stay for the chaos.
Oh and throughout the presentation you will have a chance to win your very own Ferris the crab!
Speakers
To copy to Meetup
Title: In person Rust October 2025 at AWS in Tel Aviv
Date: 2025.10.20
Start: 18:00
* Mingling (30 minutes)
* Memorix: A Next-Generation In-Memory ORM Written in Rust for Microservices and IoT by Yuval Saraf
Language: (Hebrew)
Length: 30 min
In distributed systems, developers face significant challenges managing in-memory data stores like Redis and message brokers like Kafka across multiple programming languages while maintaining type safety. While tools like GraphQL, Swagger, Prisma have solved persistent data management and messaging layers, the in-memory layer has been largely overlooked.
This presentation introduces Memorix, an open-source in-memory ORM written in Rust that addresses this gap. Memorix uses a schema-first approach to generate fully-typed client code for multiple programming languages, enabling seamless communication with microservices and IoT devices regardless of their implementation language.
What you'll see:
- The problem: type safety challenges in distributed in-memory systems
- Memorix overview: schema-first, multi-language code generation
- Live demo: creating a schema and using it across TypeScript, Python, and Rust
- Why Rust: how Rust’s features make this tool possible (performance, macros, and more)
The talk includes practical examples and live coding to show how Memorix brings the same developer experience to in-memory data that modern ORMs provide for databases.
Project: https://uvop.github.io/memorix/
* Break (15 minutes)
* Cursed Rust by Milan Šedivý
Language: (English)
Length: 40 min
A talk about abusing Rustlang's formal grammar rules.
Rust, chaos, and a chance to win your very own Ferris.
Come see what happens when programming is about fun, not clean code.
Programming isn’t always about writing the cleanest, most production-ready code. Sometimes, it’s about experimenting, breaking things, and making colleagues confused about what the heck you just wrote and why does it compile.
In this talk, we’ll take a playful look at what happens when you push Rust (and your brain cells) in unusual directions. Along the way, we’ll celebrate clever design choices in Rust, dabble in some esoteric examples, and remind ourselves that programming should be fun.
Come for the Rust, stay for the chaos.
Oh and throughout the presentation you will have a chance to win your very own Ferris the crab!