<<< Previous speaker next speaker >>>

Jon Vernon, Director Global Markets & Research Technology

 Jon  Vernon
Jon is currently Director Global Markets & Risk Technology at Bank of America.  He works on many core high scale and mission critical components of Bank of America's application stack.  Before working at Bank of America, Jon was a founder at Logistics.com, an outsourced supply chain management software provider.  And he started his career at Merrill Lynch helping to bring the firm onto the web.  Jon's expertise is in building systems that are secure, capable of handling thousands of requests per second, and simultaneously providing access to and presentation of transaction data, profile data, and large tomes of decision-support information on all devices from desktop to smartphone.  His experience will lend a unique voice to the Finance Track here at QCon in that Jon's experience does not end at the data management layer because his applications have to get the data all the way to the end user and be presented in a meaningful and efficient manner.

Presentation: "Panel: How Banks are Managing Their Data"

Time: Wednesday 16:50 - 17:50

Location: Robinson/Whitman

Abstract:
How do you manage your data?  In a relational database?  In a NoSQL store?  Do you use CEP technology?  Web services?  What we all are making sense of right now is how to store, share, secure, and scale our data storage for both application consumption as well as analytics.  Business and IT are in the middle of transformation toward real-time and mobile and data management is at the heart of our ability to succeed.  NoSQL, Hadoop, CEP, and more are all born out of the need to do more than the "traditional n-tier stack" can provide.  In this panel, Experts and senior technical leaders from banks such as JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, and Morgan Stanley as well as Thomson Reuters will discuss what is driving change in their organizations, where they are on the adoption curve of these new technologies, and what is working and what is not.