CNCF Technology Radar - Continuous Delivery, June 2020Cheryl Hung
The document summarizes the first CNCF Technology Radar focused on Continuous Delivery tools. It describes how the radar was created by collecting data from the CNCF End User Community on tools they use and recommend. Solutions were then sorted into categories of Adopt, Trial or Assess based on consensus. Key themes included combining public and in-house tools, Helm being used beyond packaging, and Jenkins still widely used alongside newer cloud-native options. Feedback on future topics and participation in creating radars is welcomed.
Lessons learned from 3 years inside cncf - WTF is Cloud Native, 4 September 2021Cheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung discusses her journey inside CNCF, home of Kubernetes and one of the top open source foundations, some hard truths about community, and thoughts about the future of cloud native.
oicheryl.com
10 predictions for cloud native in 2021 - Cheryl Hung GIFEE dayCheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung presented 10 predictions for cloud native technologies in 2021. These predictions are organized into three categories: tools, DevOps practices, and ecosystem trends. Some of the key predictions include increased use of Rust programming language in cloud projects, cross-cloud capabilities becoming more robust, GitOps and chaos engineering practices growing, and user-driven development of open source projects.
The document discusses Cheryl Hung who is the Director of Ecosystem at the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). Some key details provided include that CNCF has over 400 members, 88 members in their End User Community, over 2.66 million contributions from 56,214 contributors. It also mentions that CNCF has provided over 300 diversity scholarships and has various user group events scheduled.
Lessons learned from 3 years inside CNCF - Swiss Cloud Native DayCheryl Hung
I discuss my journey inside CNCF, home of Kubernetes and one of the top open source foundations, some hard truths about community, and thoughts on the future of cloud native.
https://www.oicheryl.com/
Building and Deploying Cloud Native ApplicationsManish Kapur
This deck provides an overview of Oracle's Cloud Native Application Development offerings. It covers developing and deploying cloud native applications like Microservices and Serverless functions using Continuous Integration and Delivery Pipelines. This will be followed by a workshop where you will get a hands-on experience of how to build and deploy simple Java and Node.js microservices using a CI/CD Pipelines and Kubernetes in Oracle Cloud.
10 predictions for cloud native in 2021Cheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung presented 10 predictions for cloud native technologies in 2021. These included increased use of Rust programming language projects, better support for multi-cloud deployments, and using WebAssembly and eBPF for new capabilities. She also predicted growth in applying Kubernetes at the edge, increased adoption of GitOps for infrastructure management, and rising focus on chaos engineering practices and FinOps. Additional trends included more pluggable developer and operator tooling, consolidation in the service mesh market, and open source projects being increasingly driven by end user needs.
Cloud-native is a way of approaching the development and deployment of applications in such a way that takes account of the characteristics and nature of the cloud - resulting in processes and workflows that fully take advantage of the platform.
Check this deck for being cloud-native on IBM Cloud.
CNCF Technology Radar - Continuous Delivery, June 2020Cheryl Hung
The document summarizes the first CNCF Technology Radar focused on Continuous Delivery tools. It describes how the radar was created by collecting data from the CNCF End User Community on tools they use and recommend. Solutions were then sorted into categories of Adopt, Trial or Assess based on consensus. Key themes included combining public and in-house tools, Helm being used beyond packaging, and Jenkins still widely used alongside newer cloud-native options. Feedback on future topics and participation in creating radars is welcomed.
Lessons learned from 3 years inside cncf - WTF is Cloud Native, 4 September 2021Cheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung discusses her journey inside CNCF, home of Kubernetes and one of the top open source foundations, some hard truths about community, and thoughts about the future of cloud native.
oicheryl.com
10 predictions for cloud native in 2021 - Cheryl Hung GIFEE dayCheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung presented 10 predictions for cloud native technologies in 2021. These predictions are organized into three categories: tools, DevOps practices, and ecosystem trends. Some of the key predictions include increased use of Rust programming language in cloud projects, cross-cloud capabilities becoming more robust, GitOps and chaos engineering practices growing, and user-driven development of open source projects.
The document discusses Cheryl Hung who is the Director of Ecosystem at the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). Some key details provided include that CNCF has over 400 members, 88 members in their End User Community, over 2.66 million contributions from 56,214 contributors. It also mentions that CNCF has provided over 300 diversity scholarships and has various user group events scheduled.
Lessons learned from 3 years inside CNCF - Swiss Cloud Native DayCheryl Hung
I discuss my journey inside CNCF, home of Kubernetes and one of the top open source foundations, some hard truths about community, and thoughts on the future of cloud native.
https://www.oicheryl.com/
Building and Deploying Cloud Native ApplicationsManish Kapur
This deck provides an overview of Oracle's Cloud Native Application Development offerings. It covers developing and deploying cloud native applications like Microservices and Serverless functions using Continuous Integration and Delivery Pipelines. This will be followed by a workshop where you will get a hands-on experience of how to build and deploy simple Java and Node.js microservices using a CI/CD Pipelines and Kubernetes in Oracle Cloud.
10 predictions for cloud native in 2021Cheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung presented 10 predictions for cloud native technologies in 2021. These included increased use of Rust programming language projects, better support for multi-cloud deployments, and using WebAssembly and eBPF for new capabilities. She also predicted growth in applying Kubernetes at the edge, increased adoption of GitOps for infrastructure management, and rising focus on chaos engineering practices and FinOps. Additional trends included more pluggable developer and operator tooling, consolidation in the service mesh market, and open source projects being increasingly driven by end user needs.
Cloud-native is a way of approaching the development and deployment of applications in such a way that takes account of the characteristics and nature of the cloud - resulting in processes and workflows that fully take advantage of the platform.
Check this deck for being cloud-native on IBM Cloud.
Want to donate a project to the cncf here's how cheryl hung - 18 november ...Cheryl Hung
This document discusses donating a project to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). It explains that the CNCF's Technical Oversight Committee represents the community and sponsors and votes on CNCF-hosted projects. Projects go through stages of sandbox, incubating, and graduated. Graduation criteria include showing the problem the project solves, adoption, and a healthy community with governance across organizations and best practices. Contact information is provided for questions about donating a project.
The document summarizes Cheryl Hung's presentation on cloud native computing past, present and future. The presentation discussed Kubernetes starting as internal Google technology, being open sourced in 2014, and growing to be the largest cloud native project at the CNCF. It also reviewed how the CNCF fosters open source projects and graduated over 20 projects, as well as common questions received about what the CNCF does and how projects can be donated. The presentation concluded by discussing challenges to cloud native adoption and how cloud native technologies can help address issues like climate change.
Steve Litras [Cribl] | The Power of Infinite Choice | InfluxDays Virtual Expe...InfluxData
The document discusses making the most of observability investments by having choice and flexibility. It notes that current observability choices like data retention policies and standardization can bind organizations inflexibly. It proposes implementing an observability pipeline to provide choice over tools, data, retention, and workflows. This allows organizations to choose solutions that meet their specific needs rather than being constrained by existing choices. The pipeline also helps avoid lock-in to any single vendor.
The new stack isn’t a stack: Fragmentation and terraforming the service layerDonnie Berkholz
Open source, cloud, and the API revolution have already
changed the way we build software. What's next? Donnie's spent the past 5 years trying to figure that out through observation and research at RedMonk and now at 451 Research. In this talk, he'll share what he's seen and what he predicts for the future of how we develop applications. You'll hear buzzwords like DevOps and microservices used in ways that actually make sense (for a change), see real-world examples of companies that have succeeded and failed, and learn how approaches like the one taken by HashiCorp's Terraform (by the authors of Vagrant) will be critical to the future of how we build software.
Upgrading Made Easy: Moving to InfluxDB 2.x or InfluxDB Cloud with Cribl LogS...InfluxData
Many organizations agree that migrating workloads to the cloud or to a newer version of existing tooling can result in cost savings and flexibility. A well-designed observability pipeline is often the key to a quick and painless transition, leading to positive impacts on cost optimization, data visibility, and performance. Cribl’s LogStream product helps teams implement such an observability pipeline.
In this hands-on technical discussion, the audience will learn how to leverage Cribl LogStream to successfully upgrade from InfluxDB 1.x to InfluxDB 2.x or move to InfluxDB Cloud. Join us as we walk through the pros and cons of workload migration, share architecture best practices, and give a live demo on how to combine Cribl LogStream with the latest version of InfluxDB.
The CNCF point of view on Serverless
Presentation at Serverlessconf NYC on October 11, 2017.
https://nyc.serverlessconf.io/
The CNCF Serverless Working Group - with participation from IBM, AWS, Google, Huawei, Red Hat, VMware and many others - has been working on guidance to help end developers understand serverless computing. relative to other cloud-native deployment options such as container orchestration (for example, Kubernetes) and Platform-as-a-Service (for example, Cloud Foundry and OpenShift). A soon-to-be-published whitepaper aims to educate users about the right workloads for serverless, help them make sense of the landscape of service providers, and recommend open source projects for inclusion in the CNCF. In this lightning talk you'll hear about our work and learn how you can help steer serverless adoption and project support from the CNCF.
Serverless architectures are rapidly gaining interest from developers but it can be hard to understand when a serverless platform makes the most sense for their next application and how long a given provider might be around to support their apps. The CNCF aims to help users learn about serverless and support emerging open source projects that can run, debug, and monitor the next generation of cloud-native applications.
Our advice on building a scalable, resilient infrastructure with KubernetesOVHcloud
Using Vodalys (a specialist in mounting and streaming) as an example, find out how to deploy and orchestrate applications using containers in Kubernetes. The principle behind Kubernetes is to offer you scalability and transparent updates.
How to share a Kubernetes cluster securely through Lens spacesLibbySchulze
The document is about Lens, an open source Kubernetes IDE. It summarizes that Lens allows developers to easily use and manage applications on Kubernetes clusters, improving productivity and return on investment. Lens users can securely share access to their Kubernetes clusters using Lens Spaces. The IDE also features a catalog to access cloud resources and hotbars to build workflows. A demo webinar showcases how to share cluster access and use other Lens features. Contact information is provided to learn more or download Lens.
This document discusses ways to secure Node.js applications that use npm modules. It recommends setting up an npm registry mirror as a fallback in case of outages, caching modules locally and publishing privately, and monitoring for vulnerabilities using tools like npm audit, Snyk, and CVE databases. For production, it suggests using N|Solid to monitor applications for security vulnerabilities both at the top level and within nested dependencies. The overall message is that while npm is widely used, organizations should take steps to cover their applications and ensure the security of the dependencies and modules they use.
The document discusses DevOps principles, goals, advantages, disadvantages and tools. It summarizes that DevOps is a culture that encourages collaboration between development and operations teams to build and maintain software quickly while improving quality and reliability. Traditional processes make modern architectures hard to manage at scale while DevOps aims to remove barriers and bottlenecks through continuous delivery, automation, collaboration and feedback loops.
Microservices 101: From DevOps to Docker and beyondDonnie Berkholz
Containers and microservices are two of the fastest-growing trends in technology, enabled by a modern approach to software development and deployment called DevOps. This talk will delve into the increasingly mainstream trend of DevOps, the Docker and containers ecosystem including current enterprise adoption, and how they combine to form a new style of software architecture dubbed microservices. We'll close by looking at real-world examples of containers and microservices architectures at leading-edge companies.
How microservices are redefining modern application architectureDonnie Berkholz
Slides from a joint webinar with Treasure Data:
This webinar will provide a crash course on microservices, focusing on high-level architectural and strategic concerns. We’ll explore best practices and architectural considerations and show you how to deliver microservices-powered applications today.
This document outlines the agenda for InfluxDays NA 2021, a conference hosted by InfluxData. The agenda includes keynote speeches from the CEO and VP of Products of InfluxData on the future of InfluxDB and its roadmap. Additional sessions will cover topics like using InfluxDB for telehealth, anomaly detection, monitoring with WP Engine, data collection, Flux alerts and notifications. Speakers are from companies like Value Momentum, Socialgist, Ngrok, WP Engine, InfluxData, Fujitsu and Red Hat.
The Coming Disruption to Datacenter StrategiesStuart Miniman
Presentation from Web-scale Wednesday webinar on 6/25/14.
Abstract: The same web-scale companies that drive much of the commerce on the Internet (Google, Yahoo, Facebook, Amazon) are some of the largest consumers of IT in the world. The operational models and many of the technologies that started in the largest data centers are starting to invade mainstream enterprise IT. This session will help unpack how to bridge the knowledge gap between these very different worlds.
Patterns and challenges of cloud native adoptionCheryl Hung
This document summarizes a presentation on patterns and challenges of cloud native adoption. It finds that as cloud native becomes more mainstream, deployments are getting larger, with over 80% of organizations using containers in production and over 75% using Kubernetes. The top benefits of cloud native technologies are faster deployment and improved scalability. However, the top challenges remain cultural changes to more continuous processes, as well as addressing security and complexity. Common tools to help overcome these challenges include Istio for traffic management and Prometheus for monitoring.
How to Use the TICK Stack, CoreOS, & Docker to Make Your SaaS Offering BetterDeborah Schalm
Other than InfluxDB and the open source Tick Stack, InfluxData provides a SaaS version of the TICK Stack, called InfluxCloud, that supports clustering, authentication and other enterprise features not found in the open source TICK Stack. InfluxCloud is designed to be easy to use and reliable for our customers, as they rely on this service to store time series data gathered from sensors, servers, and other devices that is the foundation for their own SLAs for their products and services. This means InfluxCloud requires an even higher standard of service in order to help them maintain their service level commitments.
[Confoo Montreal 2020] Build Your Own Serverless with Knative - Alex GervaisAmbassador Labs
Google Cloud Run’s use of Knative introduced a portable Serverless solution built on top of Kubernetes. In this talk, we’ll recap the basic guidelines, use cases, and benefits of a Serverless architecture. Getting up and started, you will learn to take advantage of containers and the Ambassador API Gateway to serve event-driven application workloads and save costs using your existing Kubernetes resources.
https://confoo.ca/en/yul2020/session/build-your-own-serverless-with-knative
Building with containers: How containers will drive cloud servicesDonnie Berkholz
Docker is one of the fastest-growing technologies to emerge, not just in the past decade, but ever. This hot new containerization software has changed the game for how software will be built and delivered. And yet, it's still early days in terms of how containers will transform the way teams collaborate and businesses ship and support cloud software. In this talk, we will cover:
* How DevOps and containers work together to enable better service delivery.
* What the advent of microservices means for cloud users and providers.
* What users and service providers require to cope with the changes wrought by containers.
This document summarizes Cheryl Hung's presentation on cloud native computing. The presentation covered the Kubernetes community and role of the CNCF in growing it, current architectural trends like serverless computing and service meshes, and new norms for companies engaging in open source like individual contributions over company reputation. It encourages companies to establish open source program offices to guide compliance, outreach and executive support for open source contributions.
CNCF in Japan - Keynote at Open Source Summit JapanCheryl Hung
This document discusses the growth of cloud native computing and Kubernetes in Japan. It provides statistics on CNCF membership and certified Kubernetes professionals globally and in Japan. The key points are:
- CNCF has over 400 members and 18 platinum members supporting cloud native technologies like Kubernetes.
- Interest in Kubernetes is growing significantly based on Google Trends data. There are now over 8,300 people certified in Kubernetes worldwide.
- Kubernetes certification is now available in Japanese, helping to grow adoption in Japan where there are many major companies exploring cloud native technologies.
- Major Kubernetes conferences in 2019 and 2020 are expected to draw over 23,000 attendees, showing increasing interest in cloud native applications and container orchestration.
Want to donate a project to the cncf here's how cheryl hung - 18 november ...Cheryl Hung
This document discusses donating a project to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). It explains that the CNCF's Technical Oversight Committee represents the community and sponsors and votes on CNCF-hosted projects. Projects go through stages of sandbox, incubating, and graduated. Graduation criteria include showing the problem the project solves, adoption, and a healthy community with governance across organizations and best practices. Contact information is provided for questions about donating a project.
The document summarizes Cheryl Hung's presentation on cloud native computing past, present and future. The presentation discussed Kubernetes starting as internal Google technology, being open sourced in 2014, and growing to be the largest cloud native project at the CNCF. It also reviewed how the CNCF fosters open source projects and graduated over 20 projects, as well as common questions received about what the CNCF does and how projects can be donated. The presentation concluded by discussing challenges to cloud native adoption and how cloud native technologies can help address issues like climate change.
Steve Litras [Cribl] | The Power of Infinite Choice | InfluxDays Virtual Expe...InfluxData
The document discusses making the most of observability investments by having choice and flexibility. It notes that current observability choices like data retention policies and standardization can bind organizations inflexibly. It proposes implementing an observability pipeline to provide choice over tools, data, retention, and workflows. This allows organizations to choose solutions that meet their specific needs rather than being constrained by existing choices. The pipeline also helps avoid lock-in to any single vendor.
The new stack isn’t a stack: Fragmentation and terraforming the service layerDonnie Berkholz
Open source, cloud, and the API revolution have already
changed the way we build software. What's next? Donnie's spent the past 5 years trying to figure that out through observation and research at RedMonk and now at 451 Research. In this talk, he'll share what he's seen and what he predicts for the future of how we develop applications. You'll hear buzzwords like DevOps and microservices used in ways that actually make sense (for a change), see real-world examples of companies that have succeeded and failed, and learn how approaches like the one taken by HashiCorp's Terraform (by the authors of Vagrant) will be critical to the future of how we build software.
Upgrading Made Easy: Moving to InfluxDB 2.x or InfluxDB Cloud with Cribl LogS...InfluxData
Many organizations agree that migrating workloads to the cloud or to a newer version of existing tooling can result in cost savings and flexibility. A well-designed observability pipeline is often the key to a quick and painless transition, leading to positive impacts on cost optimization, data visibility, and performance. Cribl’s LogStream product helps teams implement such an observability pipeline.
In this hands-on technical discussion, the audience will learn how to leverage Cribl LogStream to successfully upgrade from InfluxDB 1.x to InfluxDB 2.x or move to InfluxDB Cloud. Join us as we walk through the pros and cons of workload migration, share architecture best practices, and give a live demo on how to combine Cribl LogStream with the latest version of InfluxDB.
The CNCF point of view on Serverless
Presentation at Serverlessconf NYC on October 11, 2017.
https://nyc.serverlessconf.io/
The CNCF Serverless Working Group - with participation from IBM, AWS, Google, Huawei, Red Hat, VMware and many others - has been working on guidance to help end developers understand serverless computing. relative to other cloud-native deployment options such as container orchestration (for example, Kubernetes) and Platform-as-a-Service (for example, Cloud Foundry and OpenShift). A soon-to-be-published whitepaper aims to educate users about the right workloads for serverless, help them make sense of the landscape of service providers, and recommend open source projects for inclusion in the CNCF. In this lightning talk you'll hear about our work and learn how you can help steer serverless adoption and project support from the CNCF.
Serverless architectures are rapidly gaining interest from developers but it can be hard to understand when a serverless platform makes the most sense for their next application and how long a given provider might be around to support their apps. The CNCF aims to help users learn about serverless and support emerging open source projects that can run, debug, and monitor the next generation of cloud-native applications.
Our advice on building a scalable, resilient infrastructure with KubernetesOVHcloud
Using Vodalys (a specialist in mounting and streaming) as an example, find out how to deploy and orchestrate applications using containers in Kubernetes. The principle behind Kubernetes is to offer you scalability and transparent updates.
How to share a Kubernetes cluster securely through Lens spacesLibbySchulze
The document is about Lens, an open source Kubernetes IDE. It summarizes that Lens allows developers to easily use and manage applications on Kubernetes clusters, improving productivity and return on investment. Lens users can securely share access to their Kubernetes clusters using Lens Spaces. The IDE also features a catalog to access cloud resources and hotbars to build workflows. A demo webinar showcases how to share cluster access and use other Lens features. Contact information is provided to learn more or download Lens.
This document discusses ways to secure Node.js applications that use npm modules. It recommends setting up an npm registry mirror as a fallback in case of outages, caching modules locally and publishing privately, and monitoring for vulnerabilities using tools like npm audit, Snyk, and CVE databases. For production, it suggests using N|Solid to monitor applications for security vulnerabilities both at the top level and within nested dependencies. The overall message is that while npm is widely used, organizations should take steps to cover their applications and ensure the security of the dependencies and modules they use.
The document discusses DevOps principles, goals, advantages, disadvantages and tools. It summarizes that DevOps is a culture that encourages collaboration between development and operations teams to build and maintain software quickly while improving quality and reliability. Traditional processes make modern architectures hard to manage at scale while DevOps aims to remove barriers and bottlenecks through continuous delivery, automation, collaboration and feedback loops.
Microservices 101: From DevOps to Docker and beyondDonnie Berkholz
Containers and microservices are two of the fastest-growing trends in technology, enabled by a modern approach to software development and deployment called DevOps. This talk will delve into the increasingly mainstream trend of DevOps, the Docker and containers ecosystem including current enterprise adoption, and how they combine to form a new style of software architecture dubbed microservices. We'll close by looking at real-world examples of containers and microservices architectures at leading-edge companies.
How microservices are redefining modern application architectureDonnie Berkholz
Slides from a joint webinar with Treasure Data:
This webinar will provide a crash course on microservices, focusing on high-level architectural and strategic concerns. We’ll explore best practices and architectural considerations and show you how to deliver microservices-powered applications today.
This document outlines the agenda for InfluxDays NA 2021, a conference hosted by InfluxData. The agenda includes keynote speeches from the CEO and VP of Products of InfluxData on the future of InfluxDB and its roadmap. Additional sessions will cover topics like using InfluxDB for telehealth, anomaly detection, monitoring with WP Engine, data collection, Flux alerts and notifications. Speakers are from companies like Value Momentum, Socialgist, Ngrok, WP Engine, InfluxData, Fujitsu and Red Hat.
The Coming Disruption to Datacenter StrategiesStuart Miniman
Presentation from Web-scale Wednesday webinar on 6/25/14.
Abstract: The same web-scale companies that drive much of the commerce on the Internet (Google, Yahoo, Facebook, Amazon) are some of the largest consumers of IT in the world. The operational models and many of the technologies that started in the largest data centers are starting to invade mainstream enterprise IT. This session will help unpack how to bridge the knowledge gap between these very different worlds.
Patterns and challenges of cloud native adoptionCheryl Hung
This document summarizes a presentation on patterns and challenges of cloud native adoption. It finds that as cloud native becomes more mainstream, deployments are getting larger, with over 80% of organizations using containers in production and over 75% using Kubernetes. The top benefits of cloud native technologies are faster deployment and improved scalability. However, the top challenges remain cultural changes to more continuous processes, as well as addressing security and complexity. Common tools to help overcome these challenges include Istio for traffic management and Prometheus for monitoring.
How to Use the TICK Stack, CoreOS, & Docker to Make Your SaaS Offering BetterDeborah Schalm
Other than InfluxDB and the open source Tick Stack, InfluxData provides a SaaS version of the TICK Stack, called InfluxCloud, that supports clustering, authentication and other enterprise features not found in the open source TICK Stack. InfluxCloud is designed to be easy to use and reliable for our customers, as they rely on this service to store time series data gathered from sensors, servers, and other devices that is the foundation for their own SLAs for their products and services. This means InfluxCloud requires an even higher standard of service in order to help them maintain their service level commitments.
[Confoo Montreal 2020] Build Your Own Serverless with Knative - Alex GervaisAmbassador Labs
Google Cloud Run’s use of Knative introduced a portable Serverless solution built on top of Kubernetes. In this talk, we’ll recap the basic guidelines, use cases, and benefits of a Serverless architecture. Getting up and started, you will learn to take advantage of containers and the Ambassador API Gateway to serve event-driven application workloads and save costs using your existing Kubernetes resources.
https://confoo.ca/en/yul2020/session/build-your-own-serverless-with-knative
Building with containers: How containers will drive cloud servicesDonnie Berkholz
Docker is one of the fastest-growing technologies to emerge, not just in the past decade, but ever. This hot new containerization software has changed the game for how software will be built and delivered. And yet, it's still early days in terms of how containers will transform the way teams collaborate and businesses ship and support cloud software. In this talk, we will cover:
* How DevOps and containers work together to enable better service delivery.
* What the advent of microservices means for cloud users and providers.
* What users and service providers require to cope with the changes wrought by containers.
This document summarizes Cheryl Hung's presentation on cloud native computing. The presentation covered the Kubernetes community and role of the CNCF in growing it, current architectural trends like serverless computing and service meshes, and new norms for companies engaging in open source like individual contributions over company reputation. It encourages companies to establish open source program offices to guide compliance, outreach and executive support for open source contributions.
CNCF in Japan - Keynote at Open Source Summit JapanCheryl Hung
This document discusses the growth of cloud native computing and Kubernetes in Japan. It provides statistics on CNCF membership and certified Kubernetes professionals globally and in Japan. The key points are:
- CNCF has over 400 members and 18 platinum members supporting cloud native technologies like Kubernetes.
- Interest in Kubernetes is growing significantly based on Google Trends data. There are now over 8,300 people certified in Kubernetes worldwide.
- Kubernetes certification is now available in Japanese, helping to grow adoption in Japan where there are many major companies exploring cloud native technologies.
- Major Kubernetes conferences in 2019 and 2020 are expected to draw over 23,000 attendees, showing increasing interest in cloud native applications and container orchestration.
This document summarizes a presentation about cloud native computing from a community perspective. It discusses the growth of Kubernetes and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) community. It provides statistics on member companies and countries involved in CNCF. It also outlines the CNCF's role in fostering open source cloud native projects and describes some of the services it provides. Finally, it discusses the importance and impact of cloud native technologies, including their role in improving efficiency and reducing carbon emissions.
A Guided Journey of Cloud Native, featuring MonzoCheryl Hung
The document discusses the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) and provides an overview of cloud native concepts. It describes the CNCF's mission to foster open source, vendor-neutral cloud native projects and some of its activities. It then outlines a scale from houses to cities to describe how cloud native practices become more important as software systems increase in complexity and size, from source control and continuous integration for small systems, to high availability, storage and security for large systems with 500+ services. The document promotes upcoming KubeCon + CloudNativeCon conferences in Europe, China and North America.
Cloud Native Trends and 2022 Predictions - Cheryl Hung, 16 June 2022 - Cloud ...Cheryl Hung
1. Why cloud native? The drivers and the challenges of cloud native transformation
2. Industry trends: How cloud native has evolved
3. Cheryl's predictions for 2022
Navigating the Cloud Native Community for End UsersCheryl Hung
This document summarizes Cheryl Hung's presentation on navigating the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) end user community. The CNCF fosters open source cloud native projects and has over 400 members, including end user companies. The end user community helps members navigate the ecosystem, hire engineers with cloud native skills, and align their organizations with cloud native technologies. Members can get involved by becoming an end user supporter or member, attending events like KubeCon, and participating in technical committees. The goal is to ensure end user needs are met within the open source community.
The CNCF is a non-profit organization that oversees cloud native computing projects like Kubernetes. It has over 2.6 million contributions from 56,000 contributors and 400 members including major tech companies. Kubernetes and cloud native technologies are growing rapidly in popularity according to metrics like search trends and conference attendance. The CNCF aims to foster and sustain open source cloud native projects through community support, documentation, security work, and marketing of projects.
Quebec - 16 November 2022 - Canada CNCF Meetups.pdfprune1
This document appears to be notes from a Cloud Native Computing Foundation meetup in Quebec. The meetup featured presentations on topics like Istio Ambient Mesh, GitOps with OCI artifacts and Helm charts, and configuring a laptop for Kubernetes. It also included discussions on using GitOps and establishing a KCD chapter in Quebec. The agenda, speakers, and trends observed at KubeCon North America 2022 were recapped. Plans for upcoming meetups in Toronto, Montreal and Ottawa were announced.
This document discusses infrastructure design for Kubernetes and how Pivotal Container Service (PKS) addresses challenges of managing Kubernetes at scale. It describes user stories of different roles managing containers and highlights issues around frequent updates, scaling clusters, and security patching. PKS is presented as providing a production-grade solution that automates deployment and management of Kubernetes through integration with VMware technologies. It allows for full stack automation and scaling to reduce operations workload from managing multiple Kubernetes releases, OS updates, and cluster upgrades across a large infrastructure.
This document summarizes Cheryl Hung's presentation at Cloud Native London on January 8, 2019. The presentation discussed how Google does operations using the Borg system, the role of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation in fostering open source cloud native projects, and some of the challenges in 2019 for adopting cloud native technologies.
CNCF Jalandhar _ Info Session _ Slide Deck Template.pptxcncfjalandhar
Discover the world of open-source excellence with insights into the Linux Foundation and CNCF, leading the charge in open technology development and cloud-native computing. 🚀
Presented by: Peter Zaitsev
Presented at the All Things Open 2021
Raleigh, NC, USA
Raleigh Convention Center
Abstract: Cloud brought many innovations - one of them is inexpensive, scalable and sometimes secure Distributed Storage options. In this presentation we will talk about distributed storage Options modern clouds offers ranging from elastic block devices and object storage to sophisticated transactional data stores. We will discuss the benefits and new architecture options such distibuted storage systems enable as well as the challenges pitfals you need to be aware about.
Equinix and IDC Webinar - Trends Transforming Digital ConnectivityEquinix
This document discusses trends transforming digital connectivity and interconnection strategies. It summarizes research finding that interconnection bandwidth is expected to outpace internet and MPLS traffic growth. Interconnection enables organizations to more easily work together across networks, financial services, cloud computing, and content/digital media. The document then discusses how Equinix's interconnection services like ECX Fabric can help enterprises securely connect to multiple cloud services either locally or remotely. It also discusses how these services can help enterprises connect their own distributed infrastructure and ensure business continuity. Finally, it discusses how these services provide advantages to service providers by allowing them to access customers, connect to clouds in more metros, and leverage the largest interconnected ecosystem.
This document discusses how Equinix and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure can work together to provide hybrid and multi-cloud solutions for customers. It notes that Equinix provides direct, private connections to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure through FastConnect in six locations globally. Using Equinix's interconnection platform, customers can improve application performance and security while connecting applications and workloads across on-premises, cloud, and edge environments. The document highlights case studies of how interconnection strategies with Equinix have helped enterprises reduce costs, improve user experience, and gain insights from data and analytics applications in hybrid cloud configurations.
Open Source & DevOps Market trends - Open Core SummitIdo Green
This document discusses lessons learned from serving 5000 customers. It highlights that developers and maintainers directly provide support in open source communities, which helps users become contributors. It also outlines metrics for various open source programs run by JFrog, noting billions of downloads and petabytes of data transfer. The main concerns discussed are Kubernetes adoption, cloud native development, hybrid/multi-cloud environments, and security.
VMblog - 2018 Containers Predictions from 16 Industry Expertsvmblog
Find out what's going on in the world of #containers in 2018. Read #predictions from 16 of the industry's leading experts to learn more about Docker, Kubernetes, Microservices and more! Hear from industry thought leaders from companies like Datadog, Hedvig, ManageEngine, Mirantis, Red Hat, SUSE and more. Make sure to also read the more than 280+ other expert predictions from technologies across virtualization, cloud computing, hyperconverged, IoT, security, etc. here: http://bit.ly/2DQi2OT
Présentation de notre webinar du 27 janvier 2022.
Replay disponible sur https://more.suse.com/FY22Q1_FM_EM-SO-FR_SR_CLDNT_WEB_Harvester_Launch_Meetup_FR_RegistrationPage.html
Cloud computing has won and most companies are using more than one public and private clouds. This has created challenges and complexity which are addressed by new technology such as Istio service mesh.
[WSO2 Summit APAC 2020] Automating an Integrated API Supply Chain Using a Clo...WSO2
Cloud-native architectures have evolved over the past decade to meet the demands of adaptive digital platforms. Deployment automation, frequent rollouts, resiliency, and fault tolerance will play a key role in the success of these digital platforms. In this deck, Anupama will discuss the importance of cloud-native architectures and platforms to build effective digital platforms.
Watch the session on-demand here: https://wso2.com/library/summit-2020/apac/automating-an-integrated-api-supply-chain-using-a-cloud-native-architecture/
Similar to 10 predictions for cloud native in 2021 - Fidelity Cloud Cast (20)
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung (oicheryl.com) presents an overview of the current trends in hardware, cloud, and open-source, with thoughts on the most interesting areas of innovation and the impact on infrastructure and business.
Multi-Arch Infra From the Ground Up.pptxCheryl Hung
Webinar: https://www.brighttalk.com/webcast/17792/588393?utm_source=ArmLtd&utm_medium=brighttalk&utm_campaign=588393
Multi-architecture infrastructures enable workloads to run on the best hardware for the task (Arm or x86) and optimize price/performance ratios while boosting design flexibility. However, migrating from a single- to a multi-arch framework can be tricky.
Join me to learn about:
- What is multi-architecture infrastructure?
- The trend for moving cloud workloads to multi-arch
- How early adopters handled the challenges
- The growing software ecosystem of Arm
- Comparing the price-performance of common workloads on x86 vs Arm
- Resources to get you started
This talk prepares developers for the road ahead with the ability to run workloads on the best hardware without needing to be concerned with the underlying architecture.
At a high level, the goal of Multi-Arch infrastructure is that workloads can run on the best hardware for their price/performance needs, without developers being concerned with the underlying architecture. That doesn’t mean it’s easy! Multi-Arch touches Infra As Code, CI/CD, packaging, binaries, images, Kubernetes upgrades, testing, scheduling, rollout, reproducible builds, performance testing and more. This talk looks at how early adopters handled the challenges so you are prepared for the road ahead.
This document summarizes a presentation about Arm and multi-architecture Kubernetes. It discusses the history and trends driving Arm, including sustainability and the end of Moore's law. It outlines the Arm ecosystem and how Arm CPUs provide power efficiency, performance, and customizability. It notes that Arm is now in all major clouds and everywhere. The goal of multi-arch infrastructure is allowing workloads to run on the best hardware without developers considering architecture. Running Kubernetes on Arm provided better performance, lower costs, and significant power savings. The main reasons for using Arm infrastructure are cost savings of 20-40%, and that Arm is crossing the chasm in adoption.
Lessons Learned from 3 years inside CNCFCheryl Hung
Cheryl Hung gave a presentation about her experience working at CNCF over the past 3 years and lessons learned. She discussed trends in connectivity, data growth, and sustainability. Hung provided an overview of Arm's history and ecosystem. She emphasized that Kubernetes works well on Arm architectures and showed benefits like 60% faster jobs, over 1MW of power saved daily, and 50% lower costs when using Arm cloud vs. x86 cloud. Hung is advocating for more use of Arm-based clouds and servers.
Infrastructure matters - The DevOps Conference, CopenhagenCheryl Hung
http://oicheryl.com/
With hyperscale cloud computing, we now have near-infinite computing resources at our fingertips. But data centres emit as much CO2 as the global airline industry, and that will only increase with growing deployment of AI, smart cities, blockchain and other compute-intensive technologies.
Sustainability, GreenOps and Net Zero aren’t faraway concepts - what you build today directly impacts our planet and our future. How do you understand how to use resources most effectively, and will you create infrastructure that matters?
This document discusses the environmental impact of data centers and infrastructure, and sustainability efforts within the cloud native computing foundation. It notes that data centers currently use 2% of the world's electricity and produce as much carbon emissions as the aviation industry. It then outlines goals and projects from the CNCF's Environmental Sustainability TAG, including tools to measure cloud carbon footprints and optimize resource usage. The document encourages considering sustainability in 2023 through measurement, utilizing more efficient infrastructure, and participating in an upcoming sustainability survey.
Data and Storage Ecosystem Opportunities and Need - Cheryl Hung Sodacon2020 k...Cheryl Hung
The document discusses the CNCF End User Technology Radar from November 2020 focused on database storage. It provides an overview of the CNCF End User Community, the methodology for how the radar is created each quarter by a volunteer team, and the results of the November 2020 radar. The key findings were that 1) companies are cautious adopting new technologies, 2) the best database depends on use cases, and 3) an open mind is important when selecting technologies.
10 predictions for the Cloud Native platform and issues in 2021Cheryl Hung
This document discusses many technologies related to cloud native computing and Kubernetes including service mesh, distributed tracing, container runtimes, storage, networking, security, monitoring, logging, orchestration, and more. It also notes that Kubernetes jobs searches grew by over 2000% in the past 4 years and lists 10 technology predictions for cloud native in the coming year. The Cloud Native Computing Foundation community includes over 6000 members and holds monthly meetings.
We're all mad here - The state of cloud native softwareCheryl Hung
This document summarizes Cheryl Hung's presentation on the state of cloud native software. The presentation covered three main topics: 1) containers and Kubernetes have become mainstream and more automation enables more frequent releases, 2) a focus on operations at scale (Day 2), embracing cultural change, and 3) the rise of DevSecOps and that service mesh is still maturing. The presentation encouraged attendees to participate in the CNCF survey, share their cloud native journey as a case study, and register for Kubecon in August.
Kubernetes and containers for non techiesCheryl Hung
K8s and containers have crossed the chasm into mainstream usage. Although we’re probably not yet at “Nobody ever got fired for using containers.”
Often developers are driving adoption, so you need to sell to developers, perhaps via developer advocates.
Cloud native is a moving target, which opens up space for new innovations.
This document discusses why cloud native computing matters and provides three case studies. It begins by explaining how infrastructure is changing with the rise of containerization solutions in the 2010s. It then discusses why people use cloud native technologies because they work well and have a great community behind them. Three case studies are presented where companies moved workloads to cloud native solutions on Kubernetes to increase agility, reduce costs, and improve developer productivity. The document concludes by noting that while technology challenges can be solved, changing organizational culture can be the hardest challenge to address.
K8s & cloud native past, present and futureCheryl Hung
The document summarizes a talk given by Cheryl Hung on Kubernetes and cloud native technologies. It discusses how the Kubernetes community has grown significantly since its inception, with increasing diversity in companies and countries contributing. It outlines some of the projects incubated and graduated by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation. It also notes that while adoption of technologies like service meshes and serverless functions is increasing in production, cloud native storage options remain mostly in evaluation. Cultural changes for development teams and complexity remain top challenges for many organizations.
K8s & cloud native past, present and futureCheryl Hung
The document summarizes a talk given by Cheryl Hung on Kubernetes and cloud native technologies. It discusses how the Kubernetes community has grown significantly since its inception, with increasing diversity in companies and countries contributing. It outlines some of the projects incubated by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) and how CNCF provides support. It also notes that while adoption of technologies like service meshes and autoscaling is increasing in production, cloud native storage options remain in evaluation for many. Managing complexity, cultural changes, security and lack of training were cited as ongoing challenges.
Cheryl hung kube-con keynote - 19 november 2019Cheryl Hung
The document summarizes updates from Cheryl Hung, Director of Ecosystem at CNCF, including that there are now 129 members in the CNCF End User Community and over 500 total CNCF members. It also notes that there are now 102 Certified Kubernetes Partners and $200k in cloud credits available for CNCF projects. Finally, it provides information on new platinum and gold members that have joined CNCF.
End user partner summit. san diego, nov 18 2019.pptxCheryl Hung
This document contains information from Cheryl Hung's presentation at the CNCF End User Partner Summit on November 18, 2019. It includes the WiFi network name and password for the summit, an overview of the CNCF End User Community and Technical Advisory Board roles, the agenda for the summit with topics around Kubernetes testing, API management, distributed storage, and tooling, and details for an end user lunch and social event following the summit sessions.
The document discusses the history and growth of Kubernetes and the CNCF. It notes that Kubernetes was defined early on as both a project and community. It also shows graphs of increasing commits to Kubernetes code over time and growing membership in the CNCF. The document outlines the stages projects go through in the CNCF, from incubating to graduated, and lists examples of projects in each stage. It describes the role of the CNCF Technical Oversight Committee in representing the community, sponsoring and voting on projects to join CNCF, and maintaining a list of projects. It provides guidance for projects seeking to join CNCF on demonstrating relevance, adoption, and a healthy community.
This document discusses cloud native computing and open source. It provides an overview of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), including that it has over 450 members and oversees 21 graduated projects and 21 projects in its sandbox. It notes that Kubernetes is unique as both a project and community in open source. It highlights data on the growing diversity and international nature of CNCF contributors and attendees. It also briefly mentions benefits of open source such as it being the default and its importance for technology jobs.
The document discusses Kubernetes and its evolution as both an open source project and community. It started as a project defined to have both a codebase and community from the beginning. As it grew, it graduated from Google to the CNCF in 2015 and became a highly active project with many contributors and commits. It is now rare in being both a large, successful open source project as well as a defined community.
Maruthi Prithivirajan, Head of ASEAN & IN Solution Architecture, Neo4j
Get an inside look at the latest Neo4j innovations that enable relationship-driven intelligence at scale. Learn more about the newest cloud integrations and product enhancements that make Neo4j an essential choice for developers building apps with interconnected data and generative AI.
Observability Concepts EVERY Developer Should Know -- DeveloperWeek Europe.pdfPaige Cruz
Monitoring and observability aren’t traditionally found in software curriculums and many of us cobble this knowledge together from whatever vendor or ecosystem we were first introduced to and whatever is a part of your current company’s observability stack.
While the dev and ops silo continues to crumble….many organizations still relegate monitoring & observability as the purview of ops, infra and SRE teams. This is a mistake - achieving a highly observable system requires collaboration up and down the stack.
I, a former op, would like to extend an invitation to all application developers to join the observability party will share these foundational concepts to build on:
Dr. Sean Tan, Head of Data Science, Changi Airport Group
Discover how Changi Airport Group (CAG) leverages graph technologies and generative AI to revolutionize their search capabilities. This session delves into the unique search needs of CAG’s diverse passengers and customers, showcasing how graph data structures enhance the accuracy and relevance of AI-generated search results, mitigating the risk of “hallucinations” and improving the overall customer journey.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
In his public lecture, Christian Timmerer provides insights into the fascinating history of video streaming, starting from its humble beginnings before YouTube to the groundbreaking technologies that now dominate platforms like Netflix and ORF ON. Timmerer also presents provocative contributions of his own that have significantly influenced the industry. He concludes by looking at future challenges and invites the audience to join in a discussion.
Let's Integrate MuleSoft RPA, COMPOSER, APM with AWS IDP along with Slackshyamraj55
Discover the seamless integration of RPA (Robotic Process Automation), COMPOSER, and APM with AWS IDP enhanced with Slack notifications. Explore how these technologies converge to streamline workflows, optimize performance, and ensure secure access, all while leveraging the power of AWS IDP and real-time communication via Slack notifications.
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/building-and-scaling-ai-applications-with-the-nx-ai-manager-a-presentation-from-network-optix/
Robin van Emden, Senior Director of Data Science at Network Optix, presents the “Building and Scaling AI Applications with the Nx AI Manager,” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
In this presentation, van Emden covers the basics of scaling edge AI solutions using the Nx tool kit. He emphasizes the process of developing AI models and deploying them globally. He also showcases the conversion of AI models and the creation of effective edge AI pipelines, with a focus on pre-processing, model conversion, selecting the appropriate inference engine for the target hardware and post-processing.
van Emden shows how Nx can simplify the developer’s life and facilitate a rapid transition from concept to production-ready applications.He provides valuable insights into developing scalable and efficient edge AI solutions, with a strong focus on practical implementation.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
Sudheer Mechineni, Head of Application Frameworks, Standard Chartered Bank
Discover how Standard Chartered Bank harnessed the power of Neo4j to transform complex data access challenges into a dynamic, scalable graph database solution. This keynote will cover their journey from initial adoption to deploying a fully automated, enterprise-grade causal cluster, highlighting key strategies for modelling organisational changes and ensuring robust disaster recovery. Learn how these innovations have not only enhanced Standard Chartered Bank’s data infrastructure but also positioned them as pioneers in the banking sector’s adoption of graph technology.
How to Get CNIC Information System with Paksim Ga.pptxdanishmna97
Pakdata Cf is a groundbreaking system designed to streamline and facilitate access to CNIC information. This innovative platform leverages advanced technology to provide users with efficient and secure access to their CNIC details.
A tale of scale & speed: How the US Navy is enabling software delivery from l...sonjaschweigert1
Rapid and secure feature delivery is a goal across every application team and every branch of the DoD. The Navy’s DevSecOps platform, Party Barge, has achieved:
- Reduction in onboarding time from 5 weeks to 1 day
- Improved developer experience and productivity through actionable findings and reduction of false positives
- Maintenance of superior security standards and inherent policy enforcement with Authorization to Operate (ATO)
Development teams can ship efficiently and ensure applications are cyber ready for Navy Authorizing Officials (AOs). In this webinar, Sigma Defense and Anchore will give attendees a look behind the scenes and demo secure pipeline automation and security artifacts that speed up application ATO and time to production.
We will cover:
- How to remove silos in DevSecOps
- How to build efficient development pipeline roles and component templates
- How to deliver security artifacts that matter for ATO’s (SBOMs, vulnerability reports, and policy evidence)
- How to streamline operations with automated policy checks on container images
Climate Impact of Software Testing at Nordic Testing DaysKari Kakkonen
My slides at Nordic Testing Days 6.6.2024
Climate impact / sustainability of software testing discussed on the talk. ICT and testing must carry their part of global responsibility to help with the climat warming. We can minimize the carbon footprint but we can also have a carbon handprint, a positive impact on the climate. Quality characteristics can be added with sustainability, and then measured continuously. Test environments can be used less, and in smaller scale and on demand. Test techniques can be used in optimizing or minimizing number of tests. Test automation can be used to speed up testing.
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.