CraigsList Nonprofit Bootcamp - Mobile Voter - Extraordinaries Presentationbenrigby
These are the slides from the presentation that Ben Rigby and Jacob Colker gave in the Craigslist Bootcamp session today called "Mobilizing Generation 2.0" - how to use the web to engage young people in civic life, nonprofits, and politics.
CraigsList Nonprofit Bootcamp - Mobile Voter - Extraordinaries Presentationbenrigby
These are the slides from the presentation that Ben Rigby and Jacob Colker gave in the Craigslist Bootcamp session today called "Mobilizing Generation 2.0" - how to use the web to engage young people in civic life, nonprofits, and politics.
Docker is the developer-friendly container technology that enables creation of your application stack: OS, JVM, app server, app, database and all your custom configuration. So you are a Java developer but how comfortable are you and your team taking Docker from development to production? Are you hearing developers say, “But it works on my machine!” when code breaks in production? And if you are, how many hours are then spent standing up an accurate test environment to research and fix the bug that caused the problem?
This workshop/session explains how to package, deploy, and scale Java applications using Docker.
Building Distributed Systems without Docker, Using Docker Plumbing Projects -...Patrick Chanezon
Docker provides an integrated and opinionated toolset to build, ship and run distributed applications. Over the past year, the Docker codebase has been refactored extensively to extract infrastructure plumbing components that can be used independently, following the UNIX philosophy of small tools doing one thing well: runC, containerd, swarmkit, hyperkit, vpnkit, datakit and the newly introduced InfraKit.
This talk will give an overview of these tools and how you can use them to build your own distributed systems without Docker.
Patrick Chanezon & David Chung, Docker & Phil Estes, IBM
Oscon London 2016 - Docker from Development to ProductionPatrick Chanezon
Docker revolutionized how developers and operations teams build, ship, and run applications, enabling them to leverage the latest advancements in software development: the microservice architecture style, the immutable infrastructure deployment style, and the DevOps cultural model.
Existing software layers are not a great fit to leverage these trends. Infrastructure as a service is too low level; platform as a service is too high level; but containers as a service (CaaS) is just right. Container images are just the right level of abstraction for DevOps, allowing developers to specify all their dependencies at build time, building and testing an artifact that, when ready to ship, is the exact thing that will run in production. CaaS gives ops teams the tools to control how to run these workloads securely and efficiently, providing portability between different cloud providers and on-premises deployments.
Patrick Chanezon offers a detailed overview of the latest evolutions to the Docker ecosystem enabling CaaS: standards (OCI, CNCF), infrastructure (runC, containerd, Notary), platform (Docker, Swarm), and services (Docker Cloud, Docker Datacenter). Patrick ends with a demo showing how to do in-container development of a Spring Boot application on a Mac running a preconfigured IDE in a container, provision a highly available Swarm cluster using Docker Datacenter on a cloud provider, and leverage the latest Docker tools to build, ship, and run a polyglot application architected as a set of microservices—including how to set up load balancing.
Docker is the developer-friendly container technology that enables creation of your application stack: OS, JVM, app server, app, database and all your custom configuration. So you are a Java developer but how comfortable are you and your team taking Docker from development to production? Are you hearing developers say, “But it works on my machine!” when code breaks in production? And if you are, how many hours are then spent standing up an accurate test environment to research and fix the bug that caused the problem?
This workshop/session explains how to package, deploy, and scale Java applications using Docker.
Building Distributed Systems without Docker, Using Docker Plumbing Projects -...Patrick Chanezon
Docker provides an integrated and opinionated toolset to build, ship and run distributed applications. Over the past year, the Docker codebase has been refactored extensively to extract infrastructure plumbing components that can be used independently, following the UNIX philosophy of small tools doing one thing well: runC, containerd, swarmkit, hyperkit, vpnkit, datakit and the newly introduced InfraKit.
This talk will give an overview of these tools and how you can use them to build your own distributed systems without Docker.
Patrick Chanezon & David Chung, Docker & Phil Estes, IBM
Oscon London 2016 - Docker from Development to ProductionPatrick Chanezon
Docker revolutionized how developers and operations teams build, ship, and run applications, enabling them to leverage the latest advancements in software development: the microservice architecture style, the immutable infrastructure deployment style, and the DevOps cultural model.
Existing software layers are not a great fit to leverage these trends. Infrastructure as a service is too low level; platform as a service is too high level; but containers as a service (CaaS) is just right. Container images are just the right level of abstraction for DevOps, allowing developers to specify all their dependencies at build time, building and testing an artifact that, when ready to ship, is the exact thing that will run in production. CaaS gives ops teams the tools to control how to run these workloads securely and efficiently, providing portability between different cloud providers and on-premises deployments.
Patrick Chanezon offers a detailed overview of the latest evolutions to the Docker ecosystem enabling CaaS: standards (OCI, CNCF), infrastructure (runC, containerd, Notary), platform (Docker, Swarm), and services (Docker Cloud, Docker Datacenter). Patrick ends with a demo showing how to do in-container development of a Spring Boot application on a Mac running a preconfigured IDE in a container, provision a highly available Swarm cluster using Docker Datacenter on a cloud provider, and leverage the latest Docker tools to build, ship, and run a polyglot application architected as a set of microservices—including how to set up load balancing.
2. clientul este singurul responsabil şi nu poate incrimina vendorul dacă produsul/serviciul achiziţionat nu îi confirmă aşteptările Vendor 2. consumatorul neinformat, care ar putea prelua, nefiltrat, neînduplecarea parodiatorilor Parodiator
4. Filosofia unicei folosinţe „a simple and fulfilling life” vs. Imperiul Cantităţii Boomvs.doom civilizaţionişti vs. neomaltusieni
5. „Nu se poate spune că nu ne-am împotrivit.” colonizarea excesivă a spaţiilor (hype) => resemnificare - retușare persiflatoare (minor détournements) - disonanţă cognitivă (deceptive détournements) -mises-en-scène
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7. JamCon ’84, Negativland tactici DIY principiul aikido-ist (valorizare forță adversar) „Nu te lasă folosit de oraș. Folosește tu orașul!”