This document discusses the concept of DevOps from multiple perspectives. It provides definitions and viewpoints on DevOps from several experts in the field. Key points made include that DevOps is a cultural and professional movement focused on collaboration between development and operations teams. It is not about any single tool or technology, but rather the collaborative culture and processes that arise from that culture. DevOps aims to break down silos between dev and ops.
10+ Deploys Per Day: Dev and Ops Cooperation at FlickrJohn Allspaw
Communications and cooperation between development and operations isn't optional, it's mandatory. Flickr takes the idea of "release early, release often" to an extreme - on a normal day there are 10 full deployments of the site to our servers. This session discusses why this rate of change works so well, and the culture and technology needed to make it possible.
10+ Deploys Per Day: Dev and Ops Cooperation at FlickrJohn Allspaw
Communications and cooperation between development and operations isn't optional, it's mandatory. Flickr takes the idea of "release early, release often" to an extreme - on a normal day there are 10 full deployments of the site to our servers. This session discusses why this rate of change works so well, and the culture and technology needed to make it possible.
The Web moves fast, really fast. No one talks about what version of a web site you are using. Maybe you are using the beta version. Even then, it is always new. The Web is obsessed with new. It thrives on new. To meet this demand, in the early years of the web, teams learned a new way to deploy their software. Rather than the traditional models used by compiled, installed software, these pioneers on the Internet deployed software when it was ready. That meant Web sites could be responsive to changes, fix bugs quickly, and add new features to compete with the market. This method is still alive today. Successful web companies still do this to keep their advantage. While there are no set rules, there are good examples of what others do and how it helps them be successful.
Everything You Know is Not Quite Right Anymore: Rethinking Best Practices to ...Dave Olsen
We’re entering a new era where an increasing number of devices with wildly divergent features -- including phones, tablets, game consoles, and TVs -- are connected to the Internet. As the way people access the Internet changes, there is an urgent need to rethink how we use the web to communicate. This doesn't mean creating separate solutions for each device but rather preparing our existing content to meet this increasingly unpredictable future. Dave Olsen and Doug Gapinski will share and examine examples that show how responsive design will help institutions rethink and adjust for the future-friendly web.
Primary topics that are covered are: understanding the reality of web development today, example RWD design patterns, and understanding how to test and optimize the performance of your RWD website.
Recipes for Continuous Delivery (ThoughtWorks Geeknight)Gurpreet Luthra
In this presentation, I cover techniques and best practices for CD. The idea is to explain the rationale behind CI, Branching, Feature Branches, Trunk Based Development, Feature Toggles, and related techniques that aid in faster delivery.
Special Thanks to Luminaries like Martin Fowler, Paul Hammant, Jez Humble, Pete Hodgson and many ThoughtWorkers for their material. I have mentioned links to them on respective slides.
I presented this at ThoughtWorks Pune Geek Night on 8/Feb/2018.
Joshua Kerievsky's 2016 keynote speech at Agile2016. Speech abstract follows...
----
Over the past decade, innovative companies, software industry thought leaders and lean/agile pioneers have discovered simpler, sturdier, and more streamlined ways to be agile. While there is timeless wisdom in agile, today's practitioners would do well to bypass outmoded agile practices in favor of modern approaches.
Modern agile methods are defined by four guiding principles
• Make people awesome
• Make safety a prerequisite
• Experience & learn rapidly
• Deliver value continuously
World famous organizations like Google, Amazon, Air BnB, Etsy and others are living proof of the powers of these four principles. However, you don't need to be a name brand company to leverage modern agile wisdom.
In this talk, Josh will explain what he means by modern agility, share real-world modern agile stories, show how modern agile addresses key risks while targeting results over rituals, and reveal how the 2001 agile manifesto can be updated to reflect modern agile's four guiding principles.
Patterns and antipatterns in Docker image lifecycle as was presented at Scale...Baruch Sadogursky
While Docker has enabled an unprecedented velocity of software production, it is all too easy to spin out of control. A promotion-based model is required to control and track the flow of Docker images as much as it is required for a traditional software development lifecycle. New tools often introduce new paradigms. We will examine the patterns and the antipatterns for Docker image management, and what impact the new tools have on the battle-proven paradigms of the software development lifecycle.
Presented at STPcon 2011 on leveraging your automated tests by putting them under CI. Covers value proposition of CI, challenges to implement, and ideas for scaling.
Slides from the Softwerkskammer Chemnitz meetup on Tuesday, 14th of September on
- chaos engineering
- software resilience
- resilience patterns
- execution of chaos experiments
- creation of chaos backlog
- finding weaknesses in your service landscape
- dark debt
- grey failure
We will go over the motivations for wix.com R&D to move to a CI/CD/TDD model, how the model was implemented and the impact on Wix R&D. We will cover the tools used (developed in-house and 3rd party), change in methodologies, what we have learned during the transformation and the unexpected change in working with product and the rest of the company.
Presented in the Continuous Delivery track at DevOps Con Israel 2013
Has it really been 10 years?
EclipseCon Europe, November 3, 2011
John Kellerman and Kim Moir
Live recording is available on FOSSLC
http://www.fosslc.org/drupal/content/has-it-really-been-10-years
HTML5 and CSS3 offer some great features that everyone is clamoring to use. However, not everyone can simply rip apart their site and redo all of their markup and styling across the board. There are some quick wins, especially with CSS3, to be had that you can integrate into your site without rewriting your whole entire site.
Automating Oracle Database deployment with Amazon Web Services, fabric, and botomjbommar
Have credit card, need database? In this talk, I'll show you how to deploy your own Oracle 11gR2 sandbox with a single keystroke (and I don't mean RDS). Along the way, we'll learn about Infrastructure-as-a-Service with boto, provisioning tools like fabric, and Oracle response files. When we're done, we'll have a repeatable, ten-minute process that can deliver a server as cheap as $5/day or as powerful as 40k IOPS and 2.6GB/s throughput. More importantly, we'll understand what the big deal about IaaS and automated provisioning really is, and how enterprise products like Oracle can still fit comfortably in the space.
“Serverless” can be defined as a couple simple things: 1 - It’s a programming model for structuring applications as functions and events (basically a manifestation of microservices). 2 - It’s a cloud business model, where use is billed by the function call instead of by the provisioned server, so apps only pay when they run and for how long they run, eliminating over-provisioning and typically reducing costs.
In this talk, we’ll cover the what, why and how of serverless, and learn more about it through running code.
Throughout the session, we’ll focus on how the serverless model is being leveraged in the real world - not just toy functions and demos. Legacy enterprise apps - which are typically monolithic, written by large teams of Java and .Net devs, and resembling a bit of a mud ball - are being shaved down to take advantage of serverless, and we’ll be sharing some early results from those efforts. We'll discuss examples of how Fortune 50 companies are building their serverless projects on the Kubernetes and Mesos clouds they have already deployed.
Le terme “Serverless” a plusieurs significations: 1 - un modèle de programmation pour structurer les applications en tant que fonctions et événements (essentiellement une manifestation de microservices); et 2 - Il s'agit d'un modèle d'entreprise Cloud, où l'utilisation est facturée par l'appel de fonction plutôt que par le serveur provisionné, de sorte que les applications ne paient que lorsqu'elles fonctionnent et pour combien de temps elles courent, éliminant le sur-provisionnement et réduisant les coûts associés.
Dans ce discours, nous allons couvrir le quoi, le pourquoi et comment de Serverless, et en savoir plus à ce sujet en exécutant le code. Nous nous concentrerons sur la façon dont le modèle Serverless est utilisé dans le monde réel - pas seulement les fonctions et démos. Les applications d'entreprise héritées - qui sont généralement monolithiques, écrites par de grandes équipes de développeurs Java et .Net et ressemblant à un peu une grande boule de boue - sont rasées pour profiter de Serverless, et nous partagerons des résultats préliminaires de ces efforts.
The Web moves fast, really fast. No one talks about what version of a web site you are using. Maybe you are using the beta version. Even then, it is always new. The Web is obsessed with new. It thrives on new. To meet this demand, in the early years of the web, teams learned a new way to deploy their software. Rather than the traditional models used by compiled, installed software, these pioneers on the Internet deployed software when it was ready. That meant Web sites could be responsive to changes, fix bugs quickly, and add new features to compete with the market. This method is still alive today. Successful web companies still do this to keep their advantage. While there are no set rules, there are good examples of what others do and how it helps them be successful.
Everything You Know is Not Quite Right Anymore: Rethinking Best Practices to ...Dave Olsen
We’re entering a new era where an increasing number of devices with wildly divergent features -- including phones, tablets, game consoles, and TVs -- are connected to the Internet. As the way people access the Internet changes, there is an urgent need to rethink how we use the web to communicate. This doesn't mean creating separate solutions for each device but rather preparing our existing content to meet this increasingly unpredictable future. Dave Olsen and Doug Gapinski will share and examine examples that show how responsive design will help institutions rethink and adjust for the future-friendly web.
Primary topics that are covered are: understanding the reality of web development today, example RWD design patterns, and understanding how to test and optimize the performance of your RWD website.
Recipes for Continuous Delivery (ThoughtWorks Geeknight)Gurpreet Luthra
In this presentation, I cover techniques and best practices for CD. The idea is to explain the rationale behind CI, Branching, Feature Branches, Trunk Based Development, Feature Toggles, and related techniques that aid in faster delivery.
Special Thanks to Luminaries like Martin Fowler, Paul Hammant, Jez Humble, Pete Hodgson and many ThoughtWorkers for their material. I have mentioned links to them on respective slides.
I presented this at ThoughtWorks Pune Geek Night on 8/Feb/2018.
Joshua Kerievsky's 2016 keynote speech at Agile2016. Speech abstract follows...
----
Over the past decade, innovative companies, software industry thought leaders and lean/agile pioneers have discovered simpler, sturdier, and more streamlined ways to be agile. While there is timeless wisdom in agile, today's practitioners would do well to bypass outmoded agile practices in favor of modern approaches.
Modern agile methods are defined by four guiding principles
• Make people awesome
• Make safety a prerequisite
• Experience & learn rapidly
• Deliver value continuously
World famous organizations like Google, Amazon, Air BnB, Etsy and others are living proof of the powers of these four principles. However, you don't need to be a name brand company to leverage modern agile wisdom.
In this talk, Josh will explain what he means by modern agility, share real-world modern agile stories, show how modern agile addresses key risks while targeting results over rituals, and reveal how the 2001 agile manifesto can be updated to reflect modern agile's four guiding principles.
Patterns and antipatterns in Docker image lifecycle as was presented at Scale...Baruch Sadogursky
While Docker has enabled an unprecedented velocity of software production, it is all too easy to spin out of control. A promotion-based model is required to control and track the flow of Docker images as much as it is required for a traditional software development lifecycle. New tools often introduce new paradigms. We will examine the patterns and the antipatterns for Docker image management, and what impact the new tools have on the battle-proven paradigms of the software development lifecycle.
Presented at STPcon 2011 on leveraging your automated tests by putting them under CI. Covers value proposition of CI, challenges to implement, and ideas for scaling.
Slides from the Softwerkskammer Chemnitz meetup on Tuesday, 14th of September on
- chaos engineering
- software resilience
- resilience patterns
- execution of chaos experiments
- creation of chaos backlog
- finding weaknesses in your service landscape
- dark debt
- grey failure
We will go over the motivations for wix.com R&D to move to a CI/CD/TDD model, how the model was implemented and the impact on Wix R&D. We will cover the tools used (developed in-house and 3rd party), change in methodologies, what we have learned during the transformation and the unexpected change in working with product and the rest of the company.
Presented in the Continuous Delivery track at DevOps Con Israel 2013
Has it really been 10 years?
EclipseCon Europe, November 3, 2011
John Kellerman and Kim Moir
Live recording is available on FOSSLC
http://www.fosslc.org/drupal/content/has-it-really-been-10-years
HTML5 and CSS3 offer some great features that everyone is clamoring to use. However, not everyone can simply rip apart their site and redo all of their markup and styling across the board. There are some quick wins, especially with CSS3, to be had that you can integrate into your site without rewriting your whole entire site.
Automating Oracle Database deployment with Amazon Web Services, fabric, and botomjbommar
Have credit card, need database? In this talk, I'll show you how to deploy your own Oracle 11gR2 sandbox with a single keystroke (and I don't mean RDS). Along the way, we'll learn about Infrastructure-as-a-Service with boto, provisioning tools like fabric, and Oracle response files. When we're done, we'll have a repeatable, ten-minute process that can deliver a server as cheap as $5/day or as powerful as 40k IOPS and 2.6GB/s throughput. More importantly, we'll understand what the big deal about IaaS and automated provisioning really is, and how enterprise products like Oracle can still fit comfortably in the space.
“Serverless” can be defined as a couple simple things: 1 - It’s a programming model for structuring applications as functions and events (basically a manifestation of microservices). 2 - It’s a cloud business model, where use is billed by the function call instead of by the provisioned server, so apps only pay when they run and for how long they run, eliminating over-provisioning and typically reducing costs.
In this talk, we’ll cover the what, why and how of serverless, and learn more about it through running code.
Throughout the session, we’ll focus on how the serverless model is being leveraged in the real world - not just toy functions and demos. Legacy enterprise apps - which are typically monolithic, written by large teams of Java and .Net devs, and resembling a bit of a mud ball - are being shaved down to take advantage of serverless, and we’ll be sharing some early results from those efforts. We'll discuss examples of how Fortune 50 companies are building their serverless projects on the Kubernetes and Mesos clouds they have already deployed.
Le terme “Serverless” a plusieurs significations: 1 - un modèle de programmation pour structurer les applications en tant que fonctions et événements (essentiellement une manifestation de microservices); et 2 - Il s'agit d'un modèle d'entreprise Cloud, où l'utilisation est facturée par l'appel de fonction plutôt que par le serveur provisionné, de sorte que les applications ne paient que lorsqu'elles fonctionnent et pour combien de temps elles courent, éliminant le sur-provisionnement et réduisant les coûts associés.
Dans ce discours, nous allons couvrir le quoi, le pourquoi et comment de Serverless, et en savoir plus à ce sujet en exécutant le code. Nous nous concentrerons sur la façon dont le modèle Serverless est utilisé dans le monde réel - pas seulement les fonctions et démos. Les applications d'entreprise héritées - qui sont généralement monolithiques, écrites par de grandes équipes de développeurs Java et .Net et ressemblant à un peu une grande boule de boue - sont rasées pour profiter de Serverless, et nous partagerons des résultats préliminaires de ces efforts.
Spring Boot - Microservice Metrics MonitoringDonghuKIM2
마이크로서비스 아키텍쳐에서의 분산된 서비스간의 모니터링 방법을 소개합니다.
- Microservice Monitoring with Service Discovery (Eureka) Spring Boot Admin
- Microservice Monitoring with Service Discovery (Consul), Prometheus, Grafana
Electric Microservices Land - Tsuyoshi UshioDevDay.org
The basic concept of Microservies, the architecture of Microservices frameworks, including Mesosphere with Docker and Microsoft Service Fabric, and then some demos, discussion time to share ideas and experiences.
What is Devops ? What is the story behind it ? Who created it ? Why was it even created ? What are the key principles and practices related to devops ? This presentation attempts to answer all of those questions.
Infrastructure as Microservices - OReillySACon London 2016Kief Morris
Many teams adopting Infrastructure as Code end up with monolithic infrastructure. But many of the principles for microservices software architecture apply just as well to infrastructure: small, focused capabilities that can be delivered independently. This talk explores how team structures and microservices principles apply to infrastructure, and describes some patterns and anti-patterns. These are applicable whatever tools are used, whether it's Terraform, CloudFormation, Puppet, Chef, Ansible, or others. It also applies to all infrastructure platforms, whether it's an IaaS cloud like AWS or OpenStack, a virtualized platform, or even physical hardware.
Scaling Gilt: from Monolithic Ruby Application to Distributed Scala Micro-Ser...C4Media
Video and slides synchronized, mp3 and slide download available at URL http://bit.ly/10fVilQ.
Yoni Goldberg describes some of the technological innovations that have helped Gilt to reach its current size, and highlight some of the core challenges that the company's engineering team continues to face. He also discusses what every tech team needs to consider and address before heading down the path of building a first-class micro-services architecture. Filmed at qconnewyork.com.
Since joining Gilt at 2010 as a platform engineer, Yoni Goldberg has been leading a variety of personalization efforts and other customer-facing initiatives--including the Gilt Insider loyalty program, the post-purchase experience, and SEO/optimization efforts. Prior to joining Gilt, Yoni worked at Google, where he wrote his master's thesis on Fusion Tables.
muCon 2019: "Creating an Effective Developer Experience for Cloud-Native Apps"Daniel Bryant
Many organizations are embracing cloud-native technologies, such as microservices, containers, and Kubernetes, but are struggling to adapt their developer experience (DevEx or DX) and continuous delivery processes. Failure to adapt leads to longer lead times for delivery, frustration for developers, and stability issues in production. Architects and technical leaders need to drive this change.
The developer experience with modern cloud-native technologies is very different than the classic enterprise experience of the 1990s or even the early cloud experiences of the 2000s. For example, it’s often no longer possible to spin up an entire application or system on local hardware, and the extra layers of abstract of containers and VMs make debugging and observing systems more challenging.
Daniel Bryant explores the core concepts of the cloud-native developer experience, introduces and compares several useful tools, and shares lessons learned from the trenches.
Cloud-powered Continuous Integration and Deployment architectures - Jinesh VariaAmazon Web Services
The presentation will discuss some architectural patterns in continuous integration, deployment and optimization and I will share some of the lessons learned from Amazon.com.
The goal of the presentation is to convince you that if you invest your time where you get the maximum learning from your customers, automate everything else in the cloud (CI + CD + CO), you get fast feedback and will be able to release early, release often and recover quickly from your mistakes. Dynamism of the cloud allows you to increase the speed of your iteration and reduce the cost of mistakes so you can continuously innovate while keeping your cost down.
SOA Knowledge Kit, Developer Productivity and Performance Comparison AnalysisClever Moe
Frank Cohen's presentation at the Gartner Application Architecture Development and Integration (AADI) conference 2011. Covers results of an open source comparison of SOA stacks from Oracle, IBM, and TIBCO. Compares developer productivity and performance of the same use case implemented on each stack.
The presentation was made at the first Serverless Pune meetup on 4th Feb 2017 https://www.meetup.com/Serverless-Pune
In the first Meetup, we covered most of the basics & a simple demos. Upcoming meetups will dive deeper into technical implementation and various real world use cases
microXchg 2019: "Creating an Effective Developer Experience for Cloud-Native ...Daniel Bryant
In a productive cloud native development workflow, individual teams can build and ship (micro)services independently from each other. But with a rapidly evolving cloud native landscape, creating an effective developer workflow using a platform based on something like Kubernetes can be challenging.
We are all creating software to support the delivery of value to our customers and to the business, and therefore, the developer experience from idea generation to running (and observing) in production must be fast, reliable, and provide good feedback.
During this talk Daniel will share with you several lessons learned from real world consulting experience working with teams deploying to Kubernetes.
Key takeaways include:
- Why an efficient development workflow is so important
- A series of questions to ask in order to understand if you should attempt to build a PaaS on top of Kubernetes (everyone needs a platform, but how much should be built versus integrated versus bought?)
- A brief overview of developer experience tooling for Kubernetes, and how this domain could evolve in the future
- The role of Kubernetes, Envoy, Prometheus, and other popular cloud-native tools in your workflow
- Key considerations in implementing a cloud-native workflow
Slack (or Teams) Automation for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Soluti...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on the notifications, alerts, and approval requests using Slack for Bonterra Impact Management. The solutions covered in this webinar can also be deployed for Microsoft Teams.
Interested in deploying notification automations for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Elevating Tactical DDD Patterns Through Object CalisthenicsDorra BARTAGUIZ
After immersing yourself in the blue book and its red counterpart, attending DDD-focused conferences, and applying tactical patterns, you're left with a crucial question: How do I ensure my design is effective? Tactical patterns within Domain-Driven Design (DDD) serve as guiding principles for creating clear and manageable domain models. However, achieving success with these patterns requires additional guidance. Interestingly, we've observed that a set of constraints initially designed for training purposes remarkably aligns with effective pattern implementation, offering a more ‘mechanical’ approach. Let's explore together how Object Calisthenics can elevate the design of your tactical DDD patterns, offering concrete help for those venturing into DDD for the first time!
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
6. It's not abstraction.
It's not even "infrastructure as code".
It's not any single tool.
It's not about provisioning.
It's not about deployment.
It's not about a job description or position.
7. It's also not about the cloud, except for
the part where deployment and
provisioning of infrastructure gets easier
to understand for groups of people who
historically wouldn't have touched that
part of the business.
8. It *is* about the collaborative and
communicative culture and the tools and
process that arise from that culture.
Nothing more.
John Allspaw
VP of Technical Operations at Etsy
http://www.rationalsurvivability.com/blog/?p=1890#IDComment158037001
22. 2009/06/23
Velocity 2009
John Allspaw and Paul Hammond (*Flickr)
10+ Deploys Per Day: Dev and Ops Cooperation at Flickr
*at that time
23. Spock Scotty
Little bit weird Pulls levers & turns knobs
Sits closer to the boss Easily excited
Thinks too hard Yells a lot in emergencies
http://www.slideshare.net/jallspaw/10-deploys-per-day-dev-and-ops-cooperation-at-flickr
30. 2009/08/27
Agile Infrastructure
2009/06/24
velocity 2009
Agile Infrastructure
AGILE INFRASTRUCTURE
A Story in Three Acts
Velocity 2009
ANDREW SHAFER - PAUL NASRAT
Andrew Shafer
http://www.slideshare.net/littleidea/agile-infrastructure-agile-2009
31. The End of
Shrink Wrap
The infrastructure is
the application.
The application is the
infrastructure.
http://www.slideshare.net/littleidea/agile-infrastructure-velocity-09
33. DON’T NEED ANOTHER HERO...
http://www.slideshare.net/littleidea/agile-infrastructure-agile-2009
34. WHAT IS
AGILE?
PLANNING ENGINEERING
CIRCLE OF HAPPINESS
DEVELOPERS EXECUTIVES
SYSTEM ADMINISTRATORS
PRODUCT
OWNERS DATABASE ADMINISTRATORS
NETWORK ENGINEERS
TESTERS
DESIGNERS
USABILITY EXPERTS
http://www.slideshare.net/littleidea/agile-infrastructure-agile-2009