Ed Burns brings his seventeen years of server side Java experience to bear on the topic of Enterprise Java on Microsoft Azure. Before the advent of cloud infrastructure, the stack was the main thing. This gave rise to many entertaining platform wars, and even personality feuds among the principals. Spring or J2EE? Spring MVC or JSF (or Struts/Wicket/Tapestry/WebWork...)? Spring REST or JAX-RS? Spring DI or CDI? Spring Boot or MicroProfile? Single-vendor proprietary de-facto standard or multi-vendor community developed standard? Ed has seen these "wars" come and go, and even fought in some of them. While "wars" make for great conference talks, blog posts, and articles, at the end of the day creating business value is the whole point of enterprise Java. Ed contends that nowadays, the cloud vendor is the main thing, and the best cloud vendor is one that best supports "all of the above", from lift and shift of existing workloads, to lift and modernize, on through to turn-key PaaS solutions.
This session will briefly survey the history of enterprise Java to establish the need for an "all of the above" enterprise cloud platform, examine some ways enterprises can use the current offerings from Microsoft Azure, and give a peek into what's in store in the near future.
Achieving DevSecOps Outcomes with Tanzu Advanced- May 25, 2021VMware Tanzu
Achieving DevSecOps Outcomes with Tanzu Advanced
Speakers:
David Zendzian, Global Field CISCO, VMware Tanzu
James Urquhart, Strategic Executive Advisor, VMware Tanzu
Mike Koleno, Chief Architect, AHEAD
Continuous Delivery with CloudBees CoreBhavani Rao
CloudBees Core extends open source Jenkins CI/CD functionality to the needs of enterprises. This is a cloud native solution that leverages Kubernetes and can be hosted locally or on any of the major cloud service providers. Customer benefits include centralized management of Jenkins clusters, granular security, high availability and auto scaling.
Achieving DevSecOps Outcomes with Tanzu Advanced- May 25, 2021VMware Tanzu
Achieving DevSecOps Outcomes with Tanzu Advanced
Speakers:
David Zendzian, Global Field CISCO, VMware Tanzu
James Urquhart, Strategic Executive Advisor, VMware Tanzu
Mike Koleno, Chief Architect, AHEAD
Continuous Delivery with CloudBees CoreBhavani Rao
CloudBees Core extends open source Jenkins CI/CD functionality to the needs of enterprises. This is a cloud native solution that leverages Kubernetes and can be hosted locally or on any of the major cloud service providers. Customer benefits include centralized management of Jenkins clusters, granular security, high availability and auto scaling.
<November 2017 Updated from earlier presentations on Cloud-native Data>
Cloud-native applications form the foundation for modern, cloud-scale digital solutions, and the patterns and practices for cloud-native at the app tier are becoming widely understood – statelessness, service discovery, circuit breakers and more. But little has changed in the data tier. Our modern apps are often connected to monolithic shared databases that have monolithic practices wrapped around them. As a result, the autonomy promised by moving to a microservices application architecture is compromised.
What we need are patterns and practices for cloud-native data. The anti-patterns of shared databases and simple proxy-style web services to front them give way to approaches that include use of caches (Netflix calls caching their hidden microservice), database per service and polyglot persistence, modern versions of ETL and data integration and more. In this session, aimed at the application developer/architect, Cornelia will look at those patterns and see how they serve the needs of the cloud-native application.
Pivotal Platform: A First Look at the October ReleaseVMware Tanzu
Join Dan Baskette and Jared Ruckle for a first look at the latest Pivotal Platform capabilities with demos and expert Q&A. Attend this session and learn how you can put these new updates to work for your enterprise.
Build apps atop Kubernetes with:
● Azure Spring Cloud, a complete runtime for Spring apps atop Azure Kubernetes Service
● Pivotal Build Service, an automated workflow for code-to-container builds
● Container Services Manager for Pivotal Platform, a bridge between Pivotal Application Service and PKS
Build apps atop a self-managed platform with:
● Pivotal Application Service 2.7, and its additional app deployment capabilities
● Pivotal Service Instance Manager, a new tool to help you manage backing services at scale
Get your apps to production with CI/CD tools like:
● Pivotal Continuous Delivery with Spinnaker
● Pivotal Concourse 5.5
We’ll also review Pivotal Spring Cloud Gateway and Pivotal Cloud Cache 1.9!
Presenter : Dan Baskette, Director, Technical Marketing & Jared Ruckle, Director, Product Marketing
DevOps World | Jenkins World 2019 "Thinking about Jenkins Security" presentation by Mark Waite, Wadeck Follonier and Meg McRoberts. Reviews Jenkins security concepts, common pitfalls, and the techniques to avoid those common pitfalls.
Deploying Kafka on vSphere with Kubernetes Using the Confluent Operator (Just...confluent
This session starts with the importance of Kafka as an event streaming and messaging platform for application-to-application communication - and gives a quick snapshot of the Confluent Platform. Then the "operators" method for deployment of many app platforms onto Kubernetes is underlined. We then take you step-by-step through a deployment of the Confluent Operator for Kafka on vSphere 7 with Kubernetes and show the benefits of this approach. We also show a second, external, Kafka message producer sending messages into the Kubernetes cluster and a consumer receiving them from there. This shows the ease of deployment, management and testing of Kafka with the Confluent Operator and Platform. Mention will be made about using a standalone Kubernetes cluster also. Attendees will leave with a good understanding of Kafka on modern vSphere.
Introducing Tanzu Editions
VMware Tanzu editions package capabilities of the Tanzu portfolio into clearly defined solutions targeted at the most common enterprise challenges. There are four Tanzu editions, each a superset of the one before it along a spectrum, giving customers a clear path to add capabilities over time as needed.
PKS: The What and How of Enterprise-Grade KubernetesVMware Tanzu
SpringOne Platform 2017
Cornelia Davis, Pivotal; Fred Melo, Pivotal
Because of its well thought out and powerful abstractions, robust and cloud-native architecture, and the vibrant community around it, the use of Kubernetes for containerized workloads has surged. And while Kubernetes is theoretically ready to run applications in production, the actual viability is highly dependent on how Kubernetes itself is managed. In this session Cornelia and Fred will cover role of the container orchestration system in your IT landscape, and they’ll dive under the covers to show how it provides the enterprise-class Kubernetes services you need to trust your most critical workloads to it. Yes, technical details revealed!
Secure your CI/CD pipeline with Docker EE Platform, Tech Insights Singapore -...Ashnikbiz
by Sameer
Senior Solution Architect, Ashnik
This presentation covers:
Typical Challenges in Container Adoption
Docker Enterprise Edition Demo -
Role Based Access Control – Action Restriction
Image Scanning, Promotion and Mirroring
Version Control for Images
Centralized Logging for Containers
Enterprise Java on Microsoft Azure: From Java EE to Spring, we’ve got you cov...Ed Burns
Ed Burns brings his seventeen years of server side Java experience to bear on the topic of Enterprise Java on Microsoft Azure. Before the advent of cloud infrastructure, the stack was the main thing. This gave rise to many entertaining platform wars, and even personality feuds among the principals. Spring or J2EE? Spring MVC or JSF (or Struts/Wicket/Tapestry/WebWork...)? Spring REST or JAX-RS? Spring DI or CDI? Spring Boot or MicroProfile? Single-vendor proprietary de-facto standard or multi-vendor community developed standard? Ed has seen these "wars" come and go, and even fought in some of them. While "wars" make for great conference talks, blog posts, and articles, at the end of the day creating business value is the whole point of enterprise Java. Ed contends that nowadays, the cloud vendor is the main thing, and the best cloud vendor is one that best supports "all of the above", from lift and shift of existing workloads, to lift and modernize, on through to turn-key PaaS solutions.
This session will briefly survey the history of enterprise Java to establish the need for an "all of the above" enterprise cloud platform, examine some ways enterprises can use the current offerings from Microsoft Azure, and give a peek into what's in store in the near future.
Wars I’ve SeenFrom Java EE to Spring and more, Azure has you coveredEdward Burns
Ed Burns brings his seventeen years of server side Java experience to bear on the topic of Enterprise Java on Microsoft Azure. Before the advent of cloud infrastructure, the stack was the main thing. This gave rise to many entertaining platform wars, and even personality feuds among the principals. Spring or J2EE? Spring MVC or JSF (or Struts/Wicket/Tapestry/WebWork...)? Spring REST or JAX-RS? Spring DI orCDI? Spring Boot or MicroProfile? Single-vendor proprietary de-facto standard or multi-vendor community developed standard? Ed has seen these "wars" come and go, and even fought in some of them. While "wars" make for great conference talks, blog posts, and articles, at the end of the day creating business value is the whole point of enterprise Java. Ed contends that nowadays, the cloud vendor is the main thing, and the best cloud vendor is one that best supports "all of the above", from lift and shift of existing workloads, to lift and improve, on through to turn-key PaaS solutions. This session will briefly survey the history of enterprise Java to establish the need for an "all of the above" enterprise cloud platform, examine some ways enterprises can use the current offerings from Microsoft Azure, and give a peek into what's in store in the near future.
<November 2017 Updated from earlier presentations on Cloud-native Data>
Cloud-native applications form the foundation for modern, cloud-scale digital solutions, and the patterns and practices for cloud-native at the app tier are becoming widely understood – statelessness, service discovery, circuit breakers and more. But little has changed in the data tier. Our modern apps are often connected to monolithic shared databases that have monolithic practices wrapped around them. As a result, the autonomy promised by moving to a microservices application architecture is compromised.
What we need are patterns and practices for cloud-native data. The anti-patterns of shared databases and simple proxy-style web services to front them give way to approaches that include use of caches (Netflix calls caching their hidden microservice), database per service and polyglot persistence, modern versions of ETL and data integration and more. In this session, aimed at the application developer/architect, Cornelia will look at those patterns and see how they serve the needs of the cloud-native application.
Pivotal Platform: A First Look at the October ReleaseVMware Tanzu
Join Dan Baskette and Jared Ruckle for a first look at the latest Pivotal Platform capabilities with demos and expert Q&A. Attend this session and learn how you can put these new updates to work for your enterprise.
Build apps atop Kubernetes with:
● Azure Spring Cloud, a complete runtime for Spring apps atop Azure Kubernetes Service
● Pivotal Build Service, an automated workflow for code-to-container builds
● Container Services Manager for Pivotal Platform, a bridge between Pivotal Application Service and PKS
Build apps atop a self-managed platform with:
● Pivotal Application Service 2.7, and its additional app deployment capabilities
● Pivotal Service Instance Manager, a new tool to help you manage backing services at scale
Get your apps to production with CI/CD tools like:
● Pivotal Continuous Delivery with Spinnaker
● Pivotal Concourse 5.5
We’ll also review Pivotal Spring Cloud Gateway and Pivotal Cloud Cache 1.9!
Presenter : Dan Baskette, Director, Technical Marketing & Jared Ruckle, Director, Product Marketing
DevOps World | Jenkins World 2019 "Thinking about Jenkins Security" presentation by Mark Waite, Wadeck Follonier and Meg McRoberts. Reviews Jenkins security concepts, common pitfalls, and the techniques to avoid those common pitfalls.
Deploying Kafka on vSphere with Kubernetes Using the Confluent Operator (Just...confluent
This session starts with the importance of Kafka as an event streaming and messaging platform for application-to-application communication - and gives a quick snapshot of the Confluent Platform. Then the "operators" method for deployment of many app platforms onto Kubernetes is underlined. We then take you step-by-step through a deployment of the Confluent Operator for Kafka on vSphere 7 with Kubernetes and show the benefits of this approach. We also show a second, external, Kafka message producer sending messages into the Kubernetes cluster and a consumer receiving them from there. This shows the ease of deployment, management and testing of Kafka with the Confluent Operator and Platform. Mention will be made about using a standalone Kubernetes cluster also. Attendees will leave with a good understanding of Kafka on modern vSphere.
Introducing Tanzu Editions
VMware Tanzu editions package capabilities of the Tanzu portfolio into clearly defined solutions targeted at the most common enterprise challenges. There are four Tanzu editions, each a superset of the one before it along a spectrum, giving customers a clear path to add capabilities over time as needed.
PKS: The What and How of Enterprise-Grade KubernetesVMware Tanzu
SpringOne Platform 2017
Cornelia Davis, Pivotal; Fred Melo, Pivotal
Because of its well thought out and powerful abstractions, robust and cloud-native architecture, and the vibrant community around it, the use of Kubernetes for containerized workloads has surged. And while Kubernetes is theoretically ready to run applications in production, the actual viability is highly dependent on how Kubernetes itself is managed. In this session Cornelia and Fred will cover role of the container orchestration system in your IT landscape, and they’ll dive under the covers to show how it provides the enterprise-class Kubernetes services you need to trust your most critical workloads to it. Yes, technical details revealed!
Secure your CI/CD pipeline with Docker EE Platform, Tech Insights Singapore -...Ashnikbiz
by Sameer
Senior Solution Architect, Ashnik
This presentation covers:
Typical Challenges in Container Adoption
Docker Enterprise Edition Demo -
Role Based Access Control – Action Restriction
Image Scanning, Promotion and Mirroring
Version Control for Images
Centralized Logging for Containers
Enterprise Java on Microsoft Azure: From Java EE to Spring, we’ve got you cov...Ed Burns
Ed Burns brings his seventeen years of server side Java experience to bear on the topic of Enterprise Java on Microsoft Azure. Before the advent of cloud infrastructure, the stack was the main thing. This gave rise to many entertaining platform wars, and even personality feuds among the principals. Spring or J2EE? Spring MVC or JSF (or Struts/Wicket/Tapestry/WebWork...)? Spring REST or JAX-RS? Spring DI or CDI? Spring Boot or MicroProfile? Single-vendor proprietary de-facto standard or multi-vendor community developed standard? Ed has seen these "wars" come and go, and even fought in some of them. While "wars" make for great conference talks, blog posts, and articles, at the end of the day creating business value is the whole point of enterprise Java. Ed contends that nowadays, the cloud vendor is the main thing, and the best cloud vendor is one that best supports "all of the above", from lift and shift of existing workloads, to lift and modernize, on through to turn-key PaaS solutions.
This session will briefly survey the history of enterprise Java to establish the need for an "all of the above" enterprise cloud platform, examine some ways enterprises can use the current offerings from Microsoft Azure, and give a peek into what's in store in the near future.
Wars I’ve SeenFrom Java EE to Spring and more, Azure has you coveredEdward Burns
Ed Burns brings his seventeen years of server side Java experience to bear on the topic of Enterprise Java on Microsoft Azure. Before the advent of cloud infrastructure, the stack was the main thing. This gave rise to many entertaining platform wars, and even personality feuds among the principals. Spring or J2EE? Spring MVC or JSF (or Struts/Wicket/Tapestry/WebWork...)? Spring REST or JAX-RS? Spring DI orCDI? Spring Boot or MicroProfile? Single-vendor proprietary de-facto standard or multi-vendor community developed standard? Ed has seen these "wars" come and go, and even fought in some of them. While "wars" make for great conference talks, blog posts, and articles, at the end of the day creating business value is the whole point of enterprise Java. Ed contends that nowadays, the cloud vendor is the main thing, and the best cloud vendor is one that best supports "all of the above", from lift and shift of existing workloads, to lift and improve, on through to turn-key PaaS solutions. This session will briefly survey the history of enterprise Java to establish the need for an "all of the above" enterprise cloud platform, examine some ways enterprises can use the current offerings from Microsoft Azure, and give a peek into what's in store in the near future.
The Kubernetes WebLogic revival (part 1)Simon Haslam
The first of two sessions Martien & I presented at UKOUG Techfest19 in Brighton, UK about:
(a) Running WebLogic in containers, managed by Kubernetes
(b) Oracle's Container Engine for Kubernetes (OKE) - Oracle Cloud's managed k8s service
Sponsored Session: Please touch that dial!Edward Burns
Enterprise Java on Azure, from PaaS to IaaS and everything in between. Join Java Champion and Principal Architect Ed Burns to learn how to select the right Enterprise Java on Azure solution for your needs. Whether you are moving your Java enterprise to the cloud, evolving once you get it there, or starting fully cloud native, there are many factors to consider. Of course, there are the usual suspects of price, time, and effort. But there are also additional factors such as balancing complexity and maintainability, staffing (the level of involvement of systems integrators, contractors, and in-house staff), license portability. Don't forget functional factors such as high availability and disaster recovery, and quality-of-service guarantees. Azure offers a complete range of enterprise Java solutions, like turning a dial. For maximum ease, let Azure manage all the complexity for you with Azure Spring Apps, Azure App Service, or Azure Functions Java. If you want more control, consider Jakarta EE solution templates, or running Spring on App Service. For maximum control, run your enterprise Java directly on Azure runtimes like Kubernetes, Open Shift, or Virtual Machines. Ed examines the tradeoffs in these choices from an enterprise architect's perspective.
Edge 2016 Session 1886 Building your own docker container cloud on ibm power...Yong Feng
The material for IBM Edge 2016 session for a client use case of Spectrum Conductor for Containers
https://www-01.ibm.com/events/global/edge/sessions/.
Please refer to http://ibm.biz/ConductorForContainers for more details about Spectrum Conductor for Containers.
Please refer to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YMjP6EypqA and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9oVPU3rwhE for the demo of Spectrum Conductor for Containers.
Azure is a great place for all your Java. Microsoft Java experts lead a grand tour of Java on Azure. Learn how to reach cloud-scale with cloud-native innovation for enterprise Java applications.
Java on Your Terms with Azure
GIDS 2019: Developing Apps with Containers, Functions and Cloud ServicesPatrick Chanezon
Cloud native applications are increasingly composed of containers, serverless functions responding to events and managed cloud services. What is the best workflow and set of tools to provide a rapid, iterative development experience and to package applications using these three components?
This hand-on talk will compare and contrast several sets of tools and their associated workflows:
Using Docker Desktop, with its local Docker engine and Kubernetes cluster, with open source tools such as the Virtual Kubelet, or the Gloo hybrid app gateway, to build the most productive development inner-loop for these type of applications
OpenFaaS, Fn, or Nuclio open source serverless framework to run functions in containers locally
Telepresence to run a container locally, connected to a remote cluster
Helm and Draft
Knative
The talk will also cover how you can use the Cloud Native Application Bundle (CNAB) format and tools to package your applications and share them using a container registry.
One And Done Multi-Cloud Load Balancing Done Right.pptxAvi Networks
Did you know that on average, it takes organizations more than three months using legacy load balancers to scale their load balancing capacity? That includes tedious policy management, expensive over-provisioning (or even more expensive under-provisioning), and the risk of supply-chain delays.
Join us for an eye-opening discussion of application delivery done right. By following the guiding principles of a cloud operating model, your team can get operational simplicity, multi-cloud consistency, pervasive analytics, holistic security and full life-cycle automation. This means less time spent on manual, repetitive tasks and troubleshooting, freeing up more time to proactively manage and automate your load balancers.
What We Learned from Porting PiggyMetrics from Spring Boot to MicroProfileEd Burns
PiggyMetrics is a popular open source end-to-end sample which demonstrates the use of Spring Boot and Spring Cloud features in a microservices-style application. Spring Boot and MicroProfile are popular competing frameworks for building apps in the cloud-native microservices style. Functionally, architecturally, and historically they have many things in common. From a business, economic and governance perspective they have significant differences. This session from Java Champions Ed Burns and Emily Jiang, respectively of Microsoft and IBM, briefly surveys the history and non-technical aspects in comparing the Spring Boot and MicroProfile stacks and then will take you through a real world case study based on PiggyMetrics. We will share our experience of porting it from Spring to MicroProfile.
PiggyMetrics models a personal finance application and uses cloud native microservices features such as externalized configuration, aggregate logs, service metrics, security propagation, and distributed tracing. The porting exercise utilizes MicroProfile features such as Config, Metrics, Health Check, Fault Tolerance, Open Tracing and JWT Propagation along with Jakarta CDI, REST and JSON Binding.
Join Ed and Emily for a fun and informative compare and contrast ride.
What Visual Studio Code can do for Java DevelopmentEd Burns
Visual Studio Code has come a long way to become the preferred text editor of polyglot developers thanks to the ecosystem of extensions that enhance and enrich the experience, turning it into a super smart editor with IDE-ish capabilities while remaining ludicrously fast and lightweight. Extensions for editing, running, debugging and deploying Java applications are well stable and supporting latest releases of several components, tools and frameworks, like JDKs, Maven, JUnit and Spring. Other extensions take the experience to the next level: remote development environments through SSH, local or remote Docker containers, or even through the Windows Subsystem for Linux. In this presentation, we will take a look at the core capabilities for Cloud Native Java development and how Java developers can take advantage of them to really focus on what matters most: Java code.
Programming Language Platform Growth: Table Stakes or Deal Makes?Ed Burns
This talk draws from Ed's 25 years of professional programming experience, spanning many languages, operating systems, and platforms, to survey what it takes to make a programming language platform successful in terms of widespread use. Ed will look at Java, Python, Node, Go, and Ruby and evaluate the ingredients that brought each one its own form of success. Finally, Ed will draw some lessons that apply to anyone trying to grow their computing platform, because, at some level, we are all in the platform business.
Oracle Code Online: Building a Serverless State Service for the CloudEd Burns
While application architectures are evolving to become stateless, application state and state management are naturally emerging as a service in themselves. This session outlines the development, operation, and maintenance of an application state service for the cloud with Java 9, using a serverless strategy. The presentation investigates some of the challenges of designing an infinite-capacity, infinite-processing platform capable of reliably running everything from the smallest application to a globally distributed enterprise-class infrastructure for the mobile and IoT domains.
Java Servlets have been around for longer than Java EE, or even J2EE. This session from the co–spec leads surveys the new features in Servlet 4.0 and puts them in the context of their usefulness in a contemporary microservices-style architecture. Features covered include
• Support for HTTP/2, including server push
• Default context path
• Mapping discovery
• Encoding clarifications
• HTTP trailers, including their relevance to gRPC
The session examines these features in light of current application development trends, such as containerization, continuous delivery, 12-factor apps, and adapting legacy apps to take advantage of cloud-native technologies.
A quick intro to some of the tradeoffs between structured and unstructured cloud approaches, and a demo of a possible use of Mesos/Marathon for desktop-to-cloud development
Oracle WebLogic Server 12.2.1 Do More with LessEd Burns
Oracle WebLogic Server 12.2.1 (WLS) is the most significant release of WLS since Oracle added WLS to its product portfolio with the acquisition of BEA in 2008. This session by WebLogic developer and JCP Specification Lead Ed Burns goes behind the buzzwords and explains the enterprise value-add brought by WLS 12.2.1 in plain English. Ed infuses his decades long experience in web technologies throughout the presentation, addressing such topics as why app servers are still useful, what role standards play in transitioning to the cloud, and what is the difference between "full stack" and "monolith".
See an interview about this topic at <https: />.
Ed introduces the new version of WLS by taking a tour of two big ticket new features: multitenancy and Java EE 7. Other features such as continuous availability, REST management, and Docker/devops features will also be included.
The multitenancy features in WebLogic Server offer extreme efficiency, full isolation, application portability, and full automation, all in an easy to adopt format.
Java EE 7 is the latest version of the Java standard full stack of loosely coupled, highly cohesive technologies for building enterprise software. EE 7 features new versions of popular standards such as JAX-RS (REST), CDI, Servlet, JSF, JSON, WebSocket, JMS, and more.
WLS 12.2.1 delivers these and other new features, while continuing the promise of stability and scale developers expect.
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Securing your Kubernetes cluster_ a step-by-step guide to success !KatiaHIMEUR1
Today, after several years of existence, an extremely active community and an ultra-dynamic ecosystem, Kubernetes has established itself as the de facto standard in container orchestration. Thanks to a wide range of managed services, it has never been so easy to set up a ready-to-use Kubernetes cluster.
However, this ease of use means that the subject of security in Kubernetes is often left for later, or even neglected. This exposes companies to significant risks.
In this talk, I'll show you step-by-step how to secure your Kubernetes cluster for greater peace of mind and reliability.
Kubernetes & AI - Beauty and the Beast !?! @KCD Istanbul 2024Tobias Schneck
As AI technology is pushing into IT I was wondering myself, as an “infrastructure container kubernetes guy”, how get this fancy AI technology get managed from an infrastructure operational view? Is it possible to apply our lovely cloud native principals as well? What benefit’s both technologies could bring to each other?
Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
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.
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/
Builder.ai Founder Sachin Dev Duggal's Strategic Approach to Create an Innova...Ramesh Iyer
In today's fast-changing business world, Companies that adapt and embrace new ideas often need help to keep up with the competition. However, fostering a culture of innovation takes much work. It takes vision, leadership and willingness to take risks in the right proportion. Sachin Dev Duggal, co-founder of Builder.ai, has perfected the art of this balance, creating a company culture where creativity and growth are nurtured at each stage.
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!
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
FIDO Alliance Osaka Seminar: The WebAuthn API and Discoverable Credentials.pdf
Enterprise Java on Azure: From Java EE to Spring, we have you covered
1. Enterprise Java on Azure
From Java EE to Spring and more, we’ve got you
covered
Ed Burns @edburns
Principal Architect Java on Azure Developer Experiences
2019-11
3. Professional Biography
Client
NCSA Mosaic (1994)
SGI Cosmo Web Authoring
Sun Netscape 6 OJI
Server
J2EE JSF (2002)
Oracle Java EE
Servlet, JSF, Bean Validation, etc.
Microsoft Azure Cloud (2019)
Books
4. Brief Personal Journey
❑ You must constantly adapt
❑ Not necessarily frequently change jobs
❑ Companies need to adapt too
5. Starting on the Client: Birth of a Big Thing
Oil and Chemistry Building at University of
Illinois in Urbana-Champaign
Home of NCSA Mosaic
First Graphical Web Browser
Gratis and Free software
Built on prior work really well
Ubiquitous (cross platform)
Delivered something everyone
wanted
Easy to author: copy and paste from
view source!
7. Birth of the Monolith: Spring and J2EE
Addressed shared pain points
Transparent development process
Spring rode the crest of vendor
marketing efforts, differentiated
with operational excellence
J2EE had multi-vendor concept,
strong community governance
Photo: Les Chatfield
10. I’m Ready for the Cloud
My response to cloud disruption
Get out from inside of the monolith
Work with the hosting platform
Monolith
Microservices
Helps enterprises scale
34. Java on Azure for Wherever You Are in your Cloud Journey
Java EE on
Azure IaaS
Azure
Container
Instances
Azure
Kubernetes
Service
Azure
RedHat
OpenShift
Azure Spring-
Cloud Service
Azure
Functions
Azure Stack Azure
WildFly PaaS
46. Responsibilities
User management
Project and quota management
Application lifecycle
Cluster creation
Cluster management
Monitoring and logging
Network configuration
Software and security updates
Platform support
Customer Microsoft and Red Hat
Virtual network
Azure DNS
Azure Load
Balancer (Master)
Azure Load
Balancer (Router)
Public IP Public IP Public IP
Azure Active
Directory
OpenShift API/administration console App 1 App 2
User
App
definition
Azure VMs (Master)
Scale sets
Azure Premium SSD Managed Disks
Node 1 Node 2 Node 3
api-server • controller-manager • etcd
Azure VMs (Infrastructure)
Scale sets
Azure Premium
SSD Managed
Disks
Node 1 Node 2 Node 3
registry • router
Azure VMs (Application)
Scale sets
Azure Premium SSD Managed Disks
Node 1 Node 2 Node N
application pods
Azure Blob
Storage
OpenShift SDN
Node 3 Node 4
Azure Key
Vault
47. Virtual network
Azure DNS
Azure Load
Balancer (Master)
Azure Load
Balancer (Router)
Public IP Public IP Public IP
Azure Active
Directory
OpenShift API/administration console App 1 App 2
User
App
definition
Azure VMs (Master)
Scale sets
Azure Premium SSD Managed Disks
Node 1 Node 2 Node 3
api-server • controller-manager • etcd
Azure VMs (Infrastructure)
Scale sets
Azure Premium
SSD Managed
Disks
Node 1 Node 2 Node 3
registry • router
Azure VMs (Application)
Scale sets
Azure Premium SSD Managed Disks
Node 1 Node 2 Node N
application pods
Azure Blob
Storage
OpenShift SDN
Node 3 Node 4
Azure Key
Vault
Responsibilities
User management
Project and quota management
Application lifecycle
Cluster creation
Cluster management
Monitoring and logging
Network configuration
Software and security updates
Platform support
Customer Microsoft and Red Hat
Microsoft Red Hat
48. Middleware + Data services Service catalog
Azure and OpenShift self-service
OpenShift application lifecycle management
Build automation Deployment automation
Container ContainerContainer Container Container
Container orchestration Cluster services
Networking Storage Registry Telemetry Security
Container runtime and packaging
Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Physical infrastructure on Azure
Setup, maintenance, and
monitoring provided by Red Hat
Premium support from Red Hat
Hosted in the Azure
region of your choice
VPN connectivity back to the
customer environment
Rapidly deploy and scale
containerized apps and services
An entire OpenShift cluster
dedicated to your organization
Youfocus
onapps
MicrosoftandRed
Hatfocuson
infrastructure
49. • High productivity
• Fully-managed platform
• Highly secure, natively
supports SSL
Azure App Service
50. App Service
Web Apps that Scale with
your Business
• Full capability set available including:
- .NET, Node.js, Java, PHP, and Python
- WebJobs for long running tasks
- Integrated VS publish, remote debug…
- CI with GitHub, BitBucket, VSTS
- Auto-load balance, Autoscale, Geo DR
- Virtual networking and hybrid connections
- Site slots for staged deployments
51. • Web Sockets
- Integrate real-time communication scenarios
- SignalR and Socket.io libraries supported
• Always On
- Keeps your Web App active (warm)
- Standard Mode Web App or higher
- Recommended if you have Web Jobs
• Custom HTTP Handler Mappings
• Virtual Applications & Directories
Additional Application Settings
App Service
52. • Retrieve as Environment Variables
• Retrieve as Key/Value from ConfigurationManager
App Settings and Connection Strings
App Service
// node.js
var value = process.env.APPSETTING_JobServiceUri;
var value2 = process.env.SQLAZURECONNSTR_JobDatabase;
53. • Log File Targets
- File System (Shared Cloud Drive)
- Azure Blob Storage
• Web Server Log
- File System or Azure Blob Storage
• Detailed Error Messages
• Failed Request Tracing
- File System Only
Diagnostics Log Files
App Service
54. • Easy API consumption
- Integration with Swagger API metadata
- Client SDK code generation (C#, Java, and JavaScript)
• Simple Access Control
- Easily secure APIs using Azure AD or Social Logins (Facebook, Twitter, Google, Microsoft Account)
• Workflow Integration with Azure Logic Apps
• First Class Tooling Support
- Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code
- Maven
API Apps
App Service
55. Spring Boot
BUILD ANYTHING
Spring Cloud
COORDINATE ANYTHING
Spring Boot is designed to get you up and running as quickly as possible, with minimal upfront configuration of Spring
Spring Cloud provides a set of tools that makes communication between microservices easier
Spring based microservices development
56. Spring Cloud Apps
Spring Cloud
ComponentsSpring Cloud Components Cloud ServicesApp Consumers
High effort required to manage cloud
infrastructure for Spring boot applications
Application lifecycle is difficult to manage
Painful to troubleshoot application issues
Common Challenges
57. Azure Spring Cloud
A fully managed service for Spring Boot microservices
Fully managed
Infrastructure
Built-in application
lifecycle
management
Ease of monitoring
More choices and full integration into Azure’s ecosystem and services
Enterprise Ready
58. Spring Cloud - Architecture
Responsibiliti
es
DIY with
Spring
Boot
Azure Spring
Cloud Service
Application
iteration,
debugging
CI/CD
Build and
manage
Clusters
Host Spring
Cloud
Components
Monitoring
and logging
Patching
Scaling
Support
Customer Pivotal Microsoft
59. Simplify your cloud infrastructure for Spring boot applications
Responsibiliti
es
DIY with
Spring
Boot
Azure Spring
Cloud Service
Application
iteration,
debugging
CI/CD
Build and
manage
Clusters
Host Spring
Cloud
Components
Monitoring
and logging
Patching
Scaling
Support
Customer Pivotal Microsoft
Microsoft Pivotal.
Azure Spring Cloud
60. • Simple app lifecycle
management
• Easily deploy source
code or build artifacts
• Automatically wire your
app with Spring Cloud
infrastructure
• Integrated CI/CD
pipeline for deployment
Built-in application lifecycle management
61. Monitor your apps
Gain insights with Azure
monitor
Aggregate metrics
Identify reliability issues
62. Q3 2019 Q4 2019 Q1 2020 Q2 2020
June
Limited Private Preview
• Application lifecycle management
• Config server
• Eureka
• Manual scaling
General Availability
• 99.9x SLA
• Available in more Azure Regions
• Production grade app monitor
and diagnostics (e.g. app runtime
inspection)
• Circuit breaker dashboard
• Auto scale
• E2E dev experience in IntelliJ
…
Other features based on customer
feedback and market trends (e.g.
Enterprise grade security)November
Public Preview
• Full billing
• Customer support
October
Private Preview public announcement
• Additional capabilities in Config
server
• Azure monitor
• Diagnostics
• Distributed tracing
• Build service
• Blue green deployment
• Service binding
• SSL
• UX revamp
• Documentation
• Deployment experience w/ Maven
Roadmap (Calendar Year)
• Log streaming
• Alerts based on monitoring data
• Basic tier
• MSI support for Azure resources
• Custom domain
• Interactive self-diagnostics
• Auto patching systems and app
runtime
• Jenkins integration
• VNET
Future
Candidates
• .NET core/Steeltoe
• mTLS among
customers’
applications
• Support certificate
for outband traffic
(e.g. from app to
Data services)
• ….