Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
I have long noted the trend of pendulums in IT, particularly in organizations with longer histories. Centralized IT will be achieved, its weaknesses noticed and a movement will begin to decentralize. Decentralized IT is achieved, and people remember its weaknesses, causing centralization.
For the most part, these are in no particular order. These are just the best tips I can give from what I have learned after using Kubernetes for a year. This is probably the most simple to do but also one of the most helpful things to do when using Kubernetes.
Before we dig deeper in to the above question let us understand what is Monolithic Architecture. Monolithic means composed in one piece. A Monolithic application is the one in which all component must be present for the application to work.
One of the most productive meetings I had KubeCon in San Diego last November was a meeting with Docker, Amazon and Microsoft to plan a collaboration around a new version of the CNCF project Notary. We held the Notary v2 kickoff meeting a few weeks later in Seattle in the Amazon offices.
This is a fun article that shows six films where Hollywood takes on SQL and data analysts. Policemen, doctors, lawyers, scientists, teachers: these are the professions that we often see in Hollywood movies.
Where the world meets DevOps
It was shortly after high school when I was working as a construction laborer that I realized, I need to go back to school. While the option of going to a University was there, it was suggested by a friend that I attend a technical college instead.
DevOps can provide businesses the edge with faster software delivery. It’s an essential ingredient for business agility and high performing organizations. DevOps is continuously evolving. Ever since the term was coined in 2009, the state of DevOps evolved exponentially year on year.
As a software developer when you start a new project or product development, you have to decide about your Git repository’s structure! especially if you are building multiple parts: frontend and backend (API). (sometimes you have multiple API, batches …)
The mono-cloud setup is very common in startup scenarios, where you begin your life on AWS and probably you will stay there for a long period of time. However, the story for the enterprise is completely different.
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