Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
For an e-tailer as large as Amazon, even small performance improvements reap significant savings. By moving database table compaction chores from Apache Spark to the Python-based Apache Ray, the company found that they could be executed 82% more efficiently.
The cloud has changed the infrastructure of companies over the past 10 years. It has made experimentation and building more convenient and faster than traditional on-prem environments. Having on-demand APIs for an entire virtual data center greatly reduces feedback loops.
Taking a page from the world of software development, where “agile” has been a buzzword for decades, today’s data engineers are increasingly talking about agile data management.
We caught up with Taylor Dolezal, head of ecosystem at the Cloud Native Computing Foundation, to discuss Kubernetes, as it is celebrating its 10th birthday this year. Dolezal has worked as a senior developer advocate for HashiCorp and a site reliability engineer for Walt Disney Studios.
The Next.js team rolled out improvements to the Next.js core and new documentation that will make it easier for frontend developers to self-host Next.js, said Vercel’s Vice President of Product Lee Robinson during the October Next.js conference in San Francisco. Next.
StormForge sponsored this post. Insight Partners is an investor in StormForge and TNS. “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” Kubernetes is inarguably an elegant, refined, well-designed edifice of open source enterprise software. It is known.
German physicist Werner Heisenberg, on his deathbed, said, “When I meet God, I am going to ask him two questions: Why relativity? And why turbulence? I really believe he will have an answer for the first.” It’s a quote commonly misattributed to Albert Einstein.
Python list comprehensions generate new lists from existing lists and sequences in one efficient, readable line of code. They provide a concise syntax for completing this task, limiting our lines of code.
If you’ve ever been tangled in the complexities of setting up a WordPress environment, you’re not alone. WordPress powers more than 40% of all websites, making it the world’s most popular content management system (CMS).
As cloud practitioners, we can’t afford to bet on the wrong technology to manage our mission-critical infrastructure — especially when it’s so important for operations, so costly and so heavily invested in.
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