Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Adopting cloud native technology is a journey that takes time to mature. In most cases, teams start playing with containers, Kubernetes and adopting microservices in small projects. But as the projects grow, so does the complexity.
Deep Learning (DL) keeps growing and pushing the boundaries of where AI is going and compute is expanding to keep up with the complexities of these models. With expanded compute comes expanded deployment in production. It becomes a very complicated process.
Suppose you operate popup clinics in rural villages and remote locations where there is no internet. You need to capture and share data across the clinic to provide vital healthcare, but if the apps you use require an internet connection to work, they can’t operate in these areas.
We all know keeping secrets, such as passwords, credentials, keys, and access tokens, in our code, is a bad security idea. But, thanks to code-driven automation with secrets and continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) we do it anyway. And, sometimes, it comes back to bite us: Hard.
Welcome to our yearly recap of the top 10 most read articles on the A Cloud Guru blog! We compiled a list of all the pieces that resonated most with readers in 2022, according to page views.
The recent emergence of deep learning text-to-image platforms like Midjourney and Stable Diffusion are allowing people to conjure up incredible works of digital art within seconds, just by typing in a short descriptive text prompt — for example, it can be as simple as something like “a wizard ca
The California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) is a privacy law that was passed in California in 2020. It strengthens the security standards of the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), making California's consumer privacy laws more aligned with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
At AWS, security is job zero. Starting today, Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) encrypts all new objects by default. Now, S3 automatically applies server-side encryption (SSE-S3) for each new object, unless you specify a different encryption option. SSE-S3 was first launched in 2011.
Gartner predicts that by 2025, we’ll finally see over half of IT spending will finally have shifted from traditional IT infrastructure to the public cloud. That’s quite a jump compared to 2022’s 41%. But, I’m sure it will happen.
Every developer has hit a point where they’ve launched something to production and it breaks, or the database information gets corrupted, which results in them needing to roll back to the data they had previously.
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