Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Application security and vulnerability management are more crucial than ever, as businesses increasingly rely on cloud-based applications and open source software to speed up their innovation cycles.
GitOps is made of the tools and practices that translate the cultural transformation of DevOps into Infrastructure as Code (IaC). DevOps is about two decades solid, while GitOps, at maybe four years old, is still nascent. This makes getting started with GitOps hard.
Topping Stack Overflow’s 2022 list of most popular web frameworks and technologies, Node.js continues to grow as a critical MERN stack component.
Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform has seen wide-scale adoption in a variety of automation domains, however with edge use cases becoming more mainstream, the thought process around automation must shift from “complete a task immediately” to being able to run automation now and later, and respon
As a data scientist studying container adoption, I spend a lot of time looking at what the facts have to tell us about the makeup of public containers that millions of developers use every day.
Headless content management systems have turned the traditionally staid CMS market on its head over the past few years. In a headless CMS, the frontend (aka the head; meaning presentation and publishing) is decoupled from the backend (the content) and managed outside of the core system.
Tools made during development can serve a wider purpose than the immediate problem they address because if it’s a problem for one, it’s potentially a problem for many.
An application isn’t worth much until it’s put into production. For developers, getting to this point quickly means easy access to data they need to build with, without having to worry about the details of spinning up, managing and maintaining databases.
FireHydrant sponsored this post. I was at a community event over the summer, talking to other incident management practitioners when I heard one of them mention that he was mortified when a recent incident was only uncovered after it was reported by a customer.
The short answer? On average, backend developers make either $82,462, $95,472, or $104,865 per year in base pay depending on who you ask. (I asked Glassdoor, Indeed, and Salary.com respectively.
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