Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Monday means it’s time for another Week in Review post, so, without further ado, let’s dive right in! Last Week’s Launches Here’s some launch announcements from last week you may have missed.
When you start to adopt Kubernetes (or indeed any other technology), you’re making decisions from the very first moment. Which cloud vendor do you choose to host your workloads? Which Kubernetes distribution? Which service mesh? Which logging tool?
APIs, which allow programs and applications to communicate with each other, allow for flexibility and team autonomy — but that pendulum needs to swing back.
Software-as-a-Service provider BetterCloud saw 10% reduced customer churn after revitalizing its incident management as part of its site reliability engineering (SRE) practices.
With last week’s release of version 15, the Postgres relational database system had made it easier for enterprise users of Oracle and Microsoft SQL Server to move to this open source alternative, thanks to its adoption of the MERGE SQL keyword.
Demand for developers has been accelerating during the past two years (and beyond): The Great Resignation demonstrated that developers are highly valuable assets, and organizations panicked as they couldn’t find enough of them.
At its Ignite user conference this week, Microsoft put on a bit of a Kubernetes fest, highlighted by the software and services giant taking Kubernetes to the edge with AKS lite.
It appears that the leading service mesh vendors are leaning towards the Kubernetes Gateway API, replacing Ingress with a single API that can be shared for the management of Kubernetes nodes and clusters through service mesh.
This is part of a series of contributed articles leading up to KubeCon + CloudNativeCon on Oct. 24-28. Organizations are eagerly adopting containers and Kubernetes, investing in cloud native to foster innovation and growth.
Mike McNeil, a frontend developer, wasn’t sure what his next step would be but with a baby on the way, it looked like his next course would be a part-time dad and part-time consultant on Sails.JS, the open source project he’d created in 2012.
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