Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
One of the main purposes of modern tools and architectures like Kubernetes and microservices is enabling your company to shorten the time to market. Microservices let you implement new features faster into your application, while Kubernetes makes scaling and zero-downtime deployments easier.
In the first part of this series, we looked at how a high iteration rate — or a high cadence — has been used to achieve remarkable accomplishments, even in the field of aerospace, where failure costs tend to be far, far higher and more combustible than in software.
Developer interest in the mobile language Dart and Google’s Dart-based Flutter framework are growing, according to an industry observer Fabrice Bellingard, CEO of continuous code quality and security provider SonarSource.
As a DevSecOps engineer, you are aware that software supply chain attacks are rapidly on the rise. Both business and security leaders have taken notice and are becoming increasingly concerned because the damage from this emerging attack vector can be devastating.
Project signing is a new feature developed for Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform that came out in the latest 2.3 release. It enables users to sign project-based content (think playbooks, workflows, inventories, etc.) and verify whether or not that content has remained secure.
Thanks to the increasing usage of different software solutions, API usage has become an everyday practice. As such, API security is a more prevalent issue in app development than ever before.
Jit sponsored this post. Jit is under common control with TNS. Programs and apps are a manifestation of ideas in a digital format. If you can dream it in other languages, WebAssembly can deliver it to the browser.
Plenty of people have heard of SaaS, or Software-as-a-Service, which is simply software made available by a third party over the internet. Think Salesforce, WordPress, or MailChimp.
Ever use a piece of swag to write a blog post? I am right now! There was a lot of loot on offer this year at the world’s biggest cloud conference, AWS re:Invent. This is my fifth re:Invent (click for 2019 2018 2017 2016), and I’ve collected a thing or two before.
Stop me if you’ve heard this one: A lawyer, a plumber, and an Azure Function walk into an espresso bar. The lawyer immediately announces, “I make $400 an hour. The lattes are on me!” Not to be outdone, the plumber shouts, “I make $125 just for showing up and then charge $300 per hour.
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