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RJJ Software's Software Development Service This episode of The Modern .NET Show is supported, in part, by RJJ Software's Podcasting Services, whether your company is looking to elevate its UK operations or reshape its US strategy, we can provide tailored solutions that exceed expectations. Show Notes "I don't want to go into the details right now, but for the listeners, I will say that we are right in the middle of an explosive situation right now with some WordPress drama. WordPress and WP Engine are experiencing a lot of the fallout, kind of related to what we talked about in the last episode, where you start out with some good intentions and then you get in a situation where both sides kind of feel burned. And I'm not going to say that there's a perfect solution out there, But I do think that this frequent check-ins and asking, you know, "is this good for me and what needs to change for this to be good for my life?" is important."— Scott Harden Welcome friends to The Modern .NET Show; the premier .NET podcast, focusing entirely on the knowledge, tools, and frameworks that all .NET developers should have in their toolbox. We are the go-to podcast for .NET developers worldwide, and I am not your host: Jamie. I'm Delilah and I will be recording the intro for this episode because Jamie is suffering with a throat infection. In this episode, Scott Harden joined us to talk more about open-source, software licensing, and a little on some of the most recent NuGet package updates that .NET developers should know about. It's important to note, Scott and Jamie talked about the WordPress controversy which was still unfolding as we recorded (which on October 19th, 2024). They brought it up not to make fun of WordPress or to add fuel to the flames, but to talk about the fact that it highlighted Scott's point about checking in with yourself regularly, as an open-source developer, about whether you're getting what you want from your public repos. Whilst talking about open-source development and licensing, Scott brought up a question on our collective and individual digital legacies. "And this is kind of a startling topic to bring up, but what if you just disappeared tomorrow? Because people just leave because they have some medical situation or some life situation, or they die. And this happens. This happens in software. We'll talk about some specific examples in a minute. But, you know, if you disappear tomorrow, it's interesting to think about kind of what your digital legacy would be. And, you know, you could have left this thing behind in a way that it could have been used by everyone or anyone."— Scott Harden This episode has a lot of resources in the accompanying show notes, so if you're listening along in a podcast player make sure to head to the website (there'll be a link). That way you don't miss out on all the wonderful things Scott and Jamie talked about. As a form of trigger warning, at around the 58 minute mark Scott talks about how his own journey with cancer brought the idea of his digital legacy to the forefront for him. Both Scott and Jamie also talk about the late Abel Wang and Pieter Hintjens. And they talk about other examples of developers who are very public with their health struggles: Jeremy Likness and (previous guest of the show) Jon Smith, who suffer with Alzheimer's disease and dementia respectively. We understand completely if you want to skip this entire section. But we also feel that there are very important points raised whilst talking about these, less cheery, matters. This conversation makes up the bulk for the final 10-15 minutes of the episode. Aside from a teaser for the next part (which is all about NuGet packages), you won't miss anything .NET specific if you choose to skip this part. Anyway, without further ado, let's sit back, open up a terminal, type in `dotnet new podcast` and we'll dive into the core of Modern .NET. Supporting the Show If you find this episode useful in any way, please consider supporting the show by either leaving a review (check our review page for ways to do that), sharing the episode with a friend or colleague, buying the host a coffee, or considering becoming a Patron of the show. Full Show Notes The full show notes, including links to some of the things we discussed and a full transcription of this episode, can be found at: https://dotnetcore.show/season-7/open-source-and-our-digital-legacies-with-scott-harden/ Scott's Links: scottplot.net swharden.com GitHub LinkedIn Jamie's Public NuGet Packages: OwaspHeaders.Core ClackMiddleware OnionArch.Mvc Useful Links GNU Terry Pratchett OWASP Secure Headers Project GitHub sponsors Jamie on Coffee and Open Source with Isaac Levin The WordPress vs VP Engine drama, explained What we know about the xz Utils backdoor that almost infected the world .NET Foundation Finding Strength in Weakness by Jeremy Likness How to update a NuGet library once the author isn't available by Jon Smith Entity Framework Core with Jon Smith A protocol for dying Get Busy Living with Abel Wang ScottPlot.NET: GitHub NuGet scottplot.net The charts that Scott was referring to when talking about downloads per day, can be seen here Supporting the show: Leave a rating or review Buy the show a coffee Become a patron Getting in Touch: Via the contact page Joining the Discord Remember to rate and review the show on Apple Podcasts, Podchaser, or wherever you find your podcasts, this will help the show's audience grow. Or you can just share the show with a friend. And don't forget to reach out via our Contact page. We're very interested in your opinion of the show, so please get in touch. You can support the show by making a monthly donation on the show's Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/TheDotNetCorePodcast.
While this episode started out with a recap of April Edwards (@TheAprilEdwards) keynote called “Putting the Ops into DevOps” we quickly got April talk about what measures Microsoft has set to embrace the cultural change needed for their DevOps transformation: Every service has a public health dashboard, putting the customer in the center, make products open source, eat your own dog food, align your objectives with the team, …Besides this great conversation that finally gave some great input on what cultural change really looks like we learned from her background in Ops, moving to Dev, getting into the cloud and now inspiring Ops teams to have it easier in their job using automation. Tune in, learn and get inspired. We also talked about the late Abel Wang and how Microsoft UK is supporting Girls Who Code.Show Links:April on Linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/azureapril/April on Twitterhttps://twitter.com/TheAprilEdwardsPutting the Ops into DevOps keynotehttps://globalazure.at/sessions/#323994Supporting Girls Who Code in memory of Abel Wanthttps://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/msbuild2022/?WT.mc_id=modinfra-67727-apedward
Scott's Twitter - https://twitter.com/shanselmanScott's Website - https://www.hanselman.com/Scott's YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/shanselmanScott's TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@shanselman?Scott's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/shanselman/Ted Lasso - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10986410/The Hanselminutes Podcast: Get Busy Living with Abel Wang - https://www.hanselminutes.com/793/get-busy-living-with-abel-wangRatatouille Musical - https://ratatousical.com/SmartLess Podcast - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/smartless/id1521578868The Nap Ministry Twitter - https://twitter.com/TheNapMinistrySupport Black Girls Code - https://www.bonfire.com/hey-friends/
Microsoft sunsets OneNote, only to expand OneNote, and the .NET Compiler has a bit of chaos inside of it. Let's get to it.⛔✅ David Fowler, member of the .NET team, writes that “null checking in C# has gotten out of hand”. David's right, of course, and a follow up tweet in that thread narrows it down to merely three methods to checking for null. Another day, another chance to tap the sign: Just because you can doesn't mean you should. It's felt like that ever since C# was de-coupled from the .NET Framework, the language has exploded with new syntax; and yes, while newly divorced people sometimes do go through a sowing phase, you reap what you sow.
To celebrate the life of community rockstar Abel Wang, we revisit our 2018 discussion with him at GDC joined by Microsoft cloud advocate Jessica Deen. Show links Support Girls Who Code in memoriam --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gamedevbreakdown/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gamedevbreakdown/support
To celebrate the life of community rockstar Abel Wang, we revisit our 2018 discussion with him at GDC joined by Microsoft cloud advocate Jessica Deen.
Interview with Abel Wang
Abel Wang is having quite a year. A few years back he was diagnosed with cancer, and this year it's back and he has been given a number - 14%. Now he decides what do to with that number.You can also watch the VIDEO version at https://youtu.be/yPfMW0CZpms
I have been using Windows 10 for years now and I recently took the time to learn how to be more productive with it. There are lots of shortcuts and tools in Windows 10 that help me throughout the day. Do you also want to be more productive with Windows 10? Then check out my new Udemy course called Windows 10 Productivity Booster.Abel Wang is a Principal Cloud Advocate and DevOps Lead with a background in Azure and application development. He is currently part of Donovan Brown’s League of Extraordinary Cloud DevOps Advocates. Before joining Microsoft, Abel spent seven years as a Process Consultant and a Certified Scrum Master helping customers globally develop solutions using agile practices and Team Foundation Server. Prior to that, Abel founded and sold his own software company. When not working, Abel is either writing code (yes, that’s what he does for fun), playing his guitar or training for The Great Wall Marathon. Recently winning his battle against cancer, Abel spits in the face of cancer and will never quit.Show resources:Follow Abel on TwitterAbel's blogAzure DevOpsDevOps on Microsoft LearnDevOps on Microsoft DocsMicrosoft Ignite
Normally I'd start this out with some of the funnier things that happened; but before I dive into what happened last week, I want to talk about this week. Warning: death and violence follow. Yesterday was the 31st anniversary of the École Polytechnique massacre. If you're not familiar with this atrocity, let me quote Deb Chachra's chilling telling of the event: On December 6, 1989, in late afternoon a man had walked into the École Polytechnique, the engineering school of the University of Montreal, carrying a hunting rifle, ammunition, and a knife. He entered a mechanical engineering class of about sixty students, separated out the nine women, and told them, "I am fighting feminism." One of the women, Nathalie Provost, responded, "Look, we are just women studying engineering, not necessarily feminists ready to march on the streets to shout we are against men, just students intent on leading a normal life." She reports that his response was, "You're women, you're going to be engineers. You're all a bunch of feminists. I hate feminists."He then opened fire on the women, killing six of them. Then he went from floor to floor in the building, targeting and shooting women.Fourteen women were killed that day, twelve of them engineering students, one a nursing student, and one a university employee.Here are their names: Anne St-Arneault, Geneviève Bergeron, Hélène Colgan, Nathalie Crotea, Barbara Daigneault, Anne-Marie Edward, Maud Haviernick, Barbara Klueznick, Maryse Laganière, Maryse Leclair, Anne-Marie Lemay, Sonia Pelletier, Michèle Richard, and Annie Turcotte. (Me: You can hear more about these women here.)An additional thirteen people were injured. Nathalie Provost was shot four times, but survived. In the weeks, months, and years that followed, among other responses, Canada implemented stricter gun-control regulations, and began to observe December 6th as a National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. The event remains the worst mass murder in Canadian history.Our industry has problems with sexism, whether latent or outright. While we hope never to have another atrocity like this one; we should strive for equality and justice in our industry. As a white dude in tech, I'll do everything I can; and I ask you to do the same. If you've never had to fear for your life just because you wanted to be an engineer, then you too need to stand up and help stop the sexism in our industry. Now, on to what happened last week in the world of .NET.
Dmitry Sotnikov, Chief Product Officer at 42Crunch and curator of https://APIsecurity.io joins Abel Wang for a discussion on the transition to cloud and later to cloud-native, container-based and serverless architectures, which has led to explosion of REST APIs. Now application components talk to each other over the network and become targets of remote cyberattacks. In this episode, we will discuss how 42Crunch and Microsoft technologies including Visual Studio Code, Azure DevOps, and Azure Kubernetes Service can be used to enable end-to-end agile API security from design to runtime protection.Jump To:[01:25] - What is REST API security[05:25] - 42Crunch technology overview[06:20] - Demo: REST API security testing in VS Code[09:51] - Demo: API security testing in CI/CD pipeline[14:23] - Demo: API protection in Azure Kubernetes Services Learn More: REST API security weekly newsletter, encyclopedia, and community resources42Crunch API Security toolsVS Code extension for REST API development and security Azure Kubernetes Services API microfirewallDevOps Lab Favorite Links: Create a Free Azure DevOps AccountAzure DevOps DocsWrite Cool CodeGitHub Actions
Abel Wang joins Donovan Brown to show how to use Azure Pipelines to build and deploy apps for Azure Functions, App Service and even Kubernetes Clusters.[0:00:45] - DemoBuild and deploy Java to Azure FunctionsDeploy a Docker container app to Azure Kubernetes ServiceDeploy a web app to Azure App ServicesAzure DevOps overviewCreate a free account (Azure)
Abel Wang joins Donovan Brown to show how to use Azure Pipelines to build and deploy apps for Azure Functions, App Service and even Kubernetes Clusters.[0:00:45] - DemoBuild and deploy Java to Azure FunctionsDeploy a Docker container app to Azure Kubernetes ServiceDeploy a web app to Azure App ServicesAzure DevOps overviewCreate a free account (Azure)
Abel Wang joins Donovan Brown to show how to use Azure Pipelines to build and deploy apps for Azure Functions, App Service and even Kubernetes Clusters.[0:00:45] - DemoBuild and deploy Java to Azure FunctionsDeploy a Docker container app to Azure Kubernetes ServiceDeploy a web app to Azure App ServicesAzure DevOps overviewCreate a free account (Azure)
Abel Wang joins Donovan Brown to show how to use Azure Pipelines to build and deploy apps for Azure Functions, App Service and even Kubernetes Clusters.[0:00:45] - DemoBuild and deploy Java to Azure FunctionsDeploy a Docker container app to Azure Kubernetes ServiceDeploy a web app to Azure App ServicesAzure DevOps overviewCreate a free account (Azure)
Abel Wang joins Donovan Brown to show how to use Azure Pipelines to build and deploy apps for Azure Functions, App Service and even Kubernetes Clusters.[0:00:45] - DemoBuild and deploy Java to Azure FunctionsDeploy a Docker container app to Azure Kubernetes ServiceDeploy a web app to Azure App ServicesAzure DevOps overviewCreate a free account (Azure)
In this episode, I'm very fortunate to have my first guest come and join me! And what better way to kick this off, than a topic area which is very close to my own heart - DevOps. I'm very excited that I was able to invite Abel Wang, Principal Developer Advocate and DevOps lead to come and join me to talk of his experiences at Microsoft. We jump through a few different areas, from What is DevOps, how it links back to requirements, Data DevOps and shifting left. There's plenty to learn from in this one, so let's dive straight in!
In this week’s podcast, Jeffrey Palermo welcomes Abel Wang on to the show! Abel Wang is a Principal Cloud Advocate specializing in DevOps and Azure with a background in application development at Microsoft. He’s also currently a part of Donovan Brown's ‘League of Extraordinary Cloud DevOps Advocates.’ Before joining Microsoft, Abel spent seven years as a Process Consultant and a Certified Scrum Master helping customers globally develop solutions using agile practices and Team Foundation Server. When he’s not working, Abel is either writing code (yes, that’s what he does for fun), playing one of his many guitars, or training for The Great Wall Marathon now that he is cancer-free! Today, Jeffrey and Abel are discussing DevOps infrastructure. Abel highlights some of the new advances that listeners should be paying attention to as well as some of the things that they should absolutely be doing right now, speaks about being a part of Donavan Brown’s ‘League of Extraordinary Cloud DevOps Advocates,’ shares his passion for all things DevOps, and much more! Topics of Discussion: [:39] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes. [:47] About today’s fantastic guest, Abel Wang! [1:32] Jeffrey welcomes Abel on to the podcast. [1:51] What is The Great Wall Marathon? [3:10] Jeffrey congratulates Abel on being cancer-free and Abel reflects a bit on his past year and overcoming cancer. [3:33] Abel speaks about his background in writing code and how he’s gotten to where he is today in his career. [9:17] The importance of understanding the why behind scrum and agile. [12:44] Fastforwarding into Abel’s career, he speaks about his experience at Microsoft and being a part of Donavan Brown’s ‘League of Extraordinary Cloud DevOps Advocates.’ [14:40] A quick word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [15:07] Jeffrey gives some quick announcements. [15:45] @TheLoECDA’s response time on Twitter. [17:07] Abel highlights some of the new advances that listeners should be paying attention to and/or absolutely be doing right now. He also defines what ‘infrastructure as code’ is. [26:27] Is there going to be integration between GitHub and AzureDevOps or are they going to be kept separate? Abel also gives his reasoning behind why Azure DevOps Services is not going anywhere! [29:14] Abel speaks about the future of being able to have the entire chain all the way through Azure through a press of a button. [31:55] Abel points listeners to his blog for listeners who want to learn more! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Jeffrey Palermo’s Youtube Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Jeffrey@Clear-Measure.com — Email Jeffrey for a free 30-point DevOps inspection (regularly priced at $5000!) — Spaces are limited! Abel Wang’s Website Abel Wang on Twitter The Great Wall Marathon AgileManifesto.org Ken Schwaber Donovan Brown The League of Extraordinary Cloud DevOps Advocates Twitter @TheLoECDA Octopus DeployRedgate SQL Change Automation Continuous Integration: Improving Software Quality and Reducing Risk, by Paul M. Duvall, Steve Matyas, and Andrew Glover Terraform AI and ML GitHub Actions Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
In this episode we catch up with Abel Wang from Microsoft to talk all things Azure DevOps. Abel is a Principal Cloud Advocate and is the DevOps Lead at Microsoft.
We wrap up our 3-part discussion with Abel Wang of Microsoft. Here's where the rubber hits the road - Abel talks with us about the importance of testing, the power of feature flags (Abel’s a tireless advocate for LaunchDarkly, one of our faves), how eliminating flaky tests is key, and Dynatrace.
Part 2 of 3. We continue talking with Abel about feature flags and how to handle estimates so quality is never on the chopping block.
Our first 3-part interview! I love the energy Abel brings to the table, and his background as a serious coder makes his advice both pragmatic and spot on. He’s a fantastic speaker as well, if you’ve ever had the chance to catch him at a conference. (Check out his latest from Build 2018!) He wrote the foreword to my book, and with our conversation we got a chance to revisit some of the things we love most about DevOps and where we see the movement going in the future.
Put the words "Azure DevOps" into any search engine and Abel Wang will certainly show up near the top (see Azure DevOps Updates; Pre-Build 2019 for one recent example). Listen in as Abel shares his passion for Azure DevOps, delivering pitch-perfect insight into both the current and future state of his favorite Microsoft tech. ----more---- Abel Wang is a Principal Cloud Advocate specializing in DevOps and Azure with a background in application development. He is currently part of Donovan Brown's League of Extraordinary Cloud DevOps Advocates. Before joining Microsoft, Abel spent seven years as a Process Consultant and a Certified Scrum Master helping customers globally develop solutions using agile practices and Team Foundation Server. Prior to that, Abel founded and sold his own software company. When not working, Abel is either writing code (yes, that’s what he does for fun), playing his guitar or training for The Great Wall Marathon. Recently diagnosed with cancer, Abel spits in the face of cancer and will never quit. https://abelsquidhead.com https://twitter.com/abelsquidhead https://dev.azure.com https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/devops/?view=azure-devops The episode also features two PSAs from from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Be sure to give the CDC some love (they do a great job!) PLEASE VISIT http://azureability.com for show notes and additional episodes. Also, if you like (or even hate!) what we're doing, please take the time to share your comments and suggestions either by the Podbean App (see links, below), email (lberman@microsoft.com) or Twitter (@azureability). CREDITS: Louis Berman (Host); Abel Wang (Guest); Meryl Streep (PSA); CDC Radio (PSA); Vincent Tone / PremiumBeat (Music); Heather Walsh (Intro/Outro); Louis Berman (Engineer); East Coast Studio (Editing) TRANSCRIPT: https://www.videoindexer.ai/accounts/1c5a0342-11e8-4e1d-b656-d0bf35b80614/videos/dd8dccd6a8/ (be sure to turn "Closed Captioning" to "English"; icon in lower right-hand corner of "video" window)
The latest on Microsoft's customizable platform for running DevOps in your organization or on any tech platform or cloud. Abel Wang, Principal Cloud Developer Advocate at Microsoft, shows you how Azure DevOps can be used with your preferred language, tools, and processes while taking advantage of new first-party GitHub integration for your open source projects. You'll see turn-key, cloud-hosted code versioning, and automated approval workflows plus learn to build and release CI/CD process with Azure pipelines, and automated code quality checks with release gates. Finally, a look at new features, such as IntelliSense and Autocomplete, and our visual editor to help you build quality code faster. To get started with Azure DevOps go to: https://dev.azure.com
Azure DevOps, formerly known as VSTS, is more than just a set of tools. But what is it exactly? How does it help enterprises to deploy better code faster? Does it only work for Azure or other platforms & clouds as well? How can it be extended or integrated into existing processes and tools?Abel Wang, Sr Cloud Developer Advocate at Microsoft, is giving us a tour through Azure DevOps and how he has seen it implemented and integrated into existing enterprise DevOps tool landscapes. We briefly discussed the Unbreakable Delivery Pipeline for Azure DevOps that Abel helped implement and is now available on the Visual Studio Marketplace. So – give it a try and see for yourself what Abel and team has built!Last but not least we also touched upon Azure DevOps for databases and how you to implement regression testing, continuous deployment and canary releases for database updates. Very intriguing topic that we are sure to cover in future sessions in more detail.https://abelsquidhead.com/index.php/2018/08/03/the-dynatrace-unbreakable-pipeline-in-vsts-and-azure-bam/https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=Safiahabib.DynatraceUnbreakablePipelinehttps://twitter.com/AbelSquidHead?lang=en
Azure DevOps, formerly known as VSTS, is more than just a set of tools. But what is it exactly? How does it help enterprises to deploy better code faster? Does it only work for Azure or other platforms & clouds as well? How can it be extended or integrated into existing processes and tools?Abel Wang, Sr Cloud Developer Advocate at Microsoft, is giving us a tour through Azure DevOps and how he has seen it implemented and integrated into existing enterprise DevOps tool landscapes. We briefly discussed the Unbreakable Delivery Pipeline for Azure DevOps that Abel helped implement and is now available on the Visual Studio Marketplace. So – give it a try and see for yourself what Abel and team has built!Last but not least we also touched upon Azure DevOps for databases and how you to implement regression testing, continuous deployment and canary releases for database updates. Very intriguing topic that we are sure to cover in future sessions in more detail.https://abelsquidhead.com/index.php/2018/08/03/the-dynatrace-unbreakable-pipeline-in-vsts-and-azure-bam/https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=Safiahabib.DynatraceUnbreakablePipelinehttps://twitter.com/AbelSquidHead?lang=en
Continuous integration and delivery allows teams to move faster by allowing developers to ship code independently of each other. A multi-stage CD pipeline might consist of development, staging, testing, and production. At each of these stages, a new piece of code undergoes additional tests, so that when the code finally makes it to production, the The post Continuous Delivery Pipelines with Abel Wang appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Azure Friday visited various Microsoft booths in the Expo Hall at Build 2018 to learn what's new. In this episode, Donovan Brown chats with Abel Wang about continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD).For more information, see:DevOps Resource CenterVisual Studio Team ServicesWhat is Continuous Integration?What is Continuous Delivery?Create a free account (Azure)Follow @donovanbrown Follow @AzureFriday Follow @abelsquidhead
Azure Friday visited various Microsoft booths in the Expo Hall at Build 2018 to learn what's new. In this episode, Donovan Brown chats with Abel Wang about agile development.For more information, see:DevOps Resource CenterVisual Studio Team ServicesWhat is Agile? (docs)Create a free account (Azure)Follow @donovanbrown Follow @AzureFriday Follow @abelsquidhead
Azure Friday visited various Microsoft booths in the Expo Hall at Build 2018 to learn what's new. In this episode, Donovan Brown chats with Abel Wang about continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD).For more information, see:DevOps Resource CenterVisual Studio Team ServicesWhat is Continuous Integration?What is Continuous Delivery?Create a free account (Azure)Follow @donovanbrown Follow @AzureFriday Follow @abelsquidhead
Azure Friday visited various Microsoft booths in the Expo Hall at Build 2018 to learn what's new. In this episode, Donovan Brown chats with Abel Wang about agile development.For more information, see:DevOps Resource CenterVisual Studio Team ServicesWhat is Agile? (docs)Create a free account (Azure)Follow @donovanbrown Follow @AzureFriday Follow @abelsquidhead
Jessica Deen and Abel Wang stop by at #GDC18 on their quest to bring DevOps goodness to the game dev community. We talk about the importance of consistency and reaching the next level of intuitive, repeatable processes in your software development. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gamedevbreakdown/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gamedevbreakdown/support
Jessica Deen and Abel Wang stop by at #GDC18 on their quest to bring DevOps goodness to the game dev community. We talk about the importance of consistency and reaching the next level of intuitive, repeatable processes in your software development.
Guest: Abel Wang @AbelSquidHead Full show notes are at https://developeronfire.com/podcast/episode-204-abel-wang-intensity
In this episode Greg and Paul are joined by Abel Wang, chatting up the latest news, views and all about DevOps. For feedback contact radiotfs@outlook.com, call +1 425 233-8379 or visit http://www.radiotfs.com
In this episode Greg and Paul are joined by Abel Wang, chatting up the latest news, views and all about DevOps. For feedback contact radiotfs@outlook.com, call +1 425 233-8379 or visit http://www.radiotfs.com
In this interview, Senior DevOps Program Manager Donovan Brown interviews Senior ALM Consultant Steven St. Jean and Senior Technical Solutions Professional Abel Wang about source control structure and DevOps.Blog: DonovanBrown.comFollow @DonovanBrown Blog: abelsquidhead.comFollow @AbelSquidHead Blog: howstevegotburnedtoday.comFollow @stevestjean
In this interview, Senior DevOps Program Manager Donovan Brown interviews Senior ALM Consultant Steven St. Jean and Senior Technical Solutions Professional Abel Wang about source control structure and DevOps.Blog: DonovanBrown.comFollow @DonovanBrown Blog: abelsquidhead.comFollow @AbelSquidHead Blog: howstevegotburnedtoday.comFollow @stevestjean