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How can building a strong community help elevate your marketing strategy and keep your brand relevant in today's competitive landscape?In this episode of The Hard Corps Marketing Show, we dive into the essential role that community plays in modern marketing. I sat down with Derek E. Weeks, Chief Marketing Officer at Katalon, to explore how building and nurturing communities can be just as crucial as focusing on product and brand.Derek shares insights from his experience creating successful communities like All Day DevOps and Katalon's community, highlighting the core principles of relevance, consistency, and trust. He challenges the common misconception that marketers need to constantly pitch products, advocating instead for genuine engagement and helpful interactions.In this episode, we'll discuss:The critical role of community in driving marketing successHow community-generated content can keep your brand relevant and top-of-mindThe importance of trust and consistency in building lasting connectionsIf you're looking to grow your marketing efforts through authentic connections and long-term engagement, this episode is a must-listen!
We're excited to welcome back Derek Weeks, recognized as the world's foremost researcher on the topic of DevSecOps and securing software supply chains, to the podcast! Derek shares insights on just how little has changed relative to securing software supply chains and using SBOMs in the two years since we last caught up with him. For those new to SBOMs, they are like the nutritional label on a cereal box except for open source software (OSS). We're we're seeing astronomical growth in organizations' use of OSS to the tune of 3+ trillion downloads in 2023. And even with events such as Log4j within the last year, we still haven't had the cataclysmic event to act as a forcing function for more organizations to embrace SBOMs. This has opened the door for the U.S. Government to bring to the table the Securing Open Source Software Act of 2022. Derek also shares perspective on the importance of automation, accountability for supply chain security, investment range for industry to improve the security of code the next two years, and today's realities for those buying cyber insurance. Derek Weeks, Cybersecurity Advocate Derek E. Weeks is the world's foremost researcher on the topic of DevSecOps and securing software supply chains. For the past seven years, he has championed the research of the annual State of the Software Supply Chain Report and the DevSecOps Community Survey. Derek is also the co-founder of All Day DevOps, an online community of 95,000 IT professionals. In 2018, Derek was recognized by DevOps.com as the “Best DevOps Evangelist” for his work in the community. For links and resources discussed in this episode, please visit our show notes at https://www.forcepoint.com/govpodcast/e204
How can we make a better mousetrap if the designers of and the materials that go into the contemporary mousetraps aren't good enough to keep pace with the current mouse? Adapt or perish… now as ever, is nature's inexorable imperative --HG Wells It is not the strongest species that survie, nor the most intelligent… but the ones most responsive to change --Charles Darwin You improvise! You adapt! You overcome! -- Gunnery Sgt Tom Highway; Heartbreak Ridge All due respect to the United States Air Force Do you know what SecDevOps is? Do you know how when or why the concept applies to cybersecurity and the world at large? What if I told you that there are people out there who personify the definition of what we identify as SecDevOps. Well… I gotta guy… On today's episode, Matt Stephenson welcomes Mike Fraser, VP of DevSecOps at Sophos. We take a look at the role that developers can and must play in the world of cybersecurity. These aren't the folks building the security building... the are the ones making the bricks and hammers used to construct that building. How important are the materials used to construct the very infrastructure of an entire industry? Tune in and find out... About Mike Fraser Mike Fraser is Vice President of DevSecOps at Sophos. Previously, he was co-founder, CEO and chief architect at Refactr (acquired by Sophos in 2021) where he spearheaded the creation of a DevSecOps automation platform that bridges the gap between DevOps and cybersecurity. Mike is a regular speaker at numerous industry events, including Hashiconf, Hashitalks, KubeSec, various Microsoft events, RedHat AnsibleFest, DevOps Days, and All Day DevOps. He has also published several feature articles including on TechCrunch, RSA 365, and DevOps.com. In addition to his Sophos role, Mike helps advise other veteran-led software startups. While leading Refactr, Mike earned a bachelor's degree in application development from North Seattle College and has a master's degree in computer science from Seattle University. He is also, and it is clearly stated on his CV, the World's Coolest Dad About Matt Stephenson My name is Matt Stephenson (@packmatt73) and I have hosted podcasts, videos and live events all over the world which put me with experts on every corner of the cybersecurity landscape. pm73media is my first solo endeavor. On this platform and others to come, I will continue to expand upon the tradition we started with the Insecurity podcast as I seek out the leading minds in the tech industry and beyond. I am always looking for fun people who may break things every now and again. In 20 years in the ecosystem of Data Protection and Cybersecurity I have toured the world extolling the virtues of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning and how, when applied to information security, these technologies can wrong-foot the bad guys. Whether in person, live virtual events or podcasting, I get to interview interesting people doing interesting things all over the world of technology and the extended world of hacking. Sometimes, that means hacking elections or the coffee supply chain... other times that means social manipulation or the sovereign wealth fund of a national economy. Wherever I go, my job is all about talking with the people who build, manage or wreck the systems that we have put in place to make the world go round... If you tuned in to any of my previous podcasts, there's great news…! pm73media is here! I will be bringing the same kind of energy and array of guests you know and love. Best part? We're still at the same spot. You can find it at Spotify, Apple, Amazon Music & Audible as well as GooglePlay, Gaana, Himalaya, I Heart Radio and wherever you get your podcasts! Make sure you Subscribe, Rate and Review!
Ernest has a degree in electrical engineering from Rice University has been working in technology and technology management for more than 25 years, ranging from enterprises like FedEx, National Instruments, and AT&T cybersecurity to startups like Bazaarvoice, CopperEgg, Precision Autonomy, and Verica. He's been a web developer, operations engineer, product manager, engineering director, and more. He advocates for using Agile, Lean, DevOps, and smart management processes to solve business problems in a fast-moving world. Ernest is noted leader in the DevOps movement and the Austin technical community. He helps organize the CloudAustin user group and the DevOpsDays Austin and All Day DevOps conferences. He blogs with a cadre of like-thinking professionals at theagileadmin.com. Currently, Ernest resides in Round Rock, Texas. His engineering team at Verica develops a product that performs chaos engineering experiments for Kubernetes, to help enterprises use continuous verification to ensure the resilience of their systems.
DevSecOps? SecDevOps? Jeff… Kevin? Wait… what? On this episode of InSecurity, Matt Stephenson has a chat with Refactr co-founder & CEO Mike Fraser about the World of DevSecOps and the role it plays in contemporary Cybersecurity ecosphere. We dig into the relevance of low-code/no-code and FINALLY get handle on Conway’s Law as it applies to security. No idea what we're talking about? Tune in and find out… About Mike Fraser Mike Fraser (@itascode) is the Co-founder, CEO, Chief Architect of Refactr. He started his career in the US Air Force working on F-15 weapon systems and later as a cybersecurity engineer. Mike has founded multiple tech companies and is a regular speaker at industry events, including Hashiconf, various Microsoft events, Red Hat AnsibleFest and All Day DevOps. He has published several articles including on TechCrunch, RSA 365, CRN, and The New Stack, and appeared on the cover of Channel Pro Magazine. About Matt Stephenson Insecurity Podcast host Matt Stephenson (@packmatt73) leads the Broadcast Media team at BlackBerry, which puts me in front of crowds, cameras, and microphones all over the world. I am the regular host of the InSecurity podcast and video series at events around the globe. I have spent the last 10 years in the world of Data Protection and Cybersecurity. Since 2016, I have been with Cylance (now BlackBerry) extolling the virtues of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning and how, when applied to network security, can wrong-foot the bad guys. Prior to the COVID shutdown, I was on the road over 100 days a year doing live malware demonstrations for audiences from San Diego to DC to London to Abu Dhabi to Singapore to Sydney. One of the funniest things I've ever been a part of was blowing up a live instance of NotPetya 6 hours after the news broke... in Washington DC... directly across the street from FBI HQ... as soon as we activated it a parade of police cars with sirens blaring roared past the building we were in. I'm pretty they weren't there for us, but you never know... Every week on the InSecurity Podcast, I get to interview interesting people doing interesting things all over the world of cybersecurity and the extended world of hacking. Sometimes, that means hacking elections or the coffee supply chain... other times that means social manipulation or the sovereign wealth fund of a national economy. InSecurity is about talking with the people who build, manage or wreck the systems that we have put in place to make the world go round... Can’t get enough of Insecurity? You can find us at Spotify, Apple Podcasts and ThreatVector as well as GooglePlay, Gaana, Himalaya, I Heart Radio and wherever you get your podcasts! Make sure you Subscribe, Rate and Review!
DevOps practices are shared via community, and community manifests at conferences. Unfortunately, conferences are not possible right now due to COVID-19. The world has turned to virtual conferences. All Day DevOps is a 24 hour conference sharing learnings and software strategies around DevOps, starting November 12th. Derek Weeks and Mark Miller are organizers of the conference and they join the show to talk about modern DevOps.
DevOps practices are shared via community, and community manifests at conferences. Unfortunately, conferences are not possible right now due to COVID-19. The world has turned to virtual conferences. All Day DevOps is a 24 hour conference sharing learnings and software strategies around DevOps, starting November 12th. Derek Weeks and Mark Miller are organizers of the The post DevOps Community with Derek Weeks and Mark Miller appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
DevOps practices are shared via community, and community manifests at conferences. Unfortunately, conferences are not possible right now due to COVID-19. The world has turned to virtual conferences. All Day DevOps is a 24 hour conference sharing learnings and software strategies around DevOps, starting November 12th. Derek Weeks and Mark Miller are organizers of the The post DevOps Community with Derek Weeks and Mark Miller appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
DevOps practices are shared via community, and community manifests at conferences. Unfortunately, conferences are not possible right now due to COVID-19. The world has turned to virtual conferences. All Day DevOps is a 24 hour conference sharing learnings and software strategies around DevOps, starting November 12th. Derek Weeks and Mark Miller are organizers of the The post DevOps Community with Derek Weeks and Mark Miller appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
Derek Weeks is a huge advocate of applying proven supply chain management principles into DevOps practices to improve efficiencies, reduce security risks, and sustain long-lasting competitive advantages. He currently serves as vice president and DevOps advocate at Sonatype. Derek is the co-founder of All Day DevOps, an amazing virtual conference bring together DevOps practitioners and thought leaders. It’s the largest virtual conference in the world, educating DevOps professionals through online training and blog content, and host over 180 local community events in 20 countries around the world. Since its founding in September 2016, our community has grown to over 130,000 strong. For links and resources discussed in this episode, please visit our show notes at https://www.forcepoint.com/govpodcast/e98 Have a guest you think would be great for the podcast? Please email Carolyn cford@forcepointgov.com.
Derek Weeks has spent his entire career teaching, educating, and fostering relationships. From his first job with Atari teaching people how to use its consoles, to his role today as a Vice President and DevOps advocate at Sonatype, Derek works to educate others. Derek joined IT Visionaries for a conversation centered on the growth of the DevOps industry and how he is helping to grow that community through All Day DevOps, an online 24-hour conference featuring more than 100 speakers. Key Takeaways A Growing Industry: Five years ago if 1,000 people attended a developer’s conference it was considered a success. Now, more than 40,000 developers routinely attend All Day DevOps conferences. More Widely-Adopted, But Not Flawless: The use of open-source code continues to rise in popularity due to its velocity and efficiency, but it’s not without vulnerabilities, downloads that included encrypted code, or malware Seeking Clarity: Many companies still fail to understand exactly what DevOps is, where DevOps can be used, and the benefits of the DevOps industry. Therefore, a lot of education still needs to happen internally as well as externally. --- IT Visionaries is brought to you by the Salesforce Customer 360 Platform - the #1 cloud platform for digital transformation of every experience. Build connected experiences, empower every employee, and deliver continuous innovation - with the customer at the center of everything you do. Learn more at salesforce.com/platform
En el episodio 57 del podcast de https://www.entredevyops.es/ hablaremos con Nicolás Demarchi sobre la organización de un evento online como la EuroPython 2020. Blog Entre Dev y Ops - https://www.entredevyops.es Telegram Entre Dev y Ops - https://t.me/entredevyops Twitter Entre Dev y Ops - https://twitter.com/EntreDevYOps LinkedIn Entre Dev y Ops - https://www.linkedin.com/in/entre-dev-y-ops-a7404385/ Patreon Entre Dev y Ops - https://www.patreon.com/edyo Amazon Entre Dev y Ops - https://amzn.to/2HrlmRw Enlaces comentados: PyAmsterdam - https://py.amsterdam/ PyCamp - https://pycamp.es/ EuroPython - https://blog.europython.eu/ EuroPython Society - https://www.europython-society.org/ Remote Python Pizza - https://remote.python.pizza/ Pyjamas - https://pyjamas.live/ All Day DevOps - https://www.alldaydevops.com/ Podcast 12: EuroPython 2015 - https://www.entredevyops.es/podcasts/podcast-episodio-12.html PyCon Argentina 2018 - https://eventos.python.org.ar/events/pyconar2018/ Programa EuroPython 2020 - https://ep2020.europython.eu/schedule/ EuroPython 2020 Online Conference Tools - https://docs.google.com/document/d/1OAVtZnxVgmkDGvSV1vEzra7m5Nfjr-81kCrustzxAek/edit Traducción de Python a Español - https://github.com/python/python-docs-es Sprints en la EuroPython 2020 - https://ep2020.europython.eu/events/sprints/ Twitter Nico/Gilgamezh - https://twitter.com/gilgamezh FE DE ERRATAS: Nico comentó que tenían un ponente de Mauritania, pero se confundió, se refería a Mauricio - https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauricio
In this podcast Shane Hastie, Lead Editor for Culture & Methods, spoke to Derek Weeks of Sonatype about the results of the 2020 DevSecOps Community Survey and the All Day DevOps conference. Why listen to this podcast: • If you’re doing DevOps correctly then DevSecOps is already a part of it • Organisations with mature DevOps practices have more security tools and security is more tightly integrated into the overall environment • Organisations with mature teams have a higher percentage of happier developers within their organizations than the immature ones • Happy developers are 3.6 times more likely to pay attention to security • In organisations with unhappy developers the primary cause of friction in the development process is management, in happy environments it is other developers More on this: Quick scan our curated show notes on InfoQ https://bit.ly/379gYEf You can also subscribe to the InfoQ newsletter to receive weekly updates on the hottest topics from professional software development. bit.ly/24x3IVq Subscribe: www.youtube.com/infoq Like InfoQ on Facebook: bit.ly/2jmlyG8 Follow on Twitter: twitter.com/InfoQ Follow on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/infoq Check the landing page on InfoQ: https://bit.ly/379gYEf
This week we offer hot takes on a whole bunch of topics including: COBOL, Unikernels, AWS Bottlerocket, Zoom, Slack, Circle CI, Marketplaces and IBM. Relevant to your interests Unikernels are unfit for production (https://www.joyent.com/blog/unikernels-are-unfit-for-production) Knative Crowds out Other Serverless Software (and Other CNCF Survey Takeaways) (https://thenewstack.io/knative-crowds-out-other-serverless-software-packages-and-other-cncf-survey-takeaways/) Bottlerocket: a special-purpose container operating system (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/containers/bottlerocket-a-special-purpose-container-operating-system/) Slack, Teams and Conferencing Slack is working on integrating with rival Microsoft Teams for calls, says CEO Stewart Butterfield (https://www.cnbc.com/2020/03/26/slack-is-working-on-microsoft-teams-calling-integration-says-ceo.html) DHH is not happy with Zoom (https://twitter.com/dhh/status/1245097507488583681?s=21) Maybe we shouldn’t use Zoom after all (https://techcrunch.com/2020/03/31/zoom-at-your-own-risk/) Microsoft’s Skype struggles have created a Zoom moment (https://www.theverge.com/2020/3/31/21200844/microsoft-skype-zoom-houseparty-coronavirus-pandemic-usage-growth-competition) Zoom responds with a Blog Post (https://blog.zoom.us/wordpress/2020/04/01/a-message-to-our-users/) Google Has Banned Zoom Software From Employees' Computers, Citing Security Vulnerabilities (https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/pranavdixit/google-bans-zoom) Zoom isn’t Malware. (https://medium.com/@0xamit/zoom-isnt-malware-ae01618e2046) IBM New IBM CEO Arvind Krishna says hybrid cloud will be bigger than mainframes, services, middleware (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2020/04/07/arvind_krishna_becomes_ibm_ceo_letter_to_staff/) IBM Taps Former Bank of America CTO to Oversee Cloud Business (https://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2020/04/06/business/06reuters-ibm-moves.html) My first day as CEO - our journey together (https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/my-first-day-ceo-our-journey-together-arvind-krishna/) RHEL pusher Paul Cormier appointed CEO to lead Red Hat into the IBM era (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2020/04/06/red_hat_ceo_paul_cormier/) Email to associates from Red Hat president and CEO, Paul Cormier (https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/email-associates-red-hat-president-and-ceo-paul-cormier) CircleCI CircleCI Raises $100M Series E (https://news.crunchbase.com/news/circleci-raises-100m-series-e/) CircleCI raises $100 million for automated app testing and deployment (https://venturebeat.com/2020/04/07/circleci-100-million-automate-app-testing-and-deployment/) Apple Apple acquires popular weather app Dark Sky and will shut down the Android version (https://www.theverge.com/2020/3/31/21201666/apple-acquires-weather-app-dark-sky-shut-down-android-wear-os-ios) Apple's SMS one-time passcode proposal moves forward with help from Google (https://appleinsider.com/articles/20/04/07/apples-sms-one-time-passcode-proposal-moves-forward-with-help-from-google) Apple to Buy Virtual Reality Streaming Company NextVR for $100 Million (https://wccftech.com/apple-to-buy-virtual-reality-streaming-company-nextvr-for-100-million/) iOS 14: Keychain password manager to gain new 1Password-like features (https://9to5mac.com/2020/04/01/ios-14-keychain-password-features/) The a16z Marketplace 100 - Andreessen Horowitz (https://a16z.com/2020/02/18/marketplace-100/) Simplified global game management: Introducing Game Servers (https://cloudblog-withgoogle-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/cloudblog.withgoogle.com/products/gaming/introducing-google-cloud-game-servers/amp/) Forrester’s Surprising Discovery About Robotic Process Automation (https://thenewstack.io/forresters-surprising-discovery-about-robotic-process-automation/) Next frontier in Microsoft, Google, Amazon cloud battle is over a world without code (https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/01/new-microsoft-google-amazon-cloud-battle-over-world-without-code.html) Booz Allen analyzed 200+ Russian hacking operations to better understand their tactics (https://www.zdnet.com/article/booz-allen-analyzed-200-russian-hacking-operations-to-better-understand-their-tactics/) Update #2 on Microsoft cloud services continuity (https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/update-2-on-microsoft-cloud-services-continuity/) The Next Chapter of Meetup (https://www.meetup.com/blog/the-next-chapter-of-meetup/) SoftBank May Not Buy $3 Billion in WeWork Shares (https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/17/business/softbank-wework-shares.html) Portland technology companies lay off dozens amid coronavirus outbreak (https://www.oregonlive.com/silicon-forest/2020/03/portland-marketing-technology-startup-opal-lays-off-20-amid-coronavirus-outbreak.html) OneWeb goes bankrupt, lays off staff, will sell satellite-broadband business (https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2020/03/oneweb-goes-bankrupt-wont-challenge-spacex-in-satellite-broadband-race/) HashiCorp Joins the CNCF (https://www.hashicorp.com/blog/hashicorp-joins-the-cncf/) Welcoming 3D Spatial Mapping Leader 6D.ai to Niantic: Accelerating Real-World AR Innovation - Niantic (https://nianticlabs.com/blog/6d/) MongoDB’s field-level encryption protects private data—even from DBAs (https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2020/04/mongodbs-field-level-encryption-protects-private-data-even-from-dbas/) Medtronic Shares Ventilation Design Specifications to Accelerate Efforts to Increase Global Ventilator Production (http://newsroom.medtronic.com/news-releases/news-release-details/medtronic-shares-ventilation-design-specifications-accelerate) Microsoft announces agreement to acquire Affirmed Networks to deliver new opportunities for a global 5G ecosystem (https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2020/03/26/microsoft-announces-agreement-to-acquire-affirmed-networks-to-deliver-new-opportunities-for-a-global-5g-ecosystem/) Founded by Ex-Googlers, Tailscale Launches to Secure and Simplify Remote Network Access With $3M (https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200402005017/en/Founded-Ex-Googlers-Tailscale-Launches-Secure-Simplify-Remote) Kpt: Packaging up your Kubernetes configuration with git and YAML since 2014 (https://opensource.googleblog.com/2020/03/kpt-packaging-up-your-kubernetes.html) Why Covid-19 has resulted in New Jersey desperately needing COBOL programmers (https://qz.com/1832988/covid-19-results-in-new-jersey-desperately-needing-cobol-coders/) Don’t Mute, Get a Better Headset (https://ma.tt/2020/03/dont-mute-get-a-better-headset/) Non Sense Inside the Story of How H-E-B Planned for the Pandemic (https://www.texasmonthly.com/food/heb-prepared-coronavirus-pandemic/) Lobsters given seats on coronavirus rescue flights... (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2020/04/01/lobsters_coronavirus_australia/) 50,000 Microsoft employees are currently replying all to a company-wide email. (https://twitter.com/tomwarren/status/1243293912049090566?s=21) My boss turned herself into a potato on our Microsoft teams meeting (https://twitter.com/PettyClegg/status/1244649528285855746) HP TouchPad History: A Fire Sale 49 Days After Release (https://tedium.co/2020/03/31/hp-touchpad-history/) Trump order encourages US to mine the moon (https://paper.dropbox.com/doc/SDT-227--Ax2Uwny~HBV2GC0LqlnGLoEDAg-tTxEENZQ7Uw3eBuH3P5GB) CNCF Puzzle (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EVB5M3vWoAAVg9C.jpg) Sponsors MongoDB Sign up at: https://www.mongodb.com/cloud/atlas/register. After you create your account enter code ATLASSDT in the payments & billing section and get $200 in free credits. Attend MongoDB’s virtual event MongoDB.Live (http://MongoDB.Live) on June 9-10, 2020 Conferences, Videos et. al. Chef Tools & Terraform: Better Together (https://www.hashicorp.com/resources/chef-tools-and-terraform-better-together) from Matt Ray Michael Coté - Intro - Spring Live (https://tanzu.vmware.com/content/spring-live-videos/michael-cot%C3%A9-intro-spring-live) Mykel Alvis (https://www.alldaydevops.com/addo-speakers/mykel-alvis) is speaking at All Day DevOps (https://www.alldaydevops.com/spring-break) Virtual Conference on April 17, 2020 ChefConf 2020 (https://chefconf.chef.io/) June 2, 2020 All Digital. (https://www.chefconf.io/) MongoDB’s virtual event MongoDB.Live (http://MongoDB.Live) on June 9-10, 2020 Dev (https://devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/)O (https://devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/)ps (https://devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/)D (https://devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/)ays Minneapolis, (https://devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/) August 4 - 5, 2020 use code SDT for 10% off registration. THAT Conference (https://www.thatconference.com/wi) August 3 - 6 in Wisconsin Dells®. SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop stickers! Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/) Listen to the Software Defined Interviews Podcast (https://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/). Check out the back catalog (http://cote.coffee/howtotech/). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Use the code SDT to get $20 off Coté’s book, (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt) Digital WTF (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt), so $5 total. Recommendations Brandon: Ozark (https://www.netflix.com/title/80117552) and Tiger King (https://www.netflix.com/title/81115994) Matt Ray: The Memory Palace Music to Wash Hands By (https://thememorypalace.us/2020/04/music-to-wash-hands-by/) Disunited Nations (https://amzn.to/34tDWow) Photo by Ciel Cheng on Unsplash (https://unsplash.com/photos/VRTcPxPS-ds) Photo by James Besser on Unsplash (https://unsplash.com/photos/gJ2bYQLsthY)
When Derek Weeks and I started All Day DevOps in 2016, we were unsure as to whether anyone would be interested.It's now four years later. Last week we had close to 37,000 people register for the event. We're still trying to wrap our head around the scale of something that generates a world wide audience in the tens of thousands for a 24 hour conference. One of the things that has grown organically from All Day DevOps is a concept called "Viewing Parties". It's an idea the community has created, not something planned by us. Over 170 organizations, meetups or user groups around the world setup a large screen and invited colleagues and friends over to share in the DevOps journeys that were being told throughout the day. Last year, we heard through the grapevine that State Farm had over 600 people show up to participate at their viewing party in Dallas. That's 600 people internally at State Farm. When I heard about it, I knew I had to speak with Kevin ODell, Technology Director and DevOps Advocate at State Farm, the person who coordinated the event. Our initial conversation was a fascinating view into how he pulled off such a large event, internally. We kept in touch throughout the year, leading up to 2019 All Day DevOps. Keeping track of the registrations for Kevin, he soon came to realize what he had created was now a viral event at State Farm. For 2019, State Farm had 4000 of their 6000 developers confirmed to attend All Day DevOps. To me, that's just remarkable. While at the DevOps Enterprise Summit last month, Kevin and I sat down to talk about how he created such an incredible event, the process for getting business buy-in, and how he measures the value of letting 4000 developers collectively watch videos for the day. Even if I wasn't one of the co-founders of All Day DevOps, I'd find this a fascinating story. Stay with us and I think you'll be impressed, too.
If you do not know about ADDO, yet, this is the right time to learn about it and be part of this borderless online event. All Day DevOps is the world's largest DevOps conference, bringing together over 30,000 DevOps professionals. It offers 150 expert-led sessions over 24 hours across 5 tracks - all online, all for free. All sessions are all delivered from practitioners like you — with no vendor pitches allowed. Tracks include CI/CD, Cloud-Native Infrastructure, DevSecOps, Cultural Transformations, and Site Reliability Engineering. All the talks are recorded live with Q&A and are conducted through All Day DevOps Slack channels. As a media partner for this event, we spoke with the founders and organizers, Mark Miller and Derek Weeks. During our chat, Mark and Derek gave us a brief view of the history of the event, the success it's had, what's coming up for this year's series of talks, and how people can engage — right from the comfort of their couch if they choose. We enjoyed the conversation. Have a listen and see you online on November 6, 2019 - beginning at 3 AM EST (7 AM GMT)a Cheers! ______ For more ITSPmagazine content >>> https://www.itspmagazine.com/
Once a year, Sacha Labourey and I sit down to discuss the past year and what the coming year looks like for DevOps and Jenkins. As CEO of CloudBees, Sacha has broad visibility into the progress of the DevOps/DevSecOps communities. We started our talk this year, commenting on the growth of the Jenkins World conference, with over 2000 attendees... what does Sacha attribute that to and does it coincide with the growth within the DevOps community. We continued our discussion by examining how cultural transformation within a company must align with the tools that are available to help with that transformation. Along the way we touched on where cultural transformation comes from within an enterprise, the question of whether DevOps has yet to jumped the chasm, the tipping point for a company's full acceptance of DevOps patterns, and what does Sacha hope to accomplish in the coming year All Day DevOps: A Supporter of DevSecOps Podcast If you're listening to this podcast, you've probably heard of All Day DevOps. This year, All Day DevOps has expanded to 150 sessions, including 9 sessions dedicated to OWASP projects such as Seba talking about DevOps Assurance with OWASP SAMMv2, the OWASP Security Knowledge Framework with Glen & Ricardo ten Cate, DevSecOps in Azure with OWASP DevSlop featuring Tanya Janca, and an overview of the OWASP Top 10 with Caroline Wong. Simon talking about the OWASP ZAP HUD project is another session not to be missed. All Day DevOps is a free, community event, sponsored and supported by hundreds of organizations like yours from around the world. Registration is free. Go to All Day DevOps dot com to register and start building your schedule. All Day DevOps. All live. All online. All free.
Announcements: InfoSec Campout Conference (Eventbrite, social contract, etc): https://www.infoseccampout.com All Day Devops (https://www.alldaydevops.com) free talks online... Next conference starts 06 November 2019 ------ Tanya Janca (@shehackspurple) @wosectweets - Women of Security DevOps Tools for free/cheap. They are all on github right, so they are all free? Python, Docker, k8s, Jenkins Licensing can be a problem Free-mium software, or trialware is useful? OWASP DevSlop Module Nicole Becker Pixie - insecure instagram “Betty Coin” SSLlabs - Qualys Mentoring Monday: What is “Mentoring Monday”? What does it take to be a good mentor? Should a mentee have a goal in mind? Something other than “I want to be just like you”? Do you assist in creating the relationship? What if they don’t meld? Are there any restrictions? Any place in someone’s career? How do you apply? Advocating and being a good ally Leading Cyber Ladies: https://twitter.com/LadiesCyber WoSec International - https://twitter.com/WoSECtweets 19 Chapters worldwide Africa, No. America, Europe Goal? (hacker workshops) Submitting talks at cons Outreaching (how would people get involved) Mentorship involved in this? Global AppSec Videos on youtube: OWASP DevSlop: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSmjcWvgVBqF3x_7e5rfe3A https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSmjcWvgVBqF3x_7e5rfe3A Blog Site: https://dev.to/shehackspurple Check out our Store on Teepub! https://brakesec.com/store Join us on our #Slack Channel! Send a request to @brakesec on Twitter or email bds.podcast@gmail.com #Brakesec Store!:https://www.teepublic.com/user/bdspodcast #Spotify: https://brakesec.com/spotifyBDS #RSS: https://brakesec.com/BrakesecRSS #Youtube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/c/BDSPodcast #iTunes Store Link: https://brakesec.com/BDSiTunes #Google Play Store: https://brakesec.com/BDS-GooglePlay Our main site: https://brakesec.com/bdswebsite #iHeartRadio App: https://brakesec.com/iHeartBrakesec #SoundCloud: https://brakesec.com/SoundcloudBrakesec Comments, Questions, Feedback: bds.podcast@gmail.com Support Brakeing Down Security Podcast by using our #Paypal: https://brakesec.com/PaypalBDS OR our #Patreon https://brakesec.com/BDSPatreon #Twitter: @brakesec @boettcherpwned @bryanbrake @infosystir #Player.FM : https://brakesec.com/BDS-PlayerFM #Stitcher Network: https://brakesec.com/BrakeSecStitcher #TuneIn Radio App: https://brakesec.com/TuneInBrakesec
Let's not talk around the subject here... women are under represented when it comes to speaking or participating in tech conferences. It's a male dominated culture. When I saw Lani Rosales had published, "The Ultimate list of Austin women who can speak at your tech event" in response to the complaint that there are no women speakers available in the tech industry, I called her right away. As co-founder of the world's largest DevOps conference, All Day DevOps, and as one of the core organizers of the global DevSecOps Days series of events, I wanted to hear how the list came together, her motiviation for creating the list and how the tech community has responded to an overt call for women speakers. One of the most surprising topics during our conversation was the continual reference to "the vanity of diversity". Lani is opposed to replacing males speakers just for the sake of having a token female speaker or panelists. As she says it, "Let's not remove male speakers, let's add female speakers." When she said that, it resonated with me. That's how true diversity works: add women, don't subtract men. Lani's vision is to make attendees, all attendees, feel welcome, represented and given the feeling that their way of thinking is welcome in the room, in the conference, and in the community. That's the true reason for diversity, and that's what we'll be talking about today. The Ultimate List of Austin Women Who Can Speak at Your Tech Event https://theamericangenius.com/tech-news/austin-women/
I produced my first concert at the San Anselmo Playhouse in 1979. It was the first in a series of events that has lasted 40 years. I have produced more than 300 events and participated in many hundreds more as a speaker and participant. As the producer of this many events, I have an internal map of what to do to make an event successful, the steps to create and manage the logistics of an event, and how to promote them. All Day DevOps, a live online conference I co-founded with Derek Weeks, has over 30,000 registrations yearly. This type of involvement gives me a unique perspective into why an event is successful. In the past few years, I've been sketching out a "How To.." manual on producing successful events. When the book "Building Internal Conferences" came across my radar, my first thought was "Good! Something I won't have to do." After looking through the book, I called authors Matthew Skelton and Victoria Morgan-Smith to trade stories on tips and tricks for managing successful events. You might ask yourself at this point, "Why is this being covered on a tech podcast?" With so much to choose from when it comes to webinars, meetups, user groups and conferences, many companies are choosing to host their own event internally, or participate as supporters of a regional event. Industry conferences such as DevOps Days, DevSecOps Days, and SharePoint Saturday are run by local teams who are engaged in community development and education. This episode of the DevSecOps Podcast focuses on helping you as an event organizer avoid the "Epic Failures" that would stop your event from being a success. Where to find the book: https://confluxdigital.net/conflux-books/book-internal-tech-conferences
Mohammed A. “secfigo” Imran is the Founder and CTO of Eracorp Technologies/Practical DevSecOps and a seasoned security professional with 8 years of experience in helping organisations with their Information Security Programs. He has a diverse background in R&D, consulting and product-based industries with a passion to solve complex security programs. Imran is the founder of Null Singapore, the largest information security community in Singapore where he has organised more than 60 events & workshops to spread security awareness.He was also nominated as a community star for being the go-to person in the community whose contribution and knowledge sharing has helped many professionals in the security industry. He is usually seen speaking and giving trainings in conferences like Blackhat, DevSecCon, AppSec, All Day DevOps, Nullcon and many other international conferences.
Derek Weeks, Co-Founder of All Day DevOps and Vice President at Sonatype, joins us for a conversation on how marketing to communities has changed over the past couple of years. We also discussed the value of going viral versus building a legacy.
The major security breach at Equifax in 2017 should have been a wakeup call for many – but how much have dev and security practices changed since to ensure it doesn’t happen again? How vulnerable are the open source components you are using? How quickly can you identify and deploy security fixes? This was the topic of our discussion with Derek Weeks, the Vice President at Sonatype, to talk about why security should be included in DevOps, the difficultly of compliance for open source usage and what may be in store for organizations that don’t take security seriously. “If you don’t think you’re consuming a lot of open source, you really have to look at the reality of how software is built today… There are only six million JavaScript developers on the planet and they’re downloading 6 billion components a week.” Weeks offers small changes that developers– pressed for time – can make to make software products safer. Greg Bledsoe hosts at the DevOps Enterprise Summit in Las Vegas. Reach out to our guest: - Twitter @weekstweets - Linkedin www.linkedin.com/in/derekeweeks/ - All Day DevOps: www.alldaydevops.com/ The Agile Amped podcast is the shared voice of the Agile community, driven by compelling stories, passionate people, and innovative ideas. Together, we are advancing the impact of business agility. Podcast library: www.agileamped.com Connect with us on social media! Twitter: twitter.com/AgileAmpedFacebook: www.facebook.com/agileampedInstagram: www.instagram.com/agileamped/
Why would you allow open source usage in your company. What are the compelling reasons to take the risk. In this discussion, I talk with Topo Pal and Derek Weeks about the industry perception of open source and what's really happening behind the curtain at large enterprises. Topo had just finished his keynote presentation at DevOps Enterprise Summit 2018 and I wanted to dive a little deeper into some of the things he talked about. About Topo Pal Dr. Topo Pal is Senior Director & Sr. Engineering Fellow Capital One. His main areas of expertise are in DevOps/DevOpsSec/ Rugged DevOps and Continuous Integration, Continuous Delivery. Topo is also interested in Natural Language Processing, Information Extraction, Architecture Strategy, Application Architecture and Integration Architecture. About Derek Weeks Derek E. Weeks, Vice President, Sonatype. Derek is a huge advocate of applying proven supply chain management principles into DevOps practices to improve efficiencies and sustain long-lasting competitive advantages. He currently serves as vice president and DevOps advocate at Sonatype, creators of the Nexus repository manager and the global leader in solutions for software supply chain automation. Derek is also the co-founder of All Day DevOps, an online community of 40,000 IT professionals, and the lead researcher behind the annual State of the Software Supply Chain report for the DevOps industry. In 2018, Derek was recognized by DevOps.com as the "Best DevOps Evangelist" for his work in the community.
This is Mark Miller, Executive Producer. 4 years ago I took over the creation and curation of the OWASP podcast series. In that time, there have been 118 episodes, with a combined listenership of over 269,000 plays. The series began as a way to speak with OWASP project leads and chapters leaders to let the community hear what was being worked on. Gradually, the show has morphed into something broader. Recent broadcasts highlighting the work done in the DevOps and DevSecOps Communities receives well over 2000 listeners per episode. We have helped give exposure to DevSecOps practitioners at major AppSec Conferences in Europe and the United States, I have produced the DevSecOps tracks at RSA Conference in San Francisco and Singapore for the past 3 years, and we've given voice to the security practitioner in lieu of the security vendor through the production of All Day DevOps. This has allowed us to reach out to new communities, a new listenership, interested in hearing how software security is changing from a manual, labor intensive process, to an automated, supply chain solution. Cultural transformation, Continuous Delivery/Continuous integration, Cloud Native Infrastructure, and Site Reliability Engineer are all topics needing coverage if we are to truly build secure software. The future of this podcast series is in focusing on DevSecOps and the practitioners who are willing to share their stories and solutions to the OWASP Community. I'll talk with people like DJ Schleen who runs the DevSecOps initiative at Aetna, John Willis who brought the first DevOps Days to the United States, and Shannon Lietz who has introduced the concept of Red Teams to her colleagues at Intuit. We will continue to highlight OWASP projects and chapters, while having discussions that are inclusive of other communities with different ideas on the future of software security. It's an important transition historically to a safer, more secure world and we want everyone be be a part of it. I hope you stay with us as we begin to explore new voices, expand on existing ideas and highlight the diversity that will truly change our industry. Welcome to the new podcast series, DevSecOps Days.
Mark Miller and Derek Weeks of Sonatype tag team this episode of DevOps Radio with host Andre Pino. In their chat with Andre, the duo, who are fans of open source, talk about All Day DevOps, the industry-wide virtual conference pioneered by Sonatype. We think they could literally talk about DevOps “all day.”
In this episode Greg and Josh are joined by Mikael Krief and they talk about Mikael's many cool projects like the Yeoman generator VSTS-EXT, latest VSTS news, All Day DevOps, DevOps without the ps, and much more. For feedback contact radiotfs@outlook.com, call +1 425 233-8379 or visit http://www.radiotfs.com
In this episode Greg and Josh are joined by Mikael Krief and they talk about Mikael's many cool projects like the Yeoman generator VSTS-EXT, latest VSTS news, All Day DevOps, DevOps without the ps, and much more. For feedback contact radiotfs@outlook.com, call +1 425 233-8379 or visit http://www.radiotfs.com
Docker’s now into kubernetes, being the last major vendor outside of Amazon to latch the orchestration framework into its strategy. Yup, as usual, it’s pretty much just kubernetes business yappin’. This week’s exegesis We’ll be looking at (https://www.patreon.com/sdt) The Four (https://www.patreon.com/sdt) this week in the exeges (https://www.patreon.com/sdt)i (https://www.patreon.com/sdt)s podcast (https://www.patreon.com/sdt). Coté is vacillating between upset and ¯_(ツ)_/¯ $1 Class-action settlements Got my Apple iBooks pay-day (https://twitter.com/cote/status/920720718639370247)! It was $1.14. For $1.14, I don’t think any sort of crime was committed. Coffee costs triple that (double if you shop around). Sounds like a big waste of time and money. Did I ever tell you about that refund gift card from T-Mobile I got? For 3 cents? What the fuck I do with that? Soon we’ll all bow to kubernetes Docker adds in support (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/10/17/docker_ee_kubernetes_support/), official web-page with burger and brief value-props (https://www.docker.com/kubernetes), and over at (https://thenewstack.io/docker-fully-embraces-kubernetes/) The New Stack (https://thenewstack.io/docker-fully-embraces-kubernetes/). Now we can all just start The Battle of Death by a Thousand Value-props. E.g., hittin’ up that security angle hard-core (https://thenewstack.io/docker-fully-embraces-kubernetes/), talking about easily migrate-n-save for existing apps (https://thenewstack.io/docker-updates-legacy-application-migration-program/). Dave Bartoletti, Forrester: ‘said it's clear that Kubernetes has won at the orchestration layer. "There's too much mindshare around it," he said in a phone interview with The Register. "There are too many developers who just want this.”’…”Bartoletti said he expects vendors will try to move up the stack by providing security, integration, workflow, and managed services. He said Docker now will be free to focus on trying to be the best container platform for enterprises.” Looks like Bartoletti was the analyst sent around, he shows up in other coverage (https://cote.io/2017/10/17/docker-and-kubernetes/). Derrick Harris’s take (http://news.architecht.io/issues/intel-takes-on-nvidia-in-the-ai-data-center-and-docker-embraces-kubernetes-78832): “The problem is that it’s difficult to make enterprise sales when users want open source at the lower layers and to pay (real money, at least) at layers they deem more strategic. If that’s Kubernetes, then Docker either needs to support it commercially, or let someone else take all the revenue from the orchestration layer up while Docker keeps on spending money to keep the free part of the puzzle chugging. By supporting Kubernetes as part of Docker Enterprise, it now can make the argument that nobody understands containers better than Docker does, and there’s now no real reason to not pay for its enterprise version.” MTA IN DA HIZ-OUSE (https://thenewstack.io/docker-updates-legacy-application-migration-program/)! “We’ve seen 100 percent success rate for applications that meet our criteria across hundreds of Java and .NET applications (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjvQFtlNQ-M). Customers are able to see these results in five days or less. “Johnston added that some customers are able to double the release frequency of their software and cut total cost of ownership by 50 percent.” Snoopy on that shit: “MetLife applied this modernization pattern in one day to their Java application. They were able to look across their portfolio and identify 600 other applications that fit this pattern, for a 66 percent savings on total cost of ownership. That nets out to millions of dollars at MetLife. They have over 6,000 applications they want to apply this to.” Meanwhile, earlier this month, more for the whale (https://www.geekwire.com/2017/sec-filing-shows-docker-raising-75-million-funding-round/?utm_campaign=Revue%20newsletter&utm_medium=webfeeds&utm_source=feedly): “[Docker] has been putting together a $75 million funding round, which would bring the total amount of money raised by the company to $255 million.” IBM Wins the Cloud That revenue (https://www.forbes.com/sites/bobevans1/2017/07/28/ibm-beats-amazon-in-12-month-cloud-revenue-15-1-billion-to-14-5-billion/#2fc46d139d64)! Hopefully IBM figures it out. Tech people Coté’s (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/10/19/it_staff_supply_problems/) Register (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/10/19/it_staff_supply_problems/) column this month (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/10/19/it_staff_supply_problems/) is on “the skills gap,” hiring in tech. Coincidently, there’s also a story on The Olds in tech (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/10/19/tech_workers_terrified_theyll_age_out/). BONUS LINKS! Not covered in show. Misc. Brandon’s favorite chart updated (https://twitter.com/dankohn1/status/919689314706931714/photo/1). Oracle says don’t do custom IT (https://www.fedscoop.com/it-modernization-public-comments-oracle/). One of the better recordings (https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLk_5VqpWEtiVbWAF-6xhC-2n6OeI0ND13&v=qvdt8uRf8RY) of Coté’s talk is up, from DevOpsDays Kansas City. Red Hat likely to be a $3bn company soon (https://techcrunch.com/2017/10/13/red-hat-continues-steady-march-toward-5-billion-revenue-goal/?ncid=rss&utm_campaign=Revue%20newsletter&utm_medium=Newsletter&utm_source=ARCHITECHT) - 24 years in the making. Open source is hella hard. Ben on MongoDB S1 (https://stratechery.com/2017/netflix-follow-up-sonos-alexa-mongodb-ipos/): “This is the key to understanding SaaS companies: the first year is hugely negative because of sales costs, but future years are hugely profitable because the customer doesn’t go anywhere.” SaaS businesses are subscription businesses, profits in the out-years. This week in Azure Stack Dell has some info out on the SKUs and such (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/10/19/dell_microsoft_azurestack_servers/). Meta, follow-up, etc. Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/sdt) - like anyone who starts these things, I have no idea WTF it is, if it’s a good idea, or if I should be ashamed. Need some product/market fit. Check out the Software Defined Talk Members Only White-Paper Exiguous podcast over there. Join us all in the SDT Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Mid-roll & Conferences Get $50 off Casper mattresses with the code: horraymattray The Register’s conference, Continuous Lifecycle (https://continuouslifecycle.london/), in London (May 2018) has it’s CFP open, closed October 20th - submit something (https://continuouslifecycle.london/call-for-papers/)! Coté’s junk: Solarwinds THWACKcamp (http://slrwnds.com/TC17Cote), all online Oct 18th and 19th. DevOps panel (https://thwack.solarwinds.com/community/thwackcamp-2017/when-devops-says-monitor) on Oct 19th, noon central. http://thwackcamp.com (https://t.co/791HswzxdQ). All Day DevOps, Oct 24th (http://www.alldaydevops.com/) - Coté is speaking, 2:45pm central (http://sched.co/C0Fx). Fedscoop Digital Transformation Summit (https://www.fedscoop.com/events/digital-transformation-summit/), in DC Oct 26th. Meetup the night before (https://www.meetup.com/DC-Cloud-Native-Meetup/events/242927085/) on EA & DevOps. SpringOne Platform registration open (https://2017.springoneplatform.io/ehome/s1p/registration), Dec 4th to 5th. Use the code S1P200_Cote for $200 off registration (https://2017.springoneplatform.io/ehome/s1p/registration). Coté and many others speaking. Matt’s on the Road! October 25-26/27-28 DevOps Days Singapore (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-singapore/)/PowerShell Asia (http://powershell.asia/) November 6-7 - AgileNZ (http://www.agilenz.co.nz) Recommendations Brandon: Machine Learning (http://amzn.to/2zpHsPT). Matt Ray: Roseheaven (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosehaven), Utopia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utopia_(Australian_TV_series)). Coté: now that it’s getting cooler: Patagonia Men's Merlow Wool 1/4-Zip Sweater (http://www.patagonia.com/product/mens-merlow-wool-quarter-zip-sweater/50355.html?dwvar_50355_color=FGE&cgid=root). I have two!
Has everyone gone kubernetes crazy? It seems like most buyers and sellers at least want it as an option and are, if you prefer the word, capitulating to supporting it. In past weeks most all vendors - even Oracle! - have announced support and road-maps for using Google’s container orchestrator in their cloud-native stacks. Also, Chef and Puppet have new suites of tools, Docker sets its sites clearly on reducing VMware costs, and there’s some new momentum stats on the Cloud Foundry ecosystem. Do people actually do the DEV-ops? DevOps sounds cool, but, SREs? See discussion over on Coté Show (http://www.cote.show/40). Chef launches Habitat Builder SaaS Habitat Builder for the People (https://www.habitat.sh/blog/2017/10/Habitat-Builder-for-the-People/) Adam Jacob’s commentary (https://twitter.com/adamhjk/status/917417673960644608) James Governor’s take (https://redmonk.com/jgovernor/2017/10/10/whats-on-your-plate-twelve-factortraditional-hybid-apps-and-habitat/) TNS coverage (https://thenewstack.io/chef-launches-saas-version-habitat-build/), plus, bold muscle-t choice! Celebrate it! We all succumbing to the cloud-native, even Oracle JavaEE off the Eclipse, to be more modular (again). Some deep kubernetes talk (https://www.nextplatform.com/2017/10/04/oracle-emulates-google-aws-cloud/). Chef (https://blog.chef.io/2017/10/09/habitat-builder-fastest-path-code-cloud-native/) and Puppet (http://www.crn.com/news/applications-os/300093676/puppet-launches-barrage-of-products-to-enable-new-age-of-software-automation-and-devops.htm) and Pivotal and supporting kubernetes. CF Summit EU Round-up press release (https://www.cloudfoundry.org/third-annual-cloud-foundry-european-summit-begins-today-in-basel/) - mostly more on kubernetes in the Cloud Foundry world (https://www.cloudfoundry.org/cloud-foundry-launches-container-runtime-default-container-deployment-method-cloud-foundry-using-kubernetes-bosh/). Some Istio mentioning, adding legitimacy to that effort; see Istio discussion in episode #96 (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/96). James “my flight got canceled” Governor coverage (https://redmonk.com/jgovernor/2017/10/11/some-thoughts-on-cloud-foundry-summit/): “enterprises now account for more than 40% of Cloud Foundry’s membership” “Kubernetes too is seeing plenty of tyre kicking, but nowhere near the level of enterprise commitment [to Cloud Foundry] at this point.” “54% of Cloud Foundry target Amazon Web Services as a platform, that 40% of users are targeting VMware vSphere certainly [i]s” - I assume this is across all distros and OSS, which makes sense. In Pivotal land, it’s mostly on on-premises VMware, last I checked. Habitat and Cloud Foundry (http://https://blog.chef.io/2017/10/11/running-habitat-apps-cloud-foundry/) Programming Languages and Code Quality Large-scale overview of GitHub projects, their languages and their bug reports (https://cacm.acm.org/magazines/2017/10/221326-a-large-scale-study-of-programming-languages-and-code-quality-in-github/fulltext?imm_mid=0f7103&cmp=em-prog-na-na-newsltr_20171007) “The data indicates that functional languages are better than procedural languages; it suggests that disallowing implicit type conversion is better than allowing it; that static typing is better than dynamic; and that managed memory usage is better than unmanaged. Further, that the defect proneness of languages in general is not associated with software domains.” Docker as a cost-cutter Their CEO says you can slash costs by 50% (http://www.crn.com/slide-shows/cloud/300093681/docker-ceo-steve-singh-on-the-vmware-relationship-security-and-the-opportunities-around-containers-for-partners.htm/pgno/0/3). Meg Whitman says it’s more like 40% (http://www.crn.com/slide-shows/data-center/300093601/hpe-ceo-meg-whitman-on-upcoming-changes-to-field-compensation-the-impact-of-dell-on-hpes-vmware-relationship-and-why-hardware-still-matters-in-the-software-defined-era.htm/pgno/0/15). But partners make $7 off of every $1 of Docker spend (http://www.crn.com/slide-shows/cloud/300093681/docker-ceo-steve-singh-on-the-vmware-relationship-security-and-the-opportunities-around-containers-for-partners.htm/pgno/0/5) - does that math work? Scenario: I used to pay $2 for VMware (http://www.crn.com/slide-shows/cloud/300093681/docker-ceo-steve-singh-on-the-vmware-relationship-security-and-the-opportunities-around-containers-for-partners.htm/pgno/0/4), now I pay $1 for Docker (50% reduction). But it costs me $7 to get there, giving me a one time payment of net $8, and, hopefully, just $1 a year after that? (Never mind opex vs. capex GAAP-crap.) So, then: after 4+ years I’ll start saving money? (with VMware, I would have paid $2/yr., so $8 total, and with Docker over that four year period I pay $8 first year, $1 next three years, so $11 total - hrmm..where’s Excel when you need it?) Follow-up from 2011: so, Docker really is about replacing VMware…? Overall, this interview with Docker’s CEO is good stuff (http://www.crn.com/slide-shows/cloud/300093681/docker-ceo-steve-singh-on-the-vmware-relationship-security-and-the-opportunities-around-containers-for-partners.htm) for industry watchers. It didn’t occur to Coté that the former CEO of Concur would know, like, every single CFO and CEO at G2000 companies. BONUS LINKS! Not covered in show. Microsoft Ignite News SQL Server 2017, Oracle migrations, AzureStack! (https://www.businessinsider.com.au/microsoft-releases-sql-server-2017-azure-stack-oracle-database-migration-tool-2017-9) Azure (https://mspoweruser.com/azure-data-box-is-the-microsofts-answer-to-aws-snowball/) Snowball (https://mspoweruser.com/azure-data-box-is-the-microsofts-answer-to-aws-snowball/) Data Box (https://mspoweruser.com/azure-data-box-is-the-microsofts-answer-to-aws-snowball/) Meanwhile, Azure Stack is out now (https://www.digitalnewsasia.com/digital-economy/microsoft-launches-azure-stack%E2%80%A6-finally), as of Oct 4th (close enough to September, really). Security/Acquisitions SAP buys customer identity management firm Gigya for $350M (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/24/sap-is-buying-identity-management-firm-gigya-for-350m/) Google acquires identity management company Bitium (http://www.zdnet.com/article/google-acquires-identity-management-company-bitium/) Gartner Says Worldwide IaaS Public Cloud Services Market Grew 31 Percent in 2016 Don’t get 100% excited, this just covers public cloud. Cf. “The Problem with PaaS Marketsizing.” (https://cote.io/2016/01/13/paas-market-size/) Look who’s #3 (http://www.gartner.com/newsroom/id/3808563) (not Google) Coverage from TPM (https://www.nextplatform.com/2017/10/10/public-cloud-doesnt-dominate-quite-yet/), including this chart (https://3s81si1s5ygj3mzby34dq6qf-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/gartner-public-cloud-forecast.jpg): https://d2mxuefqeaa7sj.cloudfront.net/s_45572DCBF960FC189F32D453FB73D3392C80FA25D24C502EA3549B9B622A9A58_1507751894499_image.png MongoDB Going Public IPO is gonna be webscale! (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/21/database-provider-mongodb-has-filed-to-go-public/) ## HPE, migrate them workloads to cloud Interview with Meg Whitman (http://www.crn.com/slide-shows/data-center/300093601/hpe-ceo-meg-whitman-on-upcoming-changes-to-field-compensation-the-impact-of-dell-on-hpes-vmware-relationship-and-why-hardware-still-matters-in-the-software-defined-era.htm/pgno/0/10). “We aim to be the largest infrastructure provider that Azure Stack runs on on-prem, and collectively we can sell that to our joint customers.” HPE's opening bid for cash repatriotization: 2.9% (http://www.crn.com/slide-shows/data-center/300093601/hpe-ceo-meg-whitman-on-upcoming-changes-to-field-compensation-the-impact-of-dell-on-hpes-vmware-relationship-and-why-hardware-still-matters-in-the-software-defined-era.htm/pgno/0/30) taxfee. Random Amazon Treasure Truck (https://www.amazon.com/b?node=15020057011) Meta, follow-up, etc. Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/sdt) - like anyone who starts these things, I have no idea WTF it is, if it’s a good idea, or if I should be ashamed. Need some product/market fit. Check out the Software Defined Talk Members Only White-Paper Exiguous podcast over there. Join us all in the SDT Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Mid-roll & Conferences The Register’s conference, Continuous Lifecycle (https://continuouslifecycle.london/), in London (May 2018) has it’s CFP open, closed October 20th - submit something (https://continuouslifecycle.london/call-for-papers/)! Coté’s junk: NEW DISCOUNT! DevOpsDays Nashville (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-nashville/), $25 off with the code 2017NashDevOpsDays - Coté will be keynoting (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-nashville/speakers/michael-cote/) - October 17th and 18th, 2017. Solarwinds THWACKcamp (http://slrwnds.com/TC17Cote), all online Oct 18th and 19th. DevOps panel (https://thwack.solarwinds.com/community/thwackcamp-2017/when-devops-says-monitor) on Oct 19th, noon central. http://thwackcamp.com (https://t.co/791HswzxdQ). All Day DevOps, Oct 24th (http://www.alldaydevops.com/). Fedscoop Digital Transformation Summit (https://www.fedscoop.com/events/digital-transformation-summit/), in DC Oct 26th. Meetup the night before (https://www.meetup.com/DC-Cloud-Native-Meetup/events/242927085/) on EA & DevOps. SpringOne Platform registration open (https://2017.springoneplatform.io/ehome/s1p/registration), Dec 4th to 5th. Use the code S1P200_Cote for $200 off registration (https://2017.springoneplatform.io/ehome/s1p/registration). Coté and many others speaking. Matt’s on the Road! October 25-26 DevOps Days Singapore (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-singapore/) (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-singapore/) - October 27 Serverless India (http://inserverless.com) November 6-7 - AgileNZ (http://www.agilenz.co.nz) Listener Shout Outs Daniel Barker (https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-barker/) sent me (Brandon) I nice Linkedin Message. Lots of people at DevOpsDays Kansas City and Auckland. Recommendations Brandon: More Perfect Episode: Who’s Gerry and Why Is He So Bad at Drawing Maps? (http://www.wnyc.org/story/whos-gerry-and-why-he-so-bad-drawing-maps) (http://www.wnyc.org/story/whos-gerry-and-why-he-so-bad-drawing-maps) Vox: How the Supreme Court could limit gerrymandering, explained with a simple diagram (https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/10/9/16432358/gerrymandering-supreme-court-diagram) Matt Ray: Baby Driver, the movie. The forbidden backpack: Echo Rucksack (https://www.goruck.com/echo/). Coté: Workflow app (https://workflow.is/) - I thought Apple had shut this down after acquiring it, but I guess not. Pro-tip, leave your fruit on the plane when you enter the US; unlike ANZ, there’s no big bins to throw away your stuff and you end up going to a dumb line where they take your fruit and put it in a trash can for you.
Is agile software development bullshit? This is what we discuss, along with a short tale of the best uber driver ever. Show Notes Follow-up Moved to fireside.fm. So, now you can just go to http://SoftwareDefinedTalk.com. No more multi back-end management crap. Check out the last episode, the show page (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/76) is- God-damned nifty! Review in iTunes France (https://twitter.com/matt_traverse/status/790600017778249728) Osprey “one bag” style backpack (https://twitter.com/scrub/status/790190603023843328). The Best Uber Driver Ever Hands on a Hard Body guy, Ronald McCowan (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Po-rVFBC5Ps). The Sweat Hotel (http://thesweathotel.iheart.com/) Coté’s Agile shit Excerpt from a PDF in process (https://www.getrevue.co/profile/cote/issues/you-re-not-really-agile-airports-hitting-yourself-absurd-ai-tams-cote-memo-18-34432). IBM design people. We don’t know what we’re doing; celebrity diet books; agile people are squarely. It’s only cargo culting when the planes stop coming (https://twitter.com/cote/status/794349731627446272). UK GDS rant (https://medium.com/@sheldonline/the-government-it-self-harm-playbook-6537d3920f65#.p8cuon2mj). Three types of projects; then the agile tools and tactics; then approach/culture How do I get developers to care about boring shit? ...or contain the blast radius of their boredom. Magic tactic: features are locked for two weeks, no interruptions The Product Manager's Lament. If you’re implementing pagination, you’re not doing agile The big PDF on all this stuff that Coté is working on (https://docs.google.com/document/d/19T1B-jdhpNr58p7sONWtT5W48xFtV92aV9hMeb29w6I/edit?usp=sharing) - leave some comments! The End-roll Mid-roll Coté: Check out cote.io/promos (https://cote.io/promos/) for more - free books, free cloud time, etc. Coté: Nov 15th, everywhere - I'll be speaking early in the All Day DevOps virtual conference (http://www.alldaydevops.com/). Coté: Nov 16th, Cloud Native Roadshow in Omaha (https://pivotal.io/event/cloud-native-workshop/omaha) - couldn’t make it to Kansas City? Come on over to Omaha for the same! We just did the one in Kansas City this week and it was an excellent turn-out and session list. Coté: Various dates - Pivotal’s Cloud Native Roadshows (https://pivotal.io/event/pivotal-cloud-native-roadshow). Matt: DevOps Days Australia 20% discount code - SDT2016 (https://ti.to/devopsaustralia/2016-sydney/discount/SDT2016). Matt’s at Melbourne Infracoders “Compliance as Code” (http://www.meetup.com/Infrastructure-Coders/events/233990769/). BONUS LINKS! Not covered in episode. OpenStack Anyone? There’s a Summit going on in Barcelona (http://www.v3.co.uk/v3-uk/news/2475081/openstack-revenues-predicted-to-top-usd5bn-by-2020) 35% annual growth sounds good With friends like these… (http://www.computerworlduk.com/cloud-computing/mark-shuttleworth-on-openstack-hpe-layoffs-prove-bs-as-service-theory-3648336/): “Ubuntu founder and product lead at Canonical Mark Shuttleworth says he feels validated by his earlier claims that the expansion of OpenStack projects – known as the ‘big tent’ approach - would collapse and that the community needs to focus on its core services.” Bullshit as a Service: “My rule of thumb is if you're not [creating] virtual networks, compute or disks, and you can't survive on AWS, you are never going to survive on OpenStack. That's the bullshit as a service story.” OTH,