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Register now: https://bit.ly/3z56C65 Cloud Foundry Foundation will be hosting the next Cloud Foundry Summit Virtual in July this year. We sat down with Chip Childers, Executive Director of the Foundation, to talk about the format of the event and what are some themes and topics we should be looking forward to. Essentially, there will be three tracks throughout the event – the first will be about the end users' stories and experiences, the second will be “How To”, the developers guide for using Cloud Foundry;, and the third track will be “Behind the Curtain” that is all about the interaction between and with the Open Source community who create the Cloud Foundry software. The Foundation will also organize certification exams that have become extremely popular.
In this episode, Coté talks with AirFrance-KLM's Fabien Lebrere about starting AirFrance-KLM's platform group. They discuss how and why the platform team started, how they determined what they needed to do, and how they're working with developers. Fabien also discusses how to prioritize which services to work on and gives advice for those just starting out. For even more, check out Fabien and friend's presentations from Cloud Foundry Summit 2018 and 2019.
In this episode, Coté talks with AirFrance-KLM's Fabien Lebrere about starting AirFrance-KLM's platform group. They discuss how and why the platform team started, how they determined what they needed to do, and how they're working with developers. Fabien also discusses how to prioritize which services to work on and gives advice for those just starting out. For even more, check out Fabien and friend's presentations from Cloud Foundry Summit 2018 and 2019.
In this episode, Coté talks with AirFrance-KLM's Fabien Lebrere about starting AirFrance-KLM's platform group. They discuss how and why the platform team started, how they determined what they needed to do, and how they're working with developers. Fabien also discusses how to prioritize which services to work on and gives advice for those just starting out. For even more, check out Fabien and friend's presentations from Cloud Foundry Summit 2018 and 2019.
In this episode, Coté talks with AirFrance-KLM's Fabien Lebrere about starting AirFrance-KLM's platform group. They discuss how and why the platform team started, how they determined what they needed to do, and how they're working with developers. Fabien also discusses how to prioritize which services to work on and gives advice for those just starting out. For even more, check out Fabien and friend's presentations from Cloud Foundry Summit 2018 and 2019.
In this episode, Coté talks with AirFrance-KLM's Fabien Lebrere about starting AirFrance-KLM's platform group. They discuss how and why the platform team started, how they determined what they needed to do, and how they're working with developers. Fabien also discusses how to prioritize which services to work on and gives advice for those just starting out. For even more, check out Fabien and friend's presentations from Cloud Foundry Summit 2018 and 2019.
One of the themes of the Cloud Foundry Summit series has always been to help reinforce the strong sense of community among those who take part in the open source movement. In this way, the recently held Cloud Foundry Summit EU in September lived up to its mission. Among those on hand at the conference whose jobs are to initiate and educate organizations, about open source and the Cloud Foundry, as well as to include more individuals in the movement, were Ivana Scott, business operations manager, EngineerBetter and Sara Lenz, sales and account Manager, anynines. They were the guests on The New Stack Makers podcast recorded at Cloud Foundry Summit EU, hosted by Alex Williams, founder and editor in chief of The New Stack. Both Lenz and Scott are particularly well-positioned to offer a fresh perspective on how to grow the community through education. Scott first became involved in the open source community in in 2007 when she joined training provider in London. There, she was part of the events team, and was involved in organizing events, training courses, conference and meetups, while devoting a “huge amount” of effort to support open source communities. She then became directly involved in the Cloud Foundry community after joining EngineerBetter in 2018. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/CZ45-j2e_eY
The developer will certainly face new challenges when making the switch to a cloud native platform. The process might include, for example, learning how to add code to Kubernetes clusters or mastering the mechanics of etcd and kubectlis. The power and scaling flexibility a cloud native platform and Kubernetes offer, among other things, are often worth more than developers' investment in time and resources when adopting these technologies. And yet. What developers are usually more concerned about is the business goals they need to achieve. They will likely care less what the underlying infrastructure is as much as it can be used to create code that might improve their organization's bottom line, or for a public institution, better meet the needs of a citizen. In this episode of The New Stack Analysts recorded at the 2019 European Cloud Foundry Summit in The Hague, The Netherlands, this month where the business needs of developers and the role of the Cloud Foundry community were dicussed — and debated. Hosted by Alex Williams, The New Stack founder and editor-in-chief and co-hosted by Devin Davis, vice president of marketing, Cloud Foundry Foundation, the panelists were: Abby Kearns, executive director, Cloud Foundry Foundation Michael Cote, marketing director, Pivotal Tammy Van Hove, distinguished engineer, IBM Udo Seidel, Tech Writer, Heise iX
The developer will certainly face new challenges when making the switch to a cloud native platform. The process might include, for example, learning how to add code to Kubernetes clusters or mastering the mechanics of etcd and kubectlis. The power and scaling flexibility a cloud native platform and Kubernetes offer, among other things, are often worth more than developers' investment in time and resources when adopting these technologies. And yet. What developers are usually more concerned about is the business goals they need to achieve. They will likely care less what the underlying infrastructure is as much as it can be used to create code that might improve their organization's bottom line, or for a public institution, better meet the needs of a citizen. In this episode of The New Stack Analysts recorded at the 2019 European Cloud Foundry Summit in The Hague, The Netherlands, this month where the business needs of developers and the role of the Cloud Foundry community were dicussed — and debated. Hosted by Alex Williams, The New Stack founder and editor-in-chief and co-hosted by Devin Davis, vice president of marketing, Cloud Foundry Foundation, the panelists were: Abby Kearns, executive director, Cloud Foundry Foundation Michael Cote, marketing director, Pivotal Tammy Van Hove, distinguished engineer, IBM Udo Seidel, Tech Writer, Heise iX
Nobody likes to be uncomfortable, by definition. And experienced software developers and architects, like all of us, want all the answers. "But if you are really trying to achieve the agility that transformation promises, you have to let go of some of that," says Bob Cunningham, Senior Manager, Enterprise Application Architecture at TD Ameritrade. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, recorded on the floor of Cloud Foundry Summit 2019 in Philadelphia, Bob chats about his experience leading digital transformation efforts at the online brokerage, including the importance of being comfortable with being uncomfortable.
Nobody likes to be uncomfortable, by definition. And experienced software developers and architects, like all of us, want all the answers. "But if you are really trying to achieve the agility that transformation promises, you have to let go of some of that," says Bob Cunningham, Senior Manager, Enterprise Application Architecture at TD Ameritrade. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, recorded on the floor of Cloud Foundry Summit 2019 in Philadelphia, Bob chats about his experience leading digital transformation efforts at the online brokerage, including the importance of being comfortable with being uncomfortable.
Nobody likes to be uncomfortable, by definition. And experienced software developers and architects, like all of us, want all the answers. "But if you are really trying to achieve the agility that transformation promises, you have to let go of some of that," says Bob Cunningham, Senior Manager, Enterprise Application Architecture at TD Ameritrade. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, recorded on the floor of Cloud Foundry Summit 2019 in Philadelphia, Bob chats about his experience leading digital transformation efforts at the online brokerage, including the importance of being comfortable with being uncomfortable.
Nobody likes to be uncomfortable, by definition. And experienced software developers and architects, like all of us, want all the answers. "But if you are really trying to achieve the agility that transformation promises, you have to let go of some of that," says Bob Cunningham, Senior Manager, Enterprise Application Architecture at TD Ameritrade. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, recorded on the floor of Cloud Foundry Summit 2019 in Philadelphia, Bob chats about his experience leading digital transformation efforts at the online brokerage, including the importance of being comfortable with being uncomfortable.
Nobody likes to be uncomfortable, by definition. And experienced software developers and architects, like all of us, want all the answers. "But if you are really trying to achieve the agility that transformation promises, you have to let go of some of that," says Bob Cunningham, Senior Manager, Enterprise Application Architecture at TD Ameritrade. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, recorded on the floor of Cloud Foundry Summit 2019 in Philadelphia, Bob chats about his experience leading digital transformation efforts at the online brokerage, including the importance of being comfortable with being uncomfortable.
At the recent Cloud Foundry Summit, IBM Cloud made several significant announcements enhancing the service from IBM and enriching the Cloud Foundry platform. In this DevOps Chat we caught up with Jason McGee, IBM Fellow, VP and CTO of IBM cloud to get all of the details.
This week, we're talking with Toby Fee, community developer at serverless software provider Stackery, about how to apply the principles of the 12-factor application model to serverless apps. In the second half of the show, we spoke with Roman Swoszowski, vice president of cloud research and development at Grape Up, about this week's Cloud Foundry Summit, in Philadelphia. Fee has been writing a series of posts for us over the past few weeks that explores each of the principles in the 12-factor application through a serverless lens. She writes: No two serverless apps are identical, and the design decisions you make greatly affect how hard or easy you make your developers' lives. Serverless should be a choice that makes the dev experience easier not more difficult, following these guides can help.In the second half of the podcast, we discuss the Cloud Foundry Summit.
IBM is building out its portfolio of cloud services in order to offer cloud native capabilities with higher degrees of security and isolation for the enterprise, combined with the user experience of public cloud such as self-service provisioning, pay-as-you-go pricing and elasticity. So this week on Context we talked with Jason McGee, an IBM Fellow, and VP and CTO of IBM Cloud Platform about IBM's new enterprise cloud services which include the Cloud Foundry Enterprise Environment announced this week. McGee and TNS founder and editor-in-chief Alex Williams recorded live from Cloud Foundry Summit in Basel, Switzerland, where TNS hosted a day of podcasting and a pancake breakfast on topics such as BOSH and Kubernetes; integrating data services into Cloud Foundry; the importance of allies in advancing inclusivity; and the work companies and projects in the cloud native space are doing to improve the developer experience. Then later in the show, TNS managing editor Joab Jackson tells us about some of the top stories on the site this week, including a story by TNS correspondent Susan Hall about Pulsar, a data streaming tool and Kafka alternative that just reached top-level status at the Apache Software Foundation.
Show: 35Show Overview: Brian and Tyler review the Kubernetes news coming out of Cloud Foundry Summit, KubeCon and Red Hat Summit. Lots of things to talk about. Cloud Foundry SummitAttendance: 1500Fragmentation of the Container Orchestrator within the Cloud Foundry community - SUSE, IBM and SAP endorse Kubernetes, Pivotal still supporting DiegoKubeCon / CloudNativeCon (all videos)Attendance: 4300PaaS is now “GitOps” Don’t run containers as root Operator FrameworkServerless v0.1 events spec is updatedMany new container runtimes options - Google gVisor Red Hat Summit (all videos)OpenShift Commons Gathering (Attendance: 700+ - all videos)Attendance: 7000+ CoreOS + OpenShift Converged Kubernetes platform (PodCTL#34)OpenShift + Istio OpenShift + Cloud Functions (via OpenWhisk) Red Hat + IBM announcementRed Hat + Microsoft announcementFeedback?Email: PodCTL at gmail dot comTwitter: @PodCTL Web: http://podctl.com
This is the exciting content in this episode:• What’s new in SAP Cloud Platform• Special focus: Cloud Foundry Summit, interviews with some of the SAP presenters: - Bernd Krannich, Cloud Foundry and Kubernetes - Will It Blend? - Nikolay Valchev, MultiApps - Ashish Jain & Shashank Mohan Jain, Service Fabrik• Around the corner: events & open SAP courses Your host: Ina Ivanova Enjoy!
For this latest edition of The New Stack Analysts, we took our pancakes and our podcast equipment to Boston, for the Cloud Foundry Summit in Boston, for a wide ranging discussion on Cloud Foundry, cloud-native computing and Kubernetes. Hosted by TNS founder Alex Williams, with TNS managing editor Joab Jackson, our panel consisted of: Frederic Lardinois, reporter for TechCrunch. Abby Kerns, executive director for Cloud Foundry Foundation. Chen Goldberg, engineering director for Google. Jennifer Kotzen, senior product manager for SUSE. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/ekBh7_9ZVYA
CUBE host Stu Miniman (@stu) is joined by Lauren Cooney (@lcooney) CEO at Spark Labs for our coverage of Cloud Foundry Summit 2018 For our full Cloud Foundry Summit Coverage visit: https://www.thecube.net/cfs-2018
The New Stack editorial team is reporting live this week from Cloud Foundry Summit in Boston. We hosted a pancake breakfast and podcast discussion on the intersection of Cloud Foundry and Kubernetes this morning. And we've been hosting a day of podcasting and livestreaming from the show floor where we've talked to companies such as Dynatrace, Pivotal, Snyk, Grape Up, and many others. In this episode of Context we're going to have a roundtable discussion about the news from Cloud Foundry Summit and some of our top takeaways so far from the keynotes and sessions. But first we're going to bring on Jennifer Kotzen, senior product marketing manager at SUSE to talk about their new Cloud Foundry distribution, how it integrates with Kubernetes and how it's the first to package up Cloud Foundry into containers. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/Z7IxIDYMoF0
Cloud Foundry Summit Europe 2017 was a whirlwind of announcements, hands-on demos and, I assume, chocolate. It was held in Switzerland, after all. Luckily, Pivotal’s own Zach Brown and Steven Benario were at the show and join Dormain, who was also at the show, and Jeff on this episode of Pivotal Insights. They talk about the new Cloud Foundry Container Runtime (formerly Kubo), The Foundry and the vibe at the event.
Cloud Foundry Summit Europe 2017 was a whirlwind of announcements, hands-on demos and, I assume, chocolate. It was held in Switzerland, after all. Luckily, Pivotal’s own Zach Brown and Steven Benario were at the show and join Dormain, who was also at the show, and Jeff on this episode of Pivotal Insights. They talk about the new Cloud Foundry Container Runtime (formerly Kubo), The Foundry and the vibe at the event.
Going into Cloud Foundry Summit in Basel, Switzerland, there were without a doubt questions about Kubo, the Kubernetes on BOSH project developed by Pivotal and Google. At the keynote yesterday, the questions were only fueled by the announcement of Kubo's rebranding to the Cloud Foundry Container Runtime and its packaging with what Cloud Foundry is calling its Application Runtime. Both runtimes run on BOSH, "the underlying open source tool for release engineering, deployment, lifecycle management, and monitoring of distributed systems" that serve as the foundation for Cloud Foundry's platform. The shift to the new runtime discussion also changed the tenor of the conversation for the pancake breakfast The New Stack hosted, sponsored by VMware. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/nej2EsJQwyQ
Stackie, the New Stack's traveling pancake robot, ventured to Santa Clara California this week to host a pancake breakfast and podcast recording for the Cloud Foundry Summit Silicon Valley 2017. As steampunk hacker Dr. Torq tended to the fussy 3D pancake maker, TNS founder Alex Williams hosted a lively panel discussion about the evolution of Cloud Foundry, the Open Service Broker API, and Kubo, which is a new open source project being developed by Pivotal and Google that uses Google Bosh to package and deploy Kubernetes. The panel also discussed their favorite forms of communications for geographically diverse development teams, mentioning Twitter, Slack, telepathy and conferences. The panelists for this episode of the The New Stack Analysts podcast were: Dieu Cao: Pivotal director of product management, Holger Mueller: Constellation Research vice president and principal analyst, Abby Kearns: Cloud Foundry executive director, Sarah Novotny: Google Program Manager of Kubernetes Community. As an added bonus, play through to the end of the podcast to hear a special bonus segment where Dr. Torq explains the hardware hacker methodology and demonstrates his steampunk eyeball and as well as his "Electro-Matic Conference Personality Identification Device." Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/NXlQ5UZmqxA
Cloud Foundry Foundation Executive Director Abby Kearns joins Jeff and Dormain on this episode of Pivotal Insights to provide a sneak peak of the upcoming Cloud Foundry Summit, taking place June 13-15, 2017 in Santa Clara, Calif. Abby also talks about the new Cloud Foundry Certified Developer program and the foundation's efforts to promote diversity in tech.
Contents: What’s New on the Platform Cloud Foundry, Cloud Foundry Summit, and SAP Cloud Platform: Special interview with Sanjay Patil Around the Corner: Upcoming Events Your Hosts: Moya Watson and Mike Phorn
Cloud Foundry Foundation Executive Director Abby Kearns joins Jeff and Dormain on this episode of Pivotal Insights to provide a sneak peak of the upcoming Cloud Foundry Summit, taking place June 13-15, 2017 in Santa Clara, Calif. Abby also talks about the new Cloud Foundry Certified Developer program and the foundation's efforts to promote diversity in tech.
Cloud Foundry Summit 2016! Cloud Foundry Summit 2016! Program Phots keynote and session recordings
In this episode of The New Stack Analysts, The New Stack founder Alex Williams sat down with Duncan Johnston-Watt, Cloudsoft founder & CEO, Adam Lewis, Atos Origin Solution Manager and Enterprise Architect, and Sriram Subramanian, CloudDon CEO & Founder during Cloud Foundry Summit 2016 to learn more about how Cloudsoft and Atos make the most of platforms such as Cloud Foundry, why contributing to open source projects is crucial, and help to break down some of the complexities surrounding distributed control planes. Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fToFonvdHDQ Learn more at: https://thenewstack.io/tns-analysts-show-94-making-technology-accessible-open-source/
In this episode of The New Stack Analysts, The New Stack hosted a pancake breakfast Q&A session at Cloud Foundry Summit 2016. TNS Founder Alex Williams and co-host Lee Calcote spoke with Abby Kearns, Vice President of Industry Cloud Strategy at Cloud Foundry, Adam Lewis, Vice President of Enterprise Cloud Platforms at Canopy Cloud, Brian Swanson, Vice President of Cognitive Services at Dataskill, and Chris Ferris, Distinguished Engineer and CTO Open Cloud in the IBM Cloud Division's Open Technologies to learn more about making the shift to open source in the enterprise, developing team member skillsets, and creating a stronger open source community. Learn more at: https://thenewstack.io/new-stack-analysts-pancake-breakfast-qa-cloud-foundry-summit/
Last week's Cloud Foundry Summit was full of large organizations talking about revamping their IT strategy to be cloud native. We heard from the likes of Comcast, Allstate, Daimler, and ExpressScripts who each have been using Pivotal Cloud Foundry as the central enabler of their cloud strategies. These companies are modernizing how they create and deliver software, well on the journey to becoming software defined businesses. As Greg Otto from Comcast said, “We placed a bet on Cloud Foundry. We get features in days, not weeks, and scale takes minutes, not months.” In this new format for Pivotal Conversations, Richard Seroter and Coté talk about these stories and other happenings from the Cloud Foundry Summit. We also cover some recent news like the Serverless Summit and the the ruling in Google/Oracle case over APIs.
Last week's Cloud Foundry Summit was full of large organizations talking about revamping their IT strategy to be cloud native. We heard from the likes of Comcast, Allstate, Daimler, and ExpressScripts who each have been using Pivotal Cloud Foundry as the central enabler of their cloud strategies. These companies are modernizing how they create and deliver software, well on the journey to becoming software defined businesses. As Greg Otto from Comcast said, “We placed a bet on Cloud Foundry. We get features in days, not weeks, and scale takes minutes, not months.” In this new format for Pivotal Conversations, Richard Seroter and Coté talk about these stories and other happenings from the Cloud Foundry Summit. We also cover some recent news like the Serverless Summit and the the ruling in Google/Oracle case over APIs.
Last week's Cloud Foundry Summit was full of large organizations talking about revamping their IT strategy to be cloud native. We heard from the likes of Comcast, Allstate, Daimler, and ExpressScripts who each have been using Pivotal Cloud Foundry as the central enabler of their cloud strategies. These companies are modernizing how they create and deliver software, well on the journey to becoming software defined businesses. As Greg Otto from Comcast said, “We placed a bet on Cloud Foundry. We get features in days, not weeks, and scale takes minutes, not months.” In this new format for Pivotal Conversations, Richard Seroter and Coté talk about these stories and other happenings from the Cloud Foundry Summit. We also cover some recent news like the Serverless Summit and the the ruling in Google/Oracle case over APIs.
Last week’s Cloud Foundry Summit was full of large organizations talking about revamping their IT strategy to be cloud native. We heard from the likes of Comcast, Allstate, Daimler, and ExpressScripts who each have been using Pivotal Cloud Foundry as the central enabler of their cloud strategies. These companies are modernizing how they create and deliver software, well on the journey to becoming software defined businesses. As Greg Otto from Comcast said, “We placed a bet on Cloud Foundry. We get features in days, not weeks, and scale takes minutes, not months.” In this new format for Pivotal Conversations, Richard Seroter and Coté talk about these stories and other happenings from the Cloud Foundry Summit. We also cover some recent news like the Serverless Summit and the the ruling in Google/Oracle case over APIs.
Last week’s Cloud Foundry Summit was full of large organizations talking about revamping their IT strategy to be cloud native. We heard from the likes of Comcast, Allstate, Daimler, and ExpressScripts who each have been using Pivotal Cloud Foundry as the central enabler of their cloud strategies. These companies are modernizing how they create and deliver software, well on the journey to becoming software defined businesses. As Greg Otto from Comcast said, “We placed a bet on Cloud Foundry. We get features in days, not weeks, and scale takes minutes, not months.” In this new format for Pivotal Conversations, Richard Seroter and Coté talk about these stories and other happenings from the Cloud Foundry Summit. We also cover some recent news like the Serverless Summit and the the ruling in Google/Oracle case over APIs.
This week, we discuss DevOpsDays Austin, Pivotal's funding round, and some follow-up for the OpenStack Summit: turns our Gartner doesn't hate them. Also, with the new ping-model out, we discuss the potential for peak ping pong. SPONSOR Get 30% off OSCON, in Austin on May 18th and 19th, when you register with the code REFERCOTE. Get $50 off DevOpsDays Minneapolis, July 20th and 21st, with the code SDT2016. I'll be getting some for Chicago and Seattle sometime too. Get 20% off registration for the Cloud Foundry Summit, May 23rd to 25th, with the code CF16COTE. Interested in speeding your software's cycle time, reducing release cycles, and a resilient cloud platform? Check out the free ebook on Cloud Foundry (http://pivotal.io/cloud-foundry-the-cloud-native-platform?utm_source=Cote-promo&utm_medium=LP-link&utm_campaign=Duncan-Winn-OReilly-Cloud-Native-eBook-Q116) or take Cloud Foundry for a test drive with Pivotal Web Services (http://try.run.pivotal.io/SDT?utm_source=cotepivotallandingpage&utm_medium=landingpage&utm_term=FreeTwoMonthsPWS&utm_content=button&utm_campaign=cote). See those and other things at cote.io/pivotal (http://cote.io/pivotal/). Show notes If you like video, see this episodes' video recording (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLk_5VqpWEtiWnQ7od08nzkB32oT4gnDiP). Agile & Beyond Conference - Jeffrey Liker keynote. DevOpsDays Austin earlier this week. 500 to 600 people, +200 y/y Matt Ray's talk on compliance (http://www.slideshare.net/mattray/compliance-as-code), Coté's talk (https://cote.io/2016/05/02/devops-for-normals/). Pivotal gets a series C Press release (http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160505005598/en/Pivotal-Announces-Series-Financing-Fuel-Continued-Expansion#.Vyta_lwqu5I.twitter) $253 million with new investors Ford and Microsoft. Existing: GE, EMC, and VMware. Momentum by penetration: "30% of the Fortune 100 currently work with Pivotal… The company now works with seven of the top 10 U.S. banks, three of the top five global auto manufacturers, and five of the top 10 telecommunication companies." Momentum by run-rate: "Pivotal Cloud Foundry and Pivotal Big Data Suite having crossed the $200 million and $100 million annual bookings run-rate milestones, respectively." Momentum by logos: "GE, Ford, Verizon, Home Depot, Comcast, Humana, Lockheed Martin, and Allstate" "Person familiar" says (http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSKCN0XW11G) Pivotal now has a $2.8bn valuation. From the same article, Ford's chunk is $182.2m. Gartner actually "likes" OpenStack OpenStack and Gartner: The Facts - Alan Waite (http://blogs.gartner.com/alan-waite/2016/05/03/openstack-gartner-facts/) Good representation of many things: how difficult it is to be "part of the conversation" with a paywall. The perception of Gartner is usually skewed Tip: always read the primary source, be it a Gartner PDF or a talk, etc. Ping Pong and the Tech Bubble? "Falling table-tennis sales give a peek into the economics of Silicon Valley, where the right to play on the job is sacrosanct" (http://www.wsj.com/articles/is-the-tech-bubble-popping-ping-pong-offers-an-answer-1462286089#:K4CFGVr2Ylj1GA) Seriously? No wonder people hate Silicon Valley Hey, look, it's the Pivotal SF offices! Love that chunky coconut water. More DevOpsDays Seattle next week, May 12th and 13th (http://www.devopsdays.org/events/2016-seattle/) - Coté has an ignite talk there (http://www.devopsdays.org/events/2016-seattle/proposals/How_to_survive_and_thrive_in_a_big_company/). Ignite talks (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignite_(event)) Jeff Bezos weighs in on rewrites This anecdote has really stuck with me (https://storify.com/jrauser/on-the-big-rewrite-and-bezos-as-a-technical-leader) Recommendations Brandon: SaveFrom.net/ (http://en.savefrom.net/) - save videos from the web. Matt: New Radiohead "Burn the Witch" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yI2oS2hoL0k) DevOpsDays Austin speaker gifts. Coté: Lords of Computing #12 (https://cote.io/2016/04/29/loc12/) - with Brian Gregory of Express Scripts. I don't usually toot my own content horn, but this was a good episode. Also, that Elon Musk book by Ashlee Vance (http://amzn.to/1XboAw1). It was $2 on Amazon the other day, so YOLO. Also: James Governor on an Apple Watch with an explosion behind him (https://twitter.com/bennycrime/status/728261918213943296).
OpenStack is crawling its way into the plateau of productivity, we submit, during this week of the OpenStack Summit. We also discuss the recent Docker survey findings, and some overly precise number on private vs. public cloud adoption. Coté also manages to insult the entire Eastern seaboard, esp. Annapolis. SPONSOR Ads Interested in speeding your software's cycle time, reducing release cycles, and a resilient cloud platform? Check out the free ebook on Cloud Foundry (http://pivotal.io/cloud-foundry-the-cloud-native-platform?utm_source=Cote-promo&utm_medium=cotememo&utm_campaign=Duncan-Winn-OReilly-Cloud-Native-eBook-Q116) or take Cloud Foundry for a test drive with Pivotal Web Services (http://try.run.pivotal.io/SDT?utm_source=Cote-promo&utm_medium=cotememo&utm_term=FreeTwoMonthsPWS&utm_content=button&utm_campaign=cote). See those and other things at cote.io/pivotal (http://cote.io/pivotal/). FRONTSIDE.IO – HIRE THEM! (http://frontside.io/cote) Do you need some developer talent? When you have a web project that needs the "A Team," call The Frontside (http://frontside.io/cote). They've spent years honing their tools and techniques that give their clients cutting-edge web applications without losing a night's sleep. Learn more at http://frontside.io/cote (http://frontside.io/cote) Go to a conference on the cheap! Discount Codes I round up all sorts of discount codes for conferences and such, here's what I got today: Get 30% off OSCON (http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/open-source-us), in Austin on May 18th and 19th, when you register with the code REFERCOTE. Get 15% off DevOpsDays Seattle (http://www.devopsdays.org/events/2016-seattle/), May 12th and 13th, when you register with the code SOFTWARETALK. I'll be there staffing the Pivotal table and also giving an ignite talk. Get 20% off registration for the Cloud Foundry Summit (https://www.cloudfoundry.org/community/summits/attend/?summitId=10016), May 23rd to 25th, with the code CF16COTE. Get $50 off DevOpsDays Minneapolis (http://www.devopsdays.org/events/2016-minneapolis/), July 20th and 21st, with the code SDT2016. I'll be getting some for Chicago and Seattle sometime too. Show notes If you like video, see this episodes' video recording (https://youtu.be/x2ClCSW_sks). Agile and Beyond conference (http://agileandbeyond.com/2016/) OpenStack Coté's developer relations and marketing panel (https://twitter.com/alsadowski/status/724746954522021889) - see sample of questions (http://drunkandretired.com/post/143486274111/im-moderating-a-panel-tomorrow-at-the-openstack). Big name membership momentum from @alsadowski (https://twitter.com/alsadowski/status/724746954522021889) Also, 451 market-size estimates (https://twitter.com/cote/status/725374178191265792): 2013: $486m; 2015: $1.2bn; 2018E: $3.37bn Docker Survey out - #WhatDoYouMakeOfThat Get the PDF (https://goto.docker.com/rs/929-FJL-178/images/Docker-Survey-2016.pdf) Respondents are the HN set? - 511 respondents, 59% from software companies, 56% orgs less than 100 employees, 47% devs or dev managers 51% in production "survey respondents reported on average a 13X increase in frequency of software releases." "Because Docker makes it simple and easy to push software out, isolate issues and roll back, over 63% of organizations report a reduction in their MTTR which impacts overall software quality and customer satisfaction." Cloud about to get HUGE "CIOs report that 16.2% of workloads are currently running in the public cloud, and that in five years 41.3% of workloads will run in a public cloud. This suggests at least a 20% CAGR in public cloud workloads over the next five years. In our view, a near- tripling of the public-Cloud-based workload mix represents a monumental architectural shift, which shows no signs of abating and is likely to create a major ripple effect across the entire technology landscape." - "Amazon Seeing 'Momentous' Change of Guard as Public Cloud 'Booms,' Says JP Morgan" (http://blogs.barrons.com/techtraderdaily/2016/04/14/amazon-seeing-momentous-change-of-guard-as-public-cloud-booms-says-jp-morgan/) How does Wall Street work, again? A Rolex-level of "failure" (https://500ish.com/a-flop-unlike-any-other-c15545c985b5#.skx53yiw9) Back of the Envelop podcast (http://thebackoftheenvelope.tumblr.com/) - where Ed used to teach Coté about how money works. Cisco OSpod podcast (http://www.nextcast.net/openstackpod-events/michael-cot-director-of-technical-marketing-at-pivotal-software-on-ospod-at-openstack-summit-austin-2016) Dan Lyons book (http://amzn.to/1Tz9y0b) - candy walls and HubSpot. Feedback & Follow-up Full Snack Developer: Old Bay Seasoning on French Fries (https://twitter.com/rlangford77/status/723662056117784576) - that is Coté's new God. Mesos is fleet management (https://twitter.com/ryan_maclean/status/723667528782737408). How's that one handle on the curves? Chapters in podcasts. I used Chapter app (http://chaptersapp.com/) and it was better than the half-ass results with Fission (https://rogueamoeba.com/fission/). But, still, the marks didn't line up perfectly. Computers - amiright? (Don't get me wrong: Fission is awesome, but: really?) We should be in Google Play Podcasts - can someone verify this before they EOL it? I heard that two people have used the code CF16COTE to register for the CF Summit. I'm going to believe they're from the listeners here and not my newsletter. HOW YOU LIKE MY CPM NOW?! They love us in Brazil! Recommendations Brandon: TICKR heart-rate monitor (http://amzn.to/1STPmZX). Matt: Public cloud (www.slideshare.net/mattray/why-not-public-cloud). Also: renting your house is hard. Coté: OH YEAH! (https://twitter.com/imgur/status/725459722241892352)
Aaron and Brian do their annual 2015 WrapUp show. They look at the most interesting shows, trends and topics from 2015, as well as making predictions for 2016. Show Notes: Krispy Kreme Challenge Donations Topic 1 - Is Public Cloud making any money? Topic 2 - Is Open Source Software making any money Topic 3 - Everything is becoming an integrated solution. Topic 4 - Bi-Modal vs. Tri-Modal IT Topic 5 - The continued rise of SaaS applications (and who manages them) Topic 6 - The continued rise of non-vendor companies recruiting developers Show Stats and Interesting Facts 60 Shows Official Podcast at Cloud Foundry Summit, MesosCon, LinuxCon, DockerCon, VelocityConf, OSCON Went over $5B in VC + M&A Funding for Guests Most Popular Show(s) of 2015: Eps.200 (Future of Connected Cloud; Christian Reilly) Eps.199 (Docker Security; Diogo & Nathan) Eps.208 (DevOps; Nathan Harvey) Aaron’s 2015 Predictions - From 2014 show Container ecosystem is beginning to mature Docker needs to go through Trough of Disillusionment Skill Sets Changing - Blogging will become a lost art GitHub or “GetOut” - people need to learn GitHub - see 30 Days of Commitmas (GitHub learning) Existence of Bi-Modal IT - There is no migration path between the two. “Infrastructure as a Code” replaces “Software-Defined” terminology Infrastructure jobs will become the operations portion of DevOps (automate everything) Brian’s 2015 Predictions - From 2014 show Containers, Containers, Containers - competition for Docker in containers (VMware, CoreOS, etc.)? Moved from Containers to Systems. Containers/Docker were mentioned everywhere (AWS, Tutum, Microsoft, DigitalOcean) VMware pushes that “containers need VMs” AWS is finally starting to understand the Enterprise; bundling/integrating services Nobody values Cloud Management software How do the VCs justify all this investment in companies that drive open-source projects? What happens to all the SaaS tools platforms on AWS, can they survive economically? Our Grades on Various Topics/Companies/Themes OpenStack AWS Azure Google Cisco Other Public Clouds Private Cloud or Hybrid Cloud VMware Docker Cloud Foundry Open Source centric companies (CoreOS, Hashicorp, Mesosphere) Cluster-Management and Schedulers (Kubernetes, Mesos, Swarm) SaaS Applications Brian’s 2016 Prediction Notes: We’ll continue to see big bets (legacy vendors) and big failures Very curious to watch the open-source VMware-replacements (Hashicorp, CoreOS, Docker, etc.) monetize their business We’ll begin to hear about some IoT success stories Aaron’s 2016 Prediction Notes: Industry Predictions: Docker Trough of Disillusionment will happen (push from last year) in favor of Open Standards We will consolidate down to a handful of large hardware and software vendors in one (Oracle, Cisco, Dell) and pr
Summary What organization could be larger than the US Federal government? Not only that, the chance to transform how software is done in the government has perhaps one of the largest possible impacts of transforming any "IT department." In this episode, Matt and Coté talk with Diego Lapiduz who works in the GSA's 18F organization helping government agencies develop their software in new, more agile and cloud-driven ways. We discuss the background of 18F and the broader government initiatives to transform how software is done and also walk through some of the learnings 18F has had in trying to make such a huge transformation. Subscribe: iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/lord-of-computing-podcast/id983773453), RSS Feed (http://feeds.feedburner.com/LordsOfComputing) Show-notes and Links Hiring is the biggest problem around government processes. To build empathy and different teams working together, try to tackle a common goal. Building credibly by demonstrating that your method works. The Ugly Baby Problem - winning over people who think they're already doing it right. Measuring success. 18F in github. github.com/18F (https://github.com/18F) and 18f.gsa.gov (https://18f.gsa.gov/). Examples of project: NotAlone.gov (https://www.notalone.gov/), The College Score Card (https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/). Explaining "failing fast" (http://cote.io/blog/fail-fast-recording) in government. People start to understand it as they have more experience. How open source is helpful here, how non-government folks get involved and contribute to the open source projects. Diego's recent talk (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=598c1pB39Ms) at the Cloud Foundry Summit 2014. As more background on IT change in the government, check out this overview from Mikey Dickerson at OSCON 2015 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6nMQg9qs7k). Diego Lapiduz: @dlapiduz (https://twitter.com/dlapiduz) Matt Curry: @mattjcurry (https://twitter.com/mattjcurry/) Coté: @cote (https://twitter.com/cote/), cote.io (http://cote.io) Libsyn downloads as of 20160912: 458.
Summary What organization could be larger than the US Federal government? Not only that, the chance to transform how software is done in the government has perhaps one of the largest possible impacts of transforming any "IT department." In this episode, Matt and Coté talk with Diego Lapiduz who works in the GSA's 18F organization helping government agencies develop their software in new, more agile and cloud-driven ways. We discuss the background of 18F and the broader government initiatives to transform how software is done and also walk through some of the learnings 18F has had in trying to make such a huge transformation. Subscribe: iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/lord-of-computing-podcast/id983773453), RSS Feed (http://feeds.feedburner.com/LordsOfComputing) Show-notes and Links Hiring is the biggest problem around government processes. To build empathy and different teams working together, try to tackle a common goal. Building credibly by demonstrating that your method works. The Ugly Baby Problem - winning over people who think they're already doing it right. Measuring success. 18F in github. github.com/18F (https://github.com/18F) and 18f.gsa.gov (https://18f.gsa.gov/). Examples of project: NotAlone.gov (https://www.notalone.gov/), The College Score Card (https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/). Explaining "failing fast" (http://cote.io/blog/fail-fast-recording) in government. People start to understand it as they have more experience. How open source is helpful here, how non-government folks get involved and contribute to the open source projects. Diego's recent talk (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=598c1pB39Ms) at the Cloud Foundry Summit 2014. As more background on IT change in the government, check out this overview from Mikey Dickerson at OSCON 2015 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6nMQg9qs7k). Diego Lapiduz: @dlapiduz (https://twitter.com/dlapiduz) Matt Curry: @mattjcurry (https://twitter.com/mattjcurry/) Coté: @cote (https://twitter.com/cote/), cote.io (http://cote.io) Libsyn downloads as of 20160912: 458.
Summary What organization could be larger than the US Federal government? Not only that, the chance to transform how software is done in the government has perhaps one of the largest possible impacts of transforming any "IT department." In this episode, Matt and Coté talk with Diego Lapiduz who works in the GSA's 18F organization helping government agencies develop their software in new, more agile and cloud-driven ways. We discuss the background of 18F and the broader government initiatives to transform how software is done and also walk through some of the learnings 18F has had in trying to make such a huge transformation. Subscribe: iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/lord-of-computing-podcast/id983773453), RSS Feed (http://feeds.feedburner.com/LordsOfComputing) Show-notes and Links Hiring is the biggest problem around government processes. To build empathy and different teams working together, try to tackle a common goal. Building credibly by demonstrating that your method works. The Ugly Baby Problem - winning over people who think they're already doing it right. Measuring success. 18F in github. github.com/18F (https://github.com/18F) and 18f.gsa.gov (https://18f.gsa.gov/). Examples of project: NotAlone.gov (https://www.notalone.gov/), The College Score Card (https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/). Explaining "failing fast" (http://cote.io/blog/fail-fast-recording) in government. People start to understand it as they have more experience. How open source is helpful here, how non-government folks get involved and contribute to the open source projects. Diego's recent talk (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=598c1pB39Ms) at the Cloud Foundry Summit 2014. As more background on IT change in the government, check out this overview from Mikey Dickerson at OSCON 2015 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6nMQg9qs7k). Diego Lapiduz: @dlapiduz (https://twitter.com/dlapiduz) Matt Curry: @mattjcurry (https://twitter.com/mattjcurry/) Coté: @cote (https://twitter.com/cote/), cote.io (http://cote.io) Libsyn downloads as of 20160912: 458.
Som vanligt händer det mycket i branschen, Microsoft skapar debakel med att ta bort GUI:t i Windows Server 2016, alla köper sig ett OpenStack bolag - Cisco köper Piston Cloud och IBM Blue Box och antalet chip tillverkare blir färre. Vi går inte in djupare på Cloud Foundry Summit men pratar om nyheter kring Cloud Foundry och den underliggande motorn Diego, vilket leder oss till att prata om att NetFlix Chaos Monkey fått en kusin - Chaos Lemur vars uppgift är att få oss att bygga robustare applikationer baserade på Cloud Foundry. Om man har en Chaos Monkey eller Chaos Lemur i sin miljö gäller andra regler för hur applikationer byggs och detta diskuterar vi, det handlar om resilient och anti-fragile apps. Med Apple WWDC runt hörnet pratar vi också om Apple HomeKit och om ett alternativt internet. Länkar: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/06/03/admins_rebel_over_guiless_install_for_windows_server_2016/ http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-01/intel-buys-altera-for-16-7-billion-as-chip-deals-accelerate http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/05/28/avago_broadcom/ http://techcrunch.com/2015/06/03/piston-goes-to-cisco-bluebox-to-ibm-as-openstack-consolidation-accelerates/ http://blog.pivotal.io/pivotal-cloud-foundry/products/chaos-lemur-testing-high-availability-on-pivotal-cloud-foundry http://www.techradar.com/news/digital-home/these-are-the-first-apple-homekit-devices-that-you-can-buy-1295609 http://www.macrumors.com/2015/06/02/first-homekit-products-launching-today/ http://cesidianroot.net/ http://hackershelf.com/browse/?popular=1 Medverkande:Markus Eskola, @wimpyfudgeJonas Rosland, @jonasrosland
Aaron and Brian talk to Richard Seroter (@rseroter, VP of Product CenturyLink) and Ed Saipetch (@edsai, CenturyLink Office of the CTO & Speaking in Tech Podcast) about the latest in both public and Private PaaS including Pivotal Cloud Foundry, AppFogV2, Iron Foundry, the evolution of Enterprises, and the differences between containers and PaaS Interested in the O'Reilly Velocity Conference? Want to register for Velocity now? Use promo code 20CLOUD for 20% off Check out the Velocity Schedule Free eBook from O'Reilly Media for Cloudcast Listeners! Check out an excerpt from the upcoming Docker Cookbook Links from the show: Pivotal Cloud Foundry CenturyLink AppFogV2
Aaron and Brian announce a new partnership of O'Reilly Media! To kick things off The Cloudcast and O'Reilly have one free pass to O'Reilly Velocity to give away! Other great offers coming soon. Contest details: Velocity website: http://velocityconf.com/devops-web-performance-2015/ Velocity Dates: 5/27-5/29 in Santa Clara, CA Contest runs 4/25-5/1 What cool project are you working on? Send an email with details to show@thecloudcast.net or @thecloudcastnet Winner announced on 5/3 Want to register for Velocity now? Use promo code 20CLOUD for 20% off! Velocity Schedule: https://en.oreilly.com/devopswebperformance2015/public/register?cmp=mpwebopsconfregregvlca15_cloudcast_201504ct Interested in Cloud Foundry Summit? We have a code for that as well! Use CFSCAST for 25% off! http://www.cfsummit.com/ Topic 1 - What have you been up to lately? Topic 2 - Most interesting feedback you’ve gotten since we pivoted the focus of the show? Topic 3 - What’s been the most interesting announcements, acquisitions, VC funding for you so far in 2015? AWS Earnings Announcement Nebula goes out of business Commercialized Kubernetes and Mesos (Mesosphere, Kismatic, CoreOS) Docker’s Round D funding VMware’s Container Announcement Infrastructure funding levels vs. Software funding levels Interesting Moves by Microsoft (Containers, Linux on Azure, etc.) Topic 4 - What’s been the most confusing or surprising announcement or move? Topic 5 - We usually do end-of-year predictions, but stuff is moving so fast, maybe we should throw out 1 or 2 for the next 3-6 months? Music Credit:Nine Inch Nails (nin.com)
Aaron and Brian talk to Sam Ramji (@sramji; President of Cloud Foundry Foundation) about his first 30 days on the job, engaging developer communities, open vs. commercial, branding and awareness of open source projects. - Cloud Foundry Foundation: http://cloudfoundry.org/index.html - Cloud Foundry Summit May 11-12: http://www.cfsummit.com/ - Use promo code CFSCAST for 25% off Cloud Foundry Summit! Music Credit: Nine Inch Nails (nin.com)
Aaron and Brian talk with Kenny Coleman (@kendrickcoleman, Cloud Architect) about his experience and perspective at Cloud Foundry Summit. They discuss how different the customer stories were from traditional IT, the evolution of the technology, how software is changing industries and how this impacts today’s IT professional. They also discuss why smart infrastructure professionals are moving towards development. Music Credit: Nine Inch Nails (www.nin.com)