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Mark Freydl (CEO/Founder @codiacio) talks about the challenges of blending IaaC, DevOps and Platform Engineering to drive efficient software development lifecycles.SHOW: 919SHOW TRANSCRIPT: The Cloudcast #919 TranscriptSHOW VIDEO: https://youtube.com/@TheCloudcastNET CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK: http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotwNEW TO CLOUD? CHECK OUT OUR OTHER PODCAST: "CLOUDCAST BASICS"SHOW NOTES:Codiac websiteCodiac at Tech Field DayTopic 1 - Welcome to the show, Mark. Give everyone a quick introduction.Topic 2 - Before we dig into the tech, let's start with the problem. What problem were you seeing in software development that wasn't being solved with IaaC, Platform Engineering, DevOps, etc.? Where does SDLC fit into this? Topic 3 - Have microservices helped or hurt? We hear all the time about the loose coupling of microservices and benefits towards production, but doesn't that also make it harder to develop? How do you recreate an environment where you are dependent on a bunch of microservices in a development pipeline?Topic 4 - I get the feeling this is all about removing friction. But where and how? I see Kubernetes as a blessing and curse many times. It's an awesome application platform, as long as you aren't the one that has to do the care and feeding on it. Thoughts?Topic 5 - The goal here I believe is a closed loop system that is beneficial for developers and SRE's, but how do you balance closed loops vs. extensibility and abstraction of different platforms to the systems that are truly write once.Topic 6 - How does the culture and relationships in the org have to change to meet the changes in the tech?FEEDBACK?Email: show at the cloudcast dot netBluesky: @cloudcastpod.bsky.socialTwitter/X: @cloudcastpodInstagram: @cloudcastpodTikTok: @cloudcastpod
Adam Jacob (@adamhjk, CEO/Founder @thesysteminit) talks about the evolution and intersection of DevOps 2.0, Infrastructure as Code (IaC), and what's nextSHOW: 907SHOW TRANSCRIPT: The Cloudcast #907 TranscriptSHOW VIDEO: https://youtube.com/@TheCloudcastNET CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK: http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotwNEW TO CLOUD? CHECK OUT OUR OTHER PODCAST: "CLOUDCAST BASICS"SHOW SPONSOR:Try Postman AI Agent Builder Todaypostman.com/podcast/cloudcast/SHOW NOTES:System Initiative websiteAdam on The Cloudcast #729Topic 1 - Welcome back to the show. We last spoke mid-2023. For those that missed that show, tell us about your background…Topic 2 - When we last spoke, we talked about DevOps 2.0. Give everyone an update on the state of the industry. DevOps 2.0, IaC, etc. Where are we at in that journey? For instance, what's broken with IaC in the existing approaches and why a new approach?Topic 3 - One thing I've noticed in research for this topic is the move to visual and UI to conceptualize the environment and the corresponding actions. APIs and command lines will always have a place but what are your thoughts on this trend? I personally fall asleep every time someone gives a talk an industry conference and they pull up the command line for their demo. But, I'm also a visual learner.Topic 4 - When I've thought about both DevOps and IaC in the past, my mind immediately jumps to both complexity and dependencies. What do developers today have to consider and have we made any advances here?Topic 5 - Are there new metrics for success? With DevOps is was number of code commits, with IaC it was number of seamless deployments and actions. What do development teams look for today as the consider new platforms and tools?Topic 6 - I can see this being an area that could be impacted by AI in a few ways: 1. the summarization of large amounts of data 2. Digital Twins and simulations and 3. Agentic AI performing tasks based on conditions. What are your thoughts on AI here?Topic 7 - If anyone out there is interested, what's the best way to get started?FEEDBACK?Email: show at the cloudcast dot netBluesky: @cloudcastpod.bsky.socialTwitter/X: @cloudcastpodInstagram: @cloudcastpodTikTok: @cloudcastpod
Firas is an architect working across multiple disciplines including neurotechnology, AI, and the metaverse. He shares his background and journey getting into architecture, including his masters studies at IAAC in Barcelona.Firas talks about his early interests in the human body, technology, coding architecture, and responsive environments. He created interactive installations and explored how neurotechnology can inform architecture, such as through brain-building interfaces. He founded the Barcelona chapter of NeuroTechX, a global neurotechnology community. He also started a podcast exploring the intersection of neurotechnology and design. Firas is working on a neurotechnology hackathon happening soon.Professionally, Firas has worked on architectural and urban design projects around the world. He also creates art projects incorporating AI, neurotechnology and virtual environments.Looking ahead, Firas is further exploring metaverse development, aiming to create a more democratized and accessible version compared to current game-engine based metaverses. He is also planning an educational neurotechnology roadtrip to engage young people with DIY neurotech devices.Firas shares key concepts relating to his work - virtual urbanism, rule-based urbanism, understanding scale in the metaverse, city-as-world thinking, address ecologies, tokenizing life, attention economies, and more.He envisions architects designing directly for human perception via brain implants, rather than external mediums. Firas also discusses rethinking architectural practice itself towards decentralized governance models suited for metaverse collaboration. Overall, Firas is exploring new territories in architecture and urban design at the intersection of neuroscience, AI, and digital environments. He aims to engage these technologies for more participatory, experiential and ecologically-aligned outcomes. 00:00 - Introduction 05:00 - Educational background 10:00 - Early work exploring technology and architecture 15:00 - Getting into neurotechnology 20:00 - Community building and events 25:00 - Architectural practice work 30:00 - Art and speculative projects 35:00 - Key concepts and ideas 45:00 - Getting involved in the metaverse 55:00 - Rethinking architectural practice 1:05:00 - Tokenizing cities and infrastructure 1:10:00 - Neurotechnology and the future 1:15:00 - Rapid fire questions 1:20:00 - Closing thoughts neurotechnology, metaverse, virtual urbanism, neuroarchitecture, responsive architecture, interactive installations, artificial intelligence, urban design, Barcelona, masters degree, architect, coding architecture, podcast, hackathon, decentralized governance, virtual environments, brain-computer interfaces, neuroscience, perceptual engineering, participatory design, experiential design, ecological design, attention economy, tokenizing life --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mayur-m-mistry/message
Estudió arquitectura en la Universidad Iberoamericana en la Ciudad de México. En el 2002 fundó Rojkind Arquitectos, y ha participado en diversos proyectos internacionales de gran escala en México, Canadá, Kuwait, China, Dubái, Singapur y España. Ha sido profesor invitado en el Instituto de Arquitectura de California del Sur (SCI-Arc), en Los Ángeles, California, y en el Instituto de Arquitectura Avanzada de Cataluña (IAAC), en Barcelona. En 2011, la revista Wallpaper lo nombró uno de los 150 creativos más importantes de los últimos 15 años. En 2010, fue nombrado “Faces to Watch” por el periódico Los Angeles Times, y ese mismo año fue seleccionado como "Emerging Voices” por la Liga de Arquitectura de Nueva York. Rojkind Arquitectos es responsable de varios edificios icónicos dentro del país como High Park en MTY, la Cineteca Nacional en la CDMX así como Mercado Roma También es un exitoso músico baterista quien fue parte de la banda de pop-rock Aleks Syntek y la Gente Normal .
Christian spends the entire show with author Mark Ribowsky, discussing his book "Black Moses: The Hot Buttered Soul of Isaac Hayes". As a special bonus, stay tuned to the end of the episode to hear outtakes from the recording where Christian tap-dance while he waited for technical problems to end.
گفتگو با آرین حکیمی | معمار و دیزاینردر این اپیزود شنونده ی تجربه یک معمار دیزاینر بودیم ؛ آرین حکیمی. آرین حکیمی یک معمار، محقق و مدرس ایرانی هست که سال ها پیش پس از اتمام تحصیلات خود در رشته معماری در دانشگاه تهران، مدرک کارشناسی ارشد معماری پیشرفته خود را در دانشگاه IAAC بارسلون به پایان رساند. در رزومه کاری او علاوه بر برگزاری کارگاه های بین المللی برای اموزش روش طراحی جز به کل با همکاری ON-A، عنوان طراح ارشد در پروژه های مختلف شرکت زاها حدید ZHA وجود دارد. ما در این قسمت با آرین حکیمی در رابطه با مهارت های لازمه برای تبدیل شدن به یک طراح حرفه ای، قوانین کار گروهی و لزوم پرورش این مهارت، آشنایی با سیستم طراحی جز به کل(Bottom Up) و اهمیت استفاده از رفرنس در تمامی کارها، گفت و گویی داشتیم. کد تخفیف دوستان کوبیک را برای کتاب های تخصصی انتشارت وارش از دست ندهید !شما میتونید با وارد کردن کد تخفیف Cubicgift در وبسایت فروش کتاب های تخصصی دیزاین ، پیزا بوک از تخفیف مخصوص دوستان کوبیک بهره مند شوید. وبسایت پیزابوک : https://pizzabook.ir/از طریق لینک زیر نیز به تمامی پلتفورم های کوبیک دسترسی خواهید داشت :https://zil.ink/cubicpodcastگروه کوبیک : کیمیا انصاری و زینب زارعی Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
EP18 MICHEL ROJKIND Estudió arquitectura en la Universidad Iberoamericana en la Ciudad de México. En el 2002 fundó Rojkind Arquitectos, y ha participado en diversos proyectos internacionales de gran escala en México, Canadá, Kuwait, China, Dubái, Singapur y España. Ha sido profesor invitado en el Instituto de Arquitectura de California del Sur (SCI-Arc), en Los Ángeles, California, y en el Instituto de Arquitectura Avanzada de Cataluña (IAAC), en Barcelona. En 2011, la revista Wallpaper lo nombró uno de los 150 creativos más importantes de los últimos 15 años. En 2010, fue nombrado “Faces to Watch” por el periódico Los Angeles Times, y ese mismo año fue seleccionado como "Emerging Voices” por la Liga de Arquitectura de Nueva York. Rojkind Arquitectos es responsable de varios edificios icónicos dentro del país como High Park en MTY, la Cineteca Nacional en la CDMX así como Mercado Roma. También es un exitoso músico baterista quien fue parte de la banda de pop-rock Aleks Syntek y la Gente Normal .
Join our resident Business Ninja Kelsey together with Farrukh Sadykov of EvolveCyber, an IT and consulting firm offering DevOps and job opportunities. EvolveCyber's mission is to teach IT and transform the lives of people of all backgrounds. Their courses provide a foundation for individuals wishing to become IT specialists by introducing key concepts and enterprise-level tools. Their 5-month DevOps course is designed specifically for beginners. EvolveCyber has been in pursuit of excellence in offering leading IT courses. Their graduates seeking an IT job got hired with an average salary increase of 60%.EvolveCyber has a 5-month DevOps course specifically designated for beginners. EvolveCyber's mission is to teach IT and transform the lives of people of all backgrounds. It is part-time and one can attend it either online or onsite. Their curriculum was derived from most in-demand DevOps skills. Take advantage of their adapted and perfected curriculum in an environment designed for the success of clients. They will teach the customer how to use automation techniques through real-life scenarios, practical labs, and projects. Each cohort is part-time and lasts for 23 weeks. It covers Automation, CI/CD, Networking, Security, Containerization, Virtualization, Cloud, Scripting, IaaC, and more. Learn more about them and visit their website today at https://www.evolvecyber.com/-----Do you want to be interviewed for your business? Schedule time with us, and we'll create a podcast like this for your business: https://www.WriteForMe.io/-----https://www.facebook.com/writeforme.iohttps://www.instagram.com/writeforme.io/https://twitter.com/writeformeiohttps://www.linkedin.com/company/writ...https://www.pinterest.com/andysteuer/Want to be interviewed on our Business Ninjas podcast? Schedule time with us now, and we'll make it happen right away! Check out WriteForMe, more than just a Content Agency! See the Faces Behind The Voices on our YouTube Channel!
In this episode, we're talking to Daniel Charny, a creative director, curator and educator with an inquiring mind and an entrepreneurial streak. Alongside Dee Halligan, he is co-founder and director of From Now On, where he works with clients from Google to the Design Museum. Describing themselves as ‘part R&D Lab and part consultancy, small, connected and serious about finding better responses to our changing world,' their most recent initiative is the creative education think-and-do-tank FixEd.Daniel is also Professor of Design at Kingston University and guest lecturer on the Master in Design for Emergent Futures at IAAC, Barcelona.We discuss:- The mindset around fixing and the impact it has. - The importance of ‘applied creativity' in education. - Why young and older makers need to come together to create change. - The differences between formal, informal and non-formal education and why all three are important. - His time spent working with Zeev Aram and The Aram Gallery- Fixperts, an award-winning learning programme for applied creativity and social sustainability.… and more!Here are some highlights. The connection between making and mending“I think they are completely connected, but there are different values sometimes behind them and different reasons for doing them. Menders have material intelligence, they have acquired skills. Making is, I think, completely integral to mending. I don't think it works the other way around. I think a lot of makers can mend, but it's not necessarily their driver. There are lots of tribes of makers, and some of them are interested in innovation. And so improving is more of their state of making. And yes, they are mending something, but not in order to mend it back to what it was. We then just think about it as a kind of access of care, and you think about conservation, you think about maintenance, you think about care in daily life and repair, and then hacking and then adapting and so on.”Waking people up to remember that we have making“It was kind of like, ‘Okay, let's open that cupboard and remember we have it.' We don't have to invent it, it's there, we just kind of forgot about it. Too many people forget about it. And Fixperts, Maker Library Network, they really are taking that notion with a social agenda together. So there was an area in ‘The Power of Making' that was very much about communities making together, so it wasn't so much DIY culture, it was ‘MIY' culture, and it was very much the early 3D printers. […] Or materials like Sugru are about fixing but also inventing and maybe doing repair for someone else, and there was this whole notion of the social of communities doing things for themselves and for others.”The importance of engaging with young people to create change“When you think about the challenges we're facing with the environment, it's not just about coming up with how to clean in the ocean or how to reduce carbon footprints, you need a major cultural shift to support young people to even learn to think like that. We have to engage much earlier with younger people at the stage when they are thinking about what their values are, how they understand themselves and creativity. It becomes a different kind of premise for me than teaching design. It's not just the sense and the mindset, it's actually enabling. The idea is not enough, they also have to have the skills. It's the imagination and the skills together in order to achieve these shifts.”The book Katie mentions towards the end of the episode, from which she has taken the term ‘stubborn optimism' is The Future We Choose by Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac, which you can buy here. (This is an affiliate link and both Katie and a bricks and mortar bookshop will get a small cut if you purchase this way.)Connect with Daniel Charny here.Follow Daniel on Twitter here.This episode is dedicated to Zeev Aram: https://www.dezeen.com/2021/03/22/zeev-aram-obituary/About Katie TreggidenKatie Treggiden is a purpose-driven journalist, author, podcaster and keynote speaker championing a circular approach to design – because Planet Earth needs better stories. With 20 years' experience in the creative industries, she regularly contributes to publications such as The Guardian, Crafts Magazine, Design Milk and Monocle24. Following research during her recent Masters at the University of Oxford, she is currently exploring the question ‘can craft save the world?' through an emerging body of work that includes her fifth book, Wasted: When Trash Becomes Treasure (Ludion, 2020), and this podcast. You can find Katie on Instagram @katietreggiden.1, sign up for her e-newsletter here and if you're a designer-maker interested in becoming more sustainable, sign up for her free Facebook Group here. If you'd like to support more fantastic content like this, you can buy Katie a ‘virtual coffee' here in exchange for behind the scenes content and a shout-out in Season Three.
Anshu heads the SRE and engineering infrastructure (systems) operations for Grab Financial Group across SE Asia on AWS, Azure, GCP, AzureStack, and bare metal servers. Being the first member of the team and the first few engineering hires in Bangalore, he worked on greenfield project to establish engineering best practices using containers, cloud agnostics stack, IAAC, and CI/CD and grew the SRE team to 10 while helping to grow the engineering team to 200. Prior to joining Grab in 2017, Anshu worked with Freecharge, Jio, Aerospike, and Yahoo. Managing exponential scale 25:15 - Balancing innovation & growth 32:27 - How have Dev-Ops evolved? 41:20 - Being an engineering manager 53:14 - Nuances of the 0 to 1 Journey ---------------- Connect with Anshu - Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/anshuprateek/ ---------------- Check out The Daily Reader: www.tinyurl.com/wanttobeadailyreader ----------------- Found this episode informative? Let us know by hitting the like button & subscribing to our channel. You can also Tweet or DM us on - LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/startup-operator Twitter - https://twitter.com/OperatorStartup --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/startup-operator/message
GitOps em sua raiz significa que é o DevOps com IaaC, gerenciamento de configuração, integração continua e etc... mas com o git sendo o centro destas operações. Em Texto no https://esli-nux.com Plataformas de podcast em https://anchor.fm/esl1h --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/esl1h/message
Attendees Guest: Ohad Maislish Guest Title: Co-Founder & CEO Company: env0 Abstract Infrastructure as code is one of the most interesting technologies in the market. It enables organizations to deploy heavy workloads within seconds and avoid risky configuration mistakes. In this episode, we talked with Ohad Maislish, Co-Founder and CEO at env0, about infrastructure as code technology, how and where it is being used, and how env0 helps organizations to better utilize this technology. Timing 0:00 introducing our guest 2:26 What is infrastructure as a code 10:16 Examples for practical deployment of IaaC 13:55 How IaaC is helping governance 19:20 IaaC behind the scenes 25:18 IaaC in a multi-cloud environment 28:40 Summary and last words
In dieser Episode reden Thomas, Christian und Enrico über Infrastructure as Code. Dabei wird schnell klar, dass dieses Thema sehr eng mit Configuration Management verbunden ist. Neben den vielen Tools, von Ansible, Salt, Puppet, Chef überTerraform bis hin zu CFEngine, hat sich vor allem auch bei den Cloud-Providern viel getan, sodass eigentlich jede Cloud seine eigenen Möglichkeiten mitbringt, um Infrastruktur als Code zu definieren. Zusammen sprechen wir über unsere eigene Historie mit den einzelnen Tools sowie darüber, was das Ganze für Vorteile mit sich bringt und was bei einer Automatisierungsstrategie aus unserer Sicht am wichtigsten ist.
In dieser Episode reden Thomas, Christian und Enrico über Infrastructure as Code. Dabei wird schnell klar, dass dieses Thema sehr eng mit Configuration Management verbunden ist. Neben den vielen Tools, von Ansible, Salt, Puppet, Chef überTerraform bis hin zu CFEngine, hat sich vor allem auch bei den Cloud-Providern viel getan, sodass eigentlich jede Cloud seine eigenen Möglichkeiten mitbringt, um Infrastruktur als Code zu definieren. Zusammen sprechen wir über unsere eigene Historie mit den einzelnen Tools sowie darüber, was das Ganze für Vorteile mit sich bringt und was bei einer Automatisierungsstrategie aus unserer Sicht am wichtigsten ist.
In this interview, Deepak shares his journey, insights about his M.Arch projects and studio work at IAAC, electives, challenges faced, mentors, thoughts on computational design and artificial intelligence in architecture along with advice to students and professionals who are interested to purse M.Arch at IAAC. Deepak Sivadasan is an architectural designer specialized in algorithmic computational designs ( rhino + grasshopper) and contemporary designs (sketchUp) , with a focus on encouraging interdisciplinary methodologies such as machine learning (python coding), robotic construction and physical computing into architecture. He is involved with various under construction projects in Dubai, U.A.E. #m.arch #iaac #computationaldesign --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mayur-m-mistry/message
Deploying on cloud is very very different as compared to traditional IT infrastructures. In cloud, your deployments no longer remain hardware devices, but rather become programmable services. AWS CloudFormation is a managed AWS service that helps you to deploy your entire infrastructure as a code (IaaC). Using this, you can set up your resources continuously and repeatedly without doing all the work again and again. Now that we know slightly about CloudFormation let’s dive deep into it. CloudFormation has two most important components, templates and stacks. Let’s get on to them one by one starting with templates. A template is like a JSON or YAML file that lays the blueprint of your entire architecture. This is the document, sort of, that you upload to AWS and it provisions resources. A template has its own elements, namely: A list of AWS resources and their configuration values. Do remember this is the only part that is mandatory in the entire template Optional version number. Just as I mentioned earlier, you can apply version control to your architecture. Optional list of parameters. Consider them like some variable input values that you want to provide the template at the time of provisioning, eg. IP CIDR ranges. Optional list of output values Optional list of data tables to lookup static configuration values, like the AMIs as per the region you are provisioning And once the resources that you’ve mentioned in the template are provisioned, they all form a stack. But do remember that only the resources that are deployed as a part of the same template can be classified as a single unit called stack. Simply said, stack is nothing but a collection of resources provisioned as a part of the same cloudFormation template. Now comes a very important part of the CloudFormation service, change sets. So basically when you have deployed an architecture and now you want to make changes to the architecture, change sets come into picture. It includes an overview of the changes that you intend to make, thereby helping you to check how the proposed changes could potentially affect the already running resources. And once you execute the change set, only then will the changes be actually made to the resources. However, know that change set in no way tell you whether the stack will be successfully updated or not. Permissions and security, again, being the topmost priority of AWS, find their place in CloudFormation as well. Beginning with IAM, you must have IAM permissions assigned to you to enable you to create, provision, modify, edit or delete resources. Whatever action your template intends to perform, you must have requisite permissions for it. But AWS services have roles assigned to them, and you can use them too. A Service role is assigned to the template that enables cloudFormation to make API calls to required services on your behalf. If you have a service role, CloudFormation will no longer need you to have permissions, it will simply execute as per the permissions of the service role. But, how does it work? Like how do they grant permissions? When using a user’s IAM permissions, a temporary token is created on the basis of the user's credentials while in the case of service role, the token is created from the role’s credentials. Cloudformation template attributes CreationPolicy Creation policy makes sure that no resource sends a create complete signal until and unless it has sent a specified number of success signals to the CloudFormation. DeletionPolicy It specifies what to do when the stack is being deleted, as to whether to retain a resource or maintain it’s backup For example you can specify to take snapshots of an RDS instance at the time of deletion. DependsOn This attribute tells the CloudFormation that the resource A is dependent on resource B and that you need to have B created before you can go on and create A.
Contato: teslacoilpodcast@gmail.com Divulgação: Intagram - ligadaastronomia Grupo da liga no whatsapp: chat.whatsapp.com/EIV4DaFAs2QA2bYSAjmgD7 Inscrição IAAC: https://iaac.space/en/ Terremoto na Asia deixa a Terra mais Redonda: https://www.bbc.com/portuguese/reporterbbc/story/2005/01/050112_nasadtl.shtml Força de terremoto deslocou eixo da Terra: http://g1.globo.com/jornal-hoje/noticia/2011/03/forca-de-tsunami-deslocou-eixo-da-terra-afirma-estudo-italiano.html Três Gargantas pode ter mudado a velocidade da Terra: https://www.if.ufrgs.br/novocref/?contact-pergunta=hidroeletrica-causa-mudanca-na-rotacao-da-terra https://www.megacurioso.com.br/astronomia/42012-a-maior-hidroeletrica-do-planeta-e-capaz-de-alterar-a-rotacao-da-terra-.htm
Таймкоды: 05:45 - Databases on Kubernetes: Why you should care by Denis Wilson Souza Rosa (https://youtu.be/xfKmBzwPZdc) 13:30 - Azure Storage by Adam Skibicki (https://youtu.be/GYY3i1nTsPQ) 25:10 - From Containers to Kubernetes Operators by Philipp Krenn (https://youtu.be/KBCxIw48ovg) 31:40 - When developers are on call by Nicolas Moutschen (https://youtu.be/rwTULEh7_ag) 37:30 - Cloud DevOps evolution by Oleksandr Mykhalchuk (https://youtu.be/yEQZsjDEjaA) 42:40 - CI/CD with IaaC on AWS using CloudFormation + Ansible + JenkinsPipeline + Git by Szymon Święcki (https://youtu.be/1xBo3oY2Mr8) 51:50 - The steps to effective Azure governance by Sjoukje Zaal (https://youtu.be/4ZacM-Ndkqk) 55:50 - How we killed DevOps by creating a dedicated DevOps team by Adam Nowak (https://youtu.be/uezUdRSmF1k) 01:05:50 - Provisioning an AWS Fargate fleet using Terraform by Juan Luis Sanchez (https://youtu.be/5MkqBWE85x0) Мы в соцсетях: 1. Twitter: https://twitter.com/ProconfShow 2. Telegram: https://t.me/proConf 3. Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvasfOIImo7D9lQkb1Wc1tw 4. SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/proconf 5. Itunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/by/podcast/podcast-proconf/id1455023466
Gartner releases the new magic quadrant for IaaC and PaaS Cloud providers and Amazon continues to dominate. AT&T gets busy with the cloud, Google introduces spinnaker and Microsoft invests 1B in OpenAI this week on The Cloud Pod. Sponsors: Foghorn Consulting – fogops.io/thecloudpod Topics Introducing the Amazon Corretto Crypto Provider for improved Crypto Performance Advancing Microsoft Azure reliability Introducing proximity placement groups IBM inks multi-billion dollar cloud computing deal with AT&T Microsoft & AT&T sign $2B+ cloud infrastructure and services deal The case against Amazon: Why the tech giant is facing antitrust scrutiny on two continents Arrested Development: Cops Dump Amazon’s facial-recognition API after struggling to make the thing work properly AWS named as leader in Gartner’s Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) Magic Quadrant for 9th consecutive year Introducing Spinnaker for Google Cloud Platform – CD made easy Azure is making it easier to bring your linux based web apps to Azure App Service
第2回 : バルセロナとIaaC MOMENT編集部の神尾が在籍するカタルーニャ先進建築大学院大学 Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia(通称:IaaC)について話しました。 ・Master in Design for Emergent Futuresとは? ・マテリアルドリブンデザインとは? ↓マテリアルドリブンデザインに関する神尾のブログはこちら。↓ https://link.medium.com/FgtRZTvfyY
Highlights of the week: 1. Mongolia's Integrated Tax Management System 2. Air Pollution And Health 3. What can we expect from the IAAC on the SME Development Fund Scandal?
Highlights of the week: 1. Hedging fuel prices in Mongolia 2. Who is keeping the press? 3. New leadership at the IAAC
In this episode, I answer some listener questions and share some thoughts on Infrastructure as Code.
Highlight of the the week: 1. Parliament session of the Government dismissal 2. Current state of political parties 3. IAAC made a statement
This podcast episode was recorded shortly after returning from the We Agnostics, Atheists and Freethinkers International AA Convention that was held in Austin, Texas from November 11-13th. Included in the discussion is Benn B., from Lincoln, Nebraska and my co-host on AA Beyond Belief, Vic L., from New York, New York and a past board […]
This podcast episode was recorded shortly after returning from the We Agnostics, Atheists and Freethinkers International AA Convention that was held in Austin, Texas from November 11-13th. Included in the discussion is Benn B., from Lincoln, Nebraska and my co-host on AA Beyond Belief, Vic L., from New York, New York and a past board member of WAAFT IAAC, and Willow F. from Seattle, Washington. In the podcast we have a conversation about our experiences and observations while attending the convention. Included with the podcast, is an article by Vic, "Some Observations from Austin", and an article that I wrote "Thinking About Austin".
In a development without precedent in the world of 12-step organizations, hundreds of recovering alcoholics and addicts from around the world who describe themselves as atheists or agnostics will gather in Santa Monica this November for the first-ever We Agnostics and Freethinkers International Alcoholics Anonymous Convention (WAFT IAAC)”. — The Santa Monica Mirror, August 2, […]
In November of 2014, we agnostics, atheists and freethinkers followed AA’s broad highway to Santa Monica, California, and Alcoholics Anonymous has not been the same since. It was there where our imaginations were stirred, and an energy and passion was created that ultimately resulted in the formation of some 125 new AA meetings. We are staying sober by widening the gateway to recovery for others, and doing our part to ensure “that the hand of AA will always be there, when anyone, anywhere reaches out for help”.
Studio Banana TV interviews Spanish architect Vicente Guallart pioneer of interaction between nature, technology and architecture proposes new paradigms based in urban, social and cultural conditions emerging from information society.