Podcast appearances and mentions of matt asay

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Best podcasts about matt asay

Latest podcast episodes about matt asay

The MongoDB Podcast
EP. 237 The Future of MongoDB: Performance, Security, and Scalability for Developers

The MongoDB Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 10:34


In this episode of the MongoDB Podcast, Matt Asay sits down with Peder Ulander, Chief Marketing Officer at MongoDB, during MongoDB's .local London event. Peder shares insights on the latest developments in MongoDB, focusing on performance, scalability, and the platform's relevance to developers. They discuss how MongoDB has evolved beyond a niche NoSQL database to become a versatile platform capable of supporting complex, cloud-scale applications across various industries. Peder also highlights the simplicity of getting started with MongoDB, the role of AI in modernizing legacy apps, and how the data architecture landscape is shifting towards distributed systems.

The Cloud Pod
256: Begun, The Custom Silicon Wars Have

The Cloud Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 40:59


Welcome to episode 256 of the Cloud Pod podcast – where the forecast is always cloudy! This week your hosts, Justin and Matthew are here this week to catch you up on all the news you may have missed while Google Next was going on. We've got all the latest news on the custom silicon hot war that's developing, some secret sync, drama between HashiCorp and OpenTofu, and one more Google Next recap – plus much more in today's episode. Welcome to the Cloud!  Titles we almost went with this week: I have a Google Next sized hangover Claude's Magnificent Opus now on AWS US-EAST-1 Gets called Reliable; how insulting The cloud pod flies on a g6  A big thanks to this week's sponsor:   Check out Sonrai Securities’ new Cloud Permission Firewall. Just for our listeners, enjoy a 14 day trial at www.sonrai.co/cloudpod General News  Today, we get caught up on the other Clouds from last week, and other news (besides Google, that is.) Buckle up.  04:11 OpenTofu Project Denies HashiCorp's Allegations of Code Theft  After our news cutoff before Google Next, Hashicorp issued a strongly worded Cease and Desist letter to the OpenTofu project, accusing that the project has “repeatedly taken code Hashi provided under the BSL and used it in a manner that violates those license terms and Hashi's intellectual properties.” It notes that in some instances, OpenTofu has incorrectly re-labeled Hashicorp's code to make it appear as if it was made available by Hashi, originally under a different license.  Hashi gave them until April 10th to remove any allegedly copied code from the OpenTofu repo, threatening litigation if the project failed to do so.  OpenTofu struck back – and they came with receipts!  They deny that any BSL licensed code was incorporated into the OpenTofu repo, and that any code they copied came from the MPL-Licensed version of terraform. “The OpenTofu team vehemently disagrees with any suggestions that it misappropriated, mis-sourced or misused Hashi's BSL code. All such statements have zero basis in facts” — Open Tofu Team OpenTofu showed how the code they accused was lifted from the BSL code, was actually in the MPL version, and then copied into the BSL version from an older version by a Hashi Engineer.  Anticipating third party contributions might submit BSL terraform code unwittingly or otherwise, OpenTofu instituted a “taint team” to compare Terraform and Open Tofu Pull requests. If the PR is found to be in breach of intellectual property rights, the pull request is closed and the contributor is closed from working on that area of the code in the future.  Matt Asay, (from Mongo) writing for Infoworld, dropped a hit piece when the C&D was filed, but then

Software Defined Talk
Episode 463: Phishing License

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2024 68:27


This week, we discuss OpenTofu's response to Hashicorp, Salesforce potentially acquiring Informatica and the latest Kubernetes Market Size from IDC. Plus, when will Enterprise A.I. improve the DMV experience? Watch the YouTube Live Recording of Episode (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7Yvt-NtjVc) 463 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7Yvt-NtjVc) Runner-up Titles The fun run was fun. You don't have to pay for this, just glue it together with a couple of bash scripts. The Phish are biting Everything's cool zone Words that rhyme with “acquisation” Maybe AI can find it The market for products that start with “K” I like hotdogs Don't do the values, just the fun facts Rundown An Interview with Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian About Google's Enterprise AI Strategy (https://stratechery.com/2024/an-interview-with-google-cloud-ceo-thomas-kurian-about-googles-enterprise-ai-strategy/) OpenTofu responds to Hashicorp Our Response to Hashicorp's Cease and Desist Letter | OpenTofu (https://opentofu.org/blog/our-response-to-hashicorps-cease-and-desist/) Matt Asay response Tweet (https://twitter.com/mjasay/status/1778454498664690108) Adam Jacob take (https://twitter.com/adamhjk/status/1778470920094691625) Salesforce in Advanced Talks to Buy Informatica (https://www.wsj.com/tech/salesforce-in-advanced-talks-to-buy-informatica-ba9ec09c?mod=tech_lead_story&utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axiosprorata&stream=top) 451 Research's kubernetes market-sizing ($2.85 billion in 2028) (https://clients.451research.com/reportaction/203924/Toc?ref=PCN%20email) Exclusive: API startup Noname Security nears $500M deal to sell itself to Akamai (https://techcrunch.com/2024/04/12/akamai-acquisition-talks-noname-security/) Relevant to your Interests Introducing Our Next Generation Infrastructure for AI | Meta (https://about.fb.com/news/2024/04/introducing-our-next-generation-infrastructure-for-ai/?utm_campaign=%5BREBRAND%5D+%5BTI-AM%5D+Th&utm_content=1095&utm_medium=email&utm_source=cio&utm_term=124) ISPs roll out mandatory broadband 'nutrition' labels that show speeds, fees and data allowances (https://www.engadget.com/isps-roll-out-mandatory-broadband-nutrition-labels-that-show-speeds-fees-and-data-allowances-103832369.html) How ZIRP benefited hyperscaler revenue (https://twitter.com/treiner5/status/1778403310871179678) Platformonomics - Follow the CAPEX: The Clown Car Race Checkered Flag (https://platformonomics.com/2024/04/follow-the-capex-the-clown-car-race-checkered-flag/) Splunk vs Cribl Lawsuit of Terms Violating Enterprise License (https://cybersecuritynews.com/splunk-vs-cribl-lawsuit/) It's easy to bash tech, but I've started taking robotaxis — and they're awesome (https://www.businessinsider.com/waymo-self-driving-robotaxi-cars-without-drivers-amazing-tech-review-2024-4) Citi slashes 110 apps: Next up... Data transformation (https://www.thestack.technology/citi-data-transformation-2024/) Microsoft Makes High-Stakes Play in Tech Cold War With Emirati A.I. Deal (https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/16/technology/microsoft-g42-uae-ai.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axiosprorata&stream=top) Widely-Used PuTTY SSH Client Found Vulnerable to Key Recovery Attack (https://thehackernews.com/2024/04/widely-used-putty-ssh-client-found.html) Meta's Oversight Board probes explicit AI-generated images posted on Instagram and Facebook | TechCrunch (https://techcrunch.com/2024/04/16/metas-oversight-board-probes-explicit-ai-generated-images-posted-on-instagram-and-facebook/?_hsmi=302971940) New UK law targets “despicable individuals” who create AI sex deepfakes (https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2024/04/uk-seeks-to-criminalize-creation-of-sexually-explicit-ai-deepfake-images-without-consent/?_hsmi=302971940) Third-party iPhone app store AltStore PAL is now live in Europe (https://www.theverge.com/24100464/altstore-pal-dma-eu-launch-delta-nintendo-emulator-clip-clipboard-manager) Linux Foundation leads the fight against fauxpen source (https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/12/linux_foundation_opinion/) Enterprise Nonsense How to setup your own Database as a Service (DBaaS) for RabbitMQ, MySQL, Postgres, Redis (https://youtu.be/FBvQRpZYSXw?si=BAtYDg4ImZDgYxea) Listener Feedback Amazon.com: Sink Soap Dispenser (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07SJ8SQ6Q?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share) Grip Case for Nintendo Switch Lite (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08DVCCWXH/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&th=1) Andrew Shafer owns an All American Burger? (http://All> American Burger - Tucson, AZ) Conferences Open Source Summit North America (https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-north-america/), Seattle April 16-18. Matt's speaking. NDC Oslo (https://substack.com/redirect/8de3819c-db2b-47c8-bd7a-f0a40103de9e?j=eyJ1IjoiMmQ0byJ9.QKaKsDzwnXK5ipYhX0mLOvRP3vpk_3o2b5dd3FXmAkw), Coté speaking (https://substack.com/redirect/41e821af-36ba-4dbb-993c-20755d5f040a?j=eyJ1IjoiMmQ0byJ9.QKaKsDzwnXK5ipYhX0mLOvRP3vpk_3o2b5dd3FXmAkw), June 12th. DevOpsDays Amsterdam (https://devopsdays.org/events/2024-amsterdam/welcome/), June 19-21, 2024, Coté speaking. DevOpsDays Birmingham, August 19–21, 2024 (https://devopsdays.org/events/2024-birmingham-al/welcome/). SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Get a SDT Sticker! Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop stickers! Follow us: Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/sdtpodcast), Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/), Mastodon (https://hachyderm.io/@softwaredefinedtalk), BlueSky (https://bsky.app/profile/softwaredefinedtalk.com), LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/), TikTok (https://www.tiktok.com/@softwaredefinedtalk), Threads (https://www.threads.net/@softwaredefinedtalk) and YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi3OJPV6h9tp-hbsGBLGsDQ/featured). Use the code SDT to get $20 off Coté's book, Digital WTF (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt), so $5 total. Become a sponsor of Software Defined Talk (https://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/ads)! Recommendations Brandon: Discovering the XZ Backdoor with Andres Freund / Oxide (https://oxide.computer/podcasts/oxide-and-friends/1843393) Civil War (https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/civil_war_2024) Matt: Ostrich travel pillow (https://amzn.to/3Jm4ixF) H (https://www.heb.com/product-detail/optic-shop-pro-sleep-blindfold-sleeping-mask-each/6176002)- (https://www.heb.com/product-detail/optic-shop-pro-sleep-blindfold-sleeping-mask-each/6176002)E (https://www.heb.com/product-detail/optic-shop-pro-sleep-blindfold-sleeping-mask-each/6176002)- (https://www.heb.com/product-detail/optic-shop-pro-sleep-blindfold-sleeping-mask-each/6176002)B Pro-Sleep Mask (https://www.heb.com/product-detail/optic-shop-pro-sleep-blindfold-sleeping-mask-each/6176002) Coté: Continuity Camera (https://support.apple.com/en-us/102546), kibbeling (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibbeling). Photo Credits Header (https://unsplash.com/photos/six-black-and-yellow-fishing-rod-in-boat-UivGzIDhVyw) Artwork (https://opentofu.org/blog/our-response-to-hashicorps-cease-and-desist/)

Software Defined Talk
Episode 462: Lifting Code

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2024 62:30


This week, we discuss Matt Asay accusing OpenTufu of "lifting code" and recap the Google Next '24. announcements. Plus, we share some thoughts on camera placement and offer listeners a chance to get free coffee beans. Watch the YouTube Live Recording of Episode (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VBJU8UdLOA) 462 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VBJU8UdLOA) Runner-up Titles Hey, I'm VP of Cables, not VP of Hubs. Well, I still have meetings. The Cote' Experience ClosedTofu Our Cloud is Huge(tm) Rundown Matt Asay vs. OpenTofu OpenTofu may be showing us the wrong way to fork (https://www.infoworld.com/article/3714980/opentofu-may-be-showing-us-the-wrong-way-to-fork.html) OpenTofu vehemently disagrees with any suggestion that it misappropriated (https://twitter.com/opentofuorg/status/1776398008558493991?s=46&t=kiCCT8LlOOqj0WYcmUddTg) Matt Asay (https://x.com/mjasay/status/1776635226124632423?s=46&t=EoCoteGkQEahPpAJ_HYRpg) Follow up Tweet Bryan Cantrill (https://x.com/bcantrill/status/1775962870762844212) calls it an extraordinarily serious accusation Adam Jacob says “incendiary claim with no actual facts backing it up. The code looks completely different. (https://twitter.com/adamhjk/status/1775663819693703674) Google Cloud Next '24 Introducing Google's new Arm-based CPU (https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/compute/introducing-googles-new-arm-based-cpu/) Google's first Arm-based CPU will challenge Microsoft and Amazon in the AI race (https://www.theverge.com/2024/4/9/24125074/google-axion-arm-cpu-ai-chips-cloud-server-data-center) Welcome to Google Cloud Next ‘24 | Google Cloud Blog (https://cloud.google.com/blog/topics/google-cloud-next/welcome-to-google-cloud-next24) Gemini for Google Cloud is here | Google Cloud Blog (https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/ai-machine-learning/gemini-for-google-cloud-is-here) Google Cloud Next '24 Opening Keynote (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6DJYGn2SFk) Google Cloud Next '24 Developer Keynote (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMH5OcW5UYw) Relevant to your Interests WhatsApp goes down in Meta's second big outage this year (https://techcrunch.com/2024/04/03/whatsapp-goes-down-in-metas-second-big-outage-this-year/) Alphabet is weighing an offer for $32 billion marketing tech firm HubSpot, sources say (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-google-parent-alphabet-weighs-134439629.html) OpenStack debuts its first easy-to-upgrade release (https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/04/openstack_caracal_released/) No, Amazon Isn't Killing Just Walk Out But Rather “Pushing Hard” On It (https://www.forrester.com/blogs/no-amazon-isnt-killing-just-walk-out-but-rather-pushing-hard-in-it/) Substack Is Setting Writers Up For A Twitter-Style Implosion (https://homewiththearmadillo.blog/2024/04/02/substack-is-setting-writers-up-for-a-twitter-style-implosion/comment-page-1/#comments) Why WASI Preview 2 Makes WebAssembly Production Ready (https://thenewstack.io/why-wasi-preview-2-makes-webassembly-production-ready/) Why Broadcom may set the future of software licensing (https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/05/the_world_is_watching_broadcom/) Rust developers at Google twice as productive as C++ teams (https://www.theregister.com/2024/03/31/rust_google_c/) New York City defends AI chatbot that advised entrepreneurs to break laws (https://www.reuters.com/technology/new-york-city-defends-ai-chatbot-that-advised-entrepreneurs-break-laws-2024-04-04/) Apple opens the App Store to retro game emulators (https://www.theverge.com/2024/4/5/24122341/apple-app-store-game-emulators-super-apps) The Status of Just Walk Out, TSMC Gets CHIPS Act Grant (https://stratechery.com/2024/the-status-of-just-walk-out-tsmc-gets-chips-act-grant/) Baldur's Gate 3 Dev Larian's Publishing Director Calls Games Industry Layoffs an 'Avoidable F*ck Up' - IGN (https://www.ign.com/articles/baldurs-gate-3-dev-larians-publishing-director-calls-games-industry-an-avoidable-fck-up) Access: A New Portal for Managing Internal Authorization (https://discord.com/blog/access-a-new-portal-for-managing-internal-authorization) Android's upgraded Find My Device network is here (https://www.theverge.com/2024/4/8/24124174/android-find-my-device-network-offline-tracker-tag-chipolo-pebblebee) Gemini 1.5 Makes a Scholarly Connection that Took Me Years to Find (https://www.reddit.com/r/singularity/comments/1bkcjs4/gemini_15_makes_a_scholarly_connection_that_took/) Android's upgraded Find My Device network is here (https://www.theverge.com/2024/4/8/24124174/android-find-my-device-network-offline-tracker-tag-chipolo-pebblebee) KKR Weighs Sale or IPO for $15 Billion BMC Software (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-04-10/kkr-is-said-to-weigh-sale-or-ipo-for-15-billion-bmc-software?utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=socialflow-organic&utm_content=tech&cmpid%3D=socialflow-twitter-tech&utm_medium=social&embedded-checkout=true) Nonsense Dude Perfect scores $100M+ investment from Highmount Capital (https://www.axios.com/2024/04/09/dude-perfect-investment-highmount-capital) Costco selling as much as $200M in gold bars per month, Wells Fargo estimates (https://nypost.com/2024/04/10/business/costco-selling-as-much-as-200m-in-gold-bars-per-month-wells-fargo/) Listener Feedback The first person to send their United States postal address to sdt@newinstancecoffee.com (mailto:sdt@newinstancecoffee.com) will receive a bag of Dawn Python (https://www.newinstancecoffee.com/dawn-python-v2-available/) Coffee Beans from New Instance Coffee (https://www.newinstancecoffee.com/). Conferences Open Source Summit North America (https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-north-america/), Seattle April 16-18. Matt's speaking. NDC Oslo (https://substack.com/redirect/8de3819c-db2b-47c8-bd7a-f0a40103de9e?j=eyJ1IjoiMmQ0byJ9.QKaKsDzwnXK5ipYhX0mLOvRP3vpk_3o2b5dd3FXmAkw), Coté speaking (https://substack.com/redirect/41e821af-36ba-4dbb-993c-20755d5f040a?j=eyJ1IjoiMmQ0byJ9.QKaKsDzwnXK5ipYhX0mLOvRP3vpk_3o2b5dd3FXmAkw), June 12th. DevOpsDays Amsterdam (https://devopsdays.org/events/2024-amsterdam/welcome/), June 19-21, 2024, Coté speaking. DevOpsDays Birmingham, August 19–21, 2024 (https://devopsdays.org/events/2024-birmingham-al/welcome/). SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Get a SDT Sticker! Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop stickers! Follow us: Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/sdtpodcast), Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/), Mastodon (https://hachyderm.io/@softwaredefinedtalk), BlueSky (https://bsky.app/profile/softwaredefinedtalk.com), LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/), TikTok (https://www.tiktok.com/@softwaredefinedtalk), Threads (https://www.threads.net/@softwaredefinedtalk) and YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi3OJPV6h9tp-hbsGBLGsDQ/featured). Use the code SDT to get $20 off Coté's book, Digital WTF (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt), so $5 total. Become a sponsor of Software Defined Talk (https://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/ads)! Recommendations Brandon: Node.js: The Documentary (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LB8KwiiUGy0) How A Small Team of Developers Created React at Facebook | React.js: The Documentary (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pDqJVdNa44) Matt: Qatar Airlines Stopover Tour (https://www.qatarairways.com/en/offers/qatar-stopover.html) Coté: Noah Kalina YouTubes (https://www.youtube.com/@NoahKalina) (follow-up: he's three years younger than Coté (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah_Kalina), so same cultural cohort as theorized.) Photo Credits Header (https://unsplash.com/s/photos/Coffee-Beans?orientation=landscape) Artwork (https://unsplash.com/photos/a-computer-screen-with-a-bunch-of-text-on-it-1LLh8k2_YFk)

The Cloud Pod
254: The Cloud Pod Offers Therapy Sessions to AIs With Trust Issues

The Cloud Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024 82:01


Welcome to episode 254 of the Cloud Pod podcast – where the forecast is always cloudy! This week we're talking about trust issues with some security updates over at Azure, forking drama at Redis, and making all of our probably terrible predictions for Google Next. Going to be in Vegas? Find one of us and get a sticker for your favorite cloud podcast! Follow us on Slack and Twitter to get info on finding your favorite host IRL. (Unless Jonathan is your favorite. We won't be giving directions to his hot tub.) Titles we almost went with this week: The Cloud Pod Hosts Fail To Do Their Homework The Cloud Pod Now Has a Deadline  This Is Why I Love Curl … EC2 Shop Endpoint is Awesome AI & Elasticsearch… AI – But Not Like That  Preparing for Next Next Week A big thanks to this week's sponsor: We've got a new sponsor! Sonrai Security   Check out Sonrai Securities’ new Cloud Permission Firewall. Just for our listeners, enjoy a 14 day trial at www.sonrai.co/cloudpod Follow Up 02:15  AWS, Google, Oracle back Redis fork “Valkey” under the Linux Foundation In no surprise, placeholderKV is now backed by AWS, Google and Oracle and has been rebranded to Valkey under the Linux Foundation. Interestingly, Ericsson and Snap Inc. also joined Valkey.  03:19 Redis vs. the trillion-dollar cabals Anytime an open source company changes their license, AWS and other cloud providers are blamed for not contributing enough upstream.  Matt Asay, from Infoworld, weighs in this time. The fact that placeholder/Valkey was forked by several employees at AWS who were core contributors of Redis, does seem to imply that they’re doing more than nothing.  I should point out that Matt Asay also happens to run Developer relations at MongoDB. Pot, meet kettle.  04:14 Ryan – “It’s funny because I always feel like the cloud contribution to these things is managed services around them, right? It’s not necessarily improvements to the core source code. It’s more management of that source code. Now there are definitely areas where they do make enhancements, but I’m not sure the vast majority makes sense to be included in an open source made for everyone product either.” General News  07:01 What we know about the xz Utils backdoor that almost infected the world  The Open Source community was a bit shocked when a Microsoft Developer revealed a backdoor had been intentionally planted in xz Utils, an open source data compression utility available on almost all installations of Linux and Other Unix-Like OS.   The person – or people – behind this project like

The Changelog
HashiCorp strikes back (News)

The Changelog

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 9:08 Transcription Available


HashiCorp sends OpenTufu a nasty-gram in the wake of Matt Asay's infringement claims, Polar is like Patreon but for software creators, a Common Corpus of LLM data is released on HuggingFace & Loki is an open source tool for fact verification.

Changelog News
HashiCorp strikes back

Changelog News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 9:08 Transcription Available


HashiCorp sends OpenTofu a nasty-gram in the wake of Matt Asay's infringement claims, Polar is like Patreon but for software creators, a Common Corpus of LLM data is released on HuggingFace & Loki is an open source tool for fact verification.

Changelog Master Feed
HashiCorp strikes back (Changelog News #89)

Changelog Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 9:08 Transcription Available


HashiCorp sends OpenTofu a nasty-gram in the wake of Matt Asay's infringement claims, Polar is like Patreon but for software creators, a Common Corpus of LLM data is released on HuggingFace & Loki is an open source tool for fact verification.

The MongoDB Podcast
Ep. 196 Life at MongoDB - Developer Relations

The MongoDB Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2023 45:38


Join us in this insightful episode of the MongoDB Podcast, where we dive deep into the world of Developer Relations. Host Michael Lynn converses with Rita, Hubert, and Matt Asay, uncovering the intricacies of DevRel roles, the exciting career opportunities, and the daily challenges faced by developer advocates. Discover how MongoDB's DevRel team empowers developers for innovation, embraces continuous learning, and tackles the rapidly evolving tech landscape, particularly in AI. This episode is a must-listen for anyone curious about or pursuing a career in developer relations, offering valuable insights from industry veterans. Visit https://mdb.link/devrel-careers

The Changelog
The open source licensing war is over, Tailwind components for your AI app, Mac mini modded to use PoE, Apple joins OpenUSD alliance & picking the worst tool for the job

The Changelog

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 7:41


Matt Asay thinks the open source licensing war is over, LangUI is an open source Tailwind component library for your AI chat app, Ivan Kuleshov modded a Mac mini to run via PoE, Apple joins Pixar and others in the Alliance for OpenUSD & John D. Cook says sometimes you shouldn't pick the best tool for the job.

Changelog News
The open source licensing war is over?

Changelog News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 7:41 Transcription Available


Matt Asay thinks the open source licensing war is over, LangUI is an open source Tailwind component library for your AI chat app, Ivan Kuleshov modded a Mac mini to run via PoE, Apple joins Pixar and others in the Alliance for OpenUSD & John D. Cook says sometimes you shouldn't pick the best tool for the job.

Changelog Master Feed
The open source licensing war is over? (Changelog News #56)

Changelog Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 7:41 Transcription Available


Matt Asay thinks the open source licensing war is over, LangUI is an open source Tailwind component library for your AI chat app, Ivan Kuleshov modded a Mac mini to run via PoE, Apple joins Pixar and others in the Alliance for OpenUSD & John D. Cook says sometimes you shouldn't pick the best tool for the job.

Les Cast Codeurs Podcast
LCC 291 - ChatGPT licencie 15% des bisounours

Les Cast Codeurs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 100:18


Antonio, Guillaume et Emmanuel discutent de licence Oracle pour Oracle JDK, de JEPs, de Flutter, d'Hibernate, de Mokito, de Kafka, de (not so) Big Data, du parsing de YAML, de ChatGPT, de licenciements, de platform engineering, et de nombres flottants. Enregistré le 10 février 2023 Téléchargement de l'épisode LesCastCodeurs-Episode–291.mp3 News Langages Oracle a changé une des licences de Oracle Java https://redresscompliance.com/oracle-java-licensing-changes-explaned-free/ plus d'utilisateurs nommé mais basé sur tous les employés et même les employés de vos soustraitant Bref, ca va faire cher et si vous itulisez plus de 50k processeurs, vous payez en plus Un autre article d'IDC https://blogs.idc.com/2023/01/30/oracle-java-subscription-changes-what-is-the-impact-to-customers/ Message a caractère informatif: il y a d'autres distributions de OpenJDK supportées de différents vendeurs ; ou la version non supportée InfoQ fait un résumé des dernières nouvelles Java, les mises à jour sur les JEPs, les dernières releases https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/01/java-news-roundup-jan23–2023/ sur Java specificquement des mises à jour de drafts autour du projet amber (primitive types in patterns etc) Une JEP pour discuter du future process des JEP (evolutions) JDK 20 en rampdown phase avec en nouvelles features: scoped values, record patterms, pattern matching for switches, virtual threads, structured concurrency - toutes en incubation ou preview https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/02/java-news-roundup-jan30–2023/ Le framework RIFE fait son grand retour ! Sortie de Go 1.20 https://go.dev/doc/go1.20 mais pas de gros changements, juste des améliorations de la toolchain, des librairies… Recap de la conférence Flutter Forward 2023 https://medium.com/@flutterqueen/flutter-forward–2023-recap–8f6da4876e3 Annonces de Flutter 3.7 et Dart 2.19 Amélioration de la performance graphique (utilisation de Impeller au lieu de Skia) Layout adaptatif Barres et sous-barres de menu Validation de release iOS Support de Material 3 Nouveaux widgets Support de ses propres shaders Facilitation de l'intégration native avec FFIgen et JNIgen Support de la 3D Support de WebAssembly Support de RISC-V Possibilité d'intégrer une app Flutter comme un élément HTML dans un page HTML Un toolkit spécifique pour les applis de News Côté langage Dart, il devrait bientôt y avoir du pattern matching Librairies Les bonnes pratiques d'accessibilité pour les applications en Flutter https://medium.com/flutter-community/creating-inclusive-apps-with-flutter-best-practices-for-accessibility-c7cebe0beb4d 4 grands thèmes dans l'article : l'accessibilité dans Flutter, les fonctionnalités intégrées à Flutter pour l'accessibilité, les meilleurs pratiques pour rendre les apps Flutter accessibles, et tester / débugguer l'accessibilité Flutter supporte le text contrast, les screen readers, les labels sémantiques, l'utilisation au clavier Comment logger les requetes Hibernate ORM https://www.adeliosys.fr/articles/hibernate-monitoring/ log brut via un logger les requetes lentes (plus lentes que n millisecondes) les metriques plus avancées (Statement, requetes, temps acquisition de connections, cache) Exposable via JMX le pool de connexion Sortie de Mockito 5, avec la possibilité de mocker des constructeurs, des méthodes statiques et des classes finales https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/01/mockito–5/ avant, c'était déjà possible de le faire avec mockito-inline mais maintenant c'est “out of the box” la version Java minimale passe de Java 8 à Java 11 Cloud Kubernetes Java client ajouté le support de kubernetes 1.25 https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/01/kubernetes-java-client/?utm_campaign=infoq_content&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=feed&utm_term=java ajout d'APIs dynamique pour faire du monitoring générique L'article montre l'API utilisée en alternative a certaines commandes kubectl fabric8 est une alternative Data Big data est mort https://motherduck.com/blog/big-data-is-dead/ fondateur de BigQuery Puis regardé comment les utiilsateurs utilisaent Big Query Et pas un probleme de big data Retour des moteurs classiques MySQL / PostgreSQL vs MongoDB etc la plupart des utilisaeur de big query etaient sous les 1Tb et 50% at 100GB ou moins doncle deluge de données n'est pas arrivé le shift moderne c'est de detacher le stockage du compute les données grossissent plus vite que les besoin en compute sur ces données la taille du workload est sur un petit sous ensemble de la taille des données entiéres (90% des requetes bigquery sont sur 100M de données) bases de données modernes sont force a travailler sur un sous ensemble des données pression pour scocker moins de données sur les equipes données sont requetees dans la journée, dans la semaine et ensuite rarement touchées donc big data = whatever doesn't fit on a single machine, est de moins en moins vrai map reduce en 2004 et machines de maintenant entre 2 et 4 ordre de grandeurs de RAM en plus avant on se foutait de supprimer des données mais GDPR et responsabilité pénales change la donne data putrefaction comme le bit rot questionnaire pour savoir si les prochaines generations de data processing seront suffisant pour vous distribution est une raison par contre Outillage Tous les soucis avec YAML https://ruudvanasseldonk.com/2023/01/11/the-yaml-document-from-hell article qui explique la complexité de YAML et ses incohérences Comparaison a la simplicité de JSON les commentaires JSON enlevés en 2005 parce que les gens mettaient des meta instructions pour les parseurs et l'implementation des commentaire était très complexe 22:22 est une nombre en base 60 vs 80:80 qui ne l'est pas (enleve en YAML 1.2 - **.png est invalide, ** est une reference vers une ancre - !.git est parsé différemment par les parseurs: ! est une echape pour exprimer un type natif du langage (e.g. Java) - ca veut dire que charger un YAML inconnu est non sûr - fr - de - no retourne ["fr", "de", no] le problème Norvège | changé en tre YAML 1./1 et 1.2 mais l;es parseurs gardent les anciens comportements:. Boolean: on, yes, y on: "let's go" est convertit en { "True": "let's go" } parce que on est boolean et accepté en clé non String dans YAML version: [ 9.5.1, 12.13] -> { "version": [ "9.5.1", 12,13 ] } les chiffres non echapé par un guillement syntax highlighting est donc dependant les templates dans yaml ca court a la cata altewrnatives: TOML, JSON, sous ensemble de YAML (toujours quoter les chaines) ChatGPT, on lui attribue plus de magie qu'il n'en a https://arxiv.org/pdf/2212.03551.pdf un article scientifique mais de 8 pages seulement ChatGPT entant que large language models (LLM) et un prompt Engineering au dessus (le conversational agent) ChatGPT c'est une exécution du modèle Next Token Prediction C'est de la statistique brute mais excrément versatile dans ses usages Tendance à anthropomorphismes parce qu'on a passé la sensation de uncanny valley Considérant la distribution statistique des mots du corpus public, quels mots ont le plus de chance de venir après Pas de relation au monde, aux objets et aux interactions d'êtres partageant le même langage Pas des faits, ChatGPT ne sait pas, n'a pas d'intention C'est donc un outil génial pour éliminer un paquet du bullshit work de tous les jours, pas les gens qui le font Est-ce que les capacités sont émergentes ? LLM fondamentalement est hors du concept Le méta tutoriel sur le parsing avec Antlr https://tomassetti.me/antlr-mega-tutorial/ Couvre différents langages don't Java, Python, JavaScript et C# Explique les différentes phases de lexing, de parsing Comment résoudre les ambiguïtés avec les prédicats sémantiques Comment transformer du code Comment tester son parseur Et autre trucs et astuces Un tutoriel sur comment releaser un module Java avec Maven, JReleaser et Github Actions https://foojay.io/today/how-to-release-a-java-module-with-jreleaser-to-maven-central-with-github-actions/ montre le setup necessaire (clé GPG, pripriété du groupid, config maven etc montre comment faire la release à la main comment l'automatiser via GitHub actions Un tutoriel expliquant comment utiliser CRaC pour vos applis Java dans un conteneur https://foojay.io/today/how-to-run-a-java-application-with-crac-in-a-docker-container/ Coordinated Restore at Checkpoint (développé par Azul) Permet de créer des snapshots d'une application Java Pour qu'elle puisse être relancée rapidement après son démarrage, son warmup Une intro à Kafka en français https://blog.octo.com/kafka-repond-il-a-mon-besoin/ Maven 3.9 sorti https://lists.apache.org/thread/0tfr7t2j2ddbv4gjvxm47yohtk3dg6b3 https://maven.apache.org/docs/3.9.0/release-notes.html Java 8 nécessaire pour lancer Maven Pas mal de nettoyage de code et de dépendances pour préparer Maven 4. Certains plugins mal conçus (ex: qui ne déclare pas la dep plexus-util) peuvent être incompatibles. .mvn/maven.config dit désormais avoir 1 arg par ligne Maven avertit maintenant sur l'utilisation de plugins obsolètes, objectifs, paramètres, etc. Ajout de la prise en charge de l'invocation « mvn pluginPrefix:version:goal » et mise à jour des logs (pour simplifier le copier/coller). Ajout d'activation de profil par packaging. Maven 3.9.0 est désormais entièrement compatible avec la nouvelle ligne 3.x d'installation et de déploiement de plugins (les versions précédentes préviennent à ce sujet). Ajout du support du repo local partagé - https://maven.apache.org/resolver/local-repository.html#shared-access-to-local-repository Ajout de la possibilité de splitter le repo local (releases, vs snapshots…) et possibilité de gérer des workspaces - https://maven.apache.org/resolver/local-repository.html#split-local-repository Filtrage des dependences par repository - https://maven.apache.org/resolver/remote-repository-filtering.html Chained local repository (pour l'isolation entre “outer” and “inner” builds) - https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MNG–7612 Attention: Il y aurait une regression (10%) sur les perfs de gros projets - https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MNG–7677 Les bisounours Méthodologies De operation engineering vers platform engineering https://www.infoq.com/news/2022/10/platform-devops-summary/ et quand le sysadmin devient de nouveau sexy grosse tendance et beaucoup de discussions autour du la platform engineering une plateforme imposée aux devs mais sexy donc c'est bon cette fois: plus serieusement customer focus - la fameuse developer experience Requilibrage entre dev vs ops puis devops plat et maintenant ceci. Sans enlever devops car devops amene une charge mentale lourde objectif developper la “core business value” et donc supporter cela avec une Internal DEveloper Platform Backstage est la GUI au dessus mais une IDP est plus profonde Infra Platform dev teams IDP: ne pas avoir a faire tourner l'infra (pour une equipe dev metier) Et cela permet d'ajouter des controles “entreprise”: cout, gouvernance etc C'est un pendule qui se reequilibre, mais n'oublions pas que les devs aime le jeu, comme les otaries. Pas pisser du code metier le plus vite possible. Est-ce que les IDP seront populaires, c'est la grande question un contre point dans l'articl;e: IDP are expensive and hard to do, offer a mediocre service at best, destroy velocity, and create bad incentives lié a la notion de golden path Sécurité Une liste de binaires Unix qui peuvent être utilisés pour bypasser des systèmes malconfigurés https://gtfobins.github.io/ apparemment même des images type distroless peuvent être affectées risques potentiels : accès à un shell, des privilèges élevés, transférer des fichiers, etc. Loi, société et organisation Twitter desactive l'API pour les clients qui n'affichent pas les pubs de Twitter (comme Tweetbot https://twitter.com/tweetbot/status/1613763746437947394) et paf le support de twitter sur ton ordi Ola Bini déclaré innocent https://peoplesdispatch.org/2023/02/01/digital-rights-activist-ola-bini-declared-innocent-by-ecuadorian-court Arrété en 2019 en Equateur Accusé d'avoir eu access à des ordinateurs et des systemes de communication En même temps que Julian Assange était renvoyé de l'ambassage Equatorienne de Londres Il a fait 70 jours de prison Google a viré son équipe Open Source https://www.infoworld.com/article/3686511/google-blew-it-with-open-source-layoffs.html gros efforts autour de l'open sourcing (Kubernetes, Tensor flow) paie des dividendes viré par les tetes de gondoles mais ceux qui avaient fait des différences Open Source program, Google Summer of Code Grosse influeence interne qui se perd, risque pour le futur ca reste l'opinion de Matt Asay ( :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye: ) Dans la saga Twitter, après l'arrêt des clients Twitter tiers, maintenant l'accès même à l'API va devenir payant https://twitter.com/twitterdev/status/1621026986784337922 donc par exemple, on ne pourra même plus créer des bots gratuitement, comme faire des annonces automatiques de release, etc ah bah merde c'est ce que je fais pour les cast codeurs :/ On peut rajouter son Mastodon sur son profil Github https://github.blog/changelog/2023–02–02-add-more-social-links-to-your-user-profile/ Pratique pour la vérification Mastodon ! On pouvait seulement mettre un lien vers Twitter, maintenant on peut avoir plusieurs profils de médias sociaux différents Rubrique débutant Julia Evans a écrit deux articles intéressants sur les problèmes avec les nombres flottants et avec les nombres entiers https://jvns.ca/blog/2023/01/13/examples-of-floating-point-problems/ https://jvns.ca/blog/2023/01/18/examples-of-problems-with-integers/ les problèmes classiques d'overflow le grand écart entre les grands nombres flottants des cas concrets de valeur approchée (proche à epsilon près), ou avec JavaScript qui interprète les entiers comme des flottants et du coup interprète mal des grands ID en JSON des clés primaires trop petites, les bizarreries de l'encodage des nombres signés ou non Quels sont les types de mémoires dans la JVM ? https://www.baeldung.com/java-jvm-memory-types Heap Stack Native Direct je pense que l'article a des incoherences, Ent ous cas native vs direct est mal expliqué. Un truc pas super clair mais plus clair est ici sur native vs direct: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30622818/what-is-the-difference-between-off-heap-native-heap-direct-memory-and-native-m c'est en gros direct vers du hardware (IO/ network etc) memory mapped file permet d'aller au dela de la limit e de memoire vive du systeme Conférences La liste des conférences provenant de Developers Conferences Agenda/List par Aurélie Vache et contributeurs : 9–11 février 2023 : World AI Cannes Festival - Cannes (France) 16–19 février 2023 : PyConFR - Bordeaux (France) 7 mars 2023 : Kubernetes Community Days France - Paris (France) 15–18 mars 2023 : JChateau - Cheverny in the Châteaux of the Loire Valley (France) 23–24 mars 2023 : SymfonyLive Paris - Paris (France) 23–24 mars 2023 : Agile Niort - Niort (France) 30 mars 2023 : Archilocus - Online (France) 31 mars 2023–1 avril 2023 : Agile Games France - Grenoble (France) 1–2 avril 2023 : JdLL - Lyon 3e (France) 4 avril 2023 : AWS Summit Paris - Paris (France) 5–7 avril 2023 : FIC - Lille Grand Palais (France) 12–14 avril 2023 : Devoxx France - Paris (France) 20–21 avril 2023 : Toulouse Hacking Convention 2023 - Toulouse (France) 27–28 avril 2023 : AndroidMakers by droidcon - Montrouge (France) 4–6 mai 2023 : Devoxx Greece - Athens (Greece) 10–12 mai 2023 : Devoxx UK - London (UK) 12 mai 2023 : AFUP Day - lle & Lyon (France) 25–26 mai 2023 : Newcrafts Paris - Paris (France) 26 mai 2023 : Devfest Lille - Lille (France) 27 mai 2023 : Polycloud - Montpellier (France) 31 mai 2023–2 juin 2023 : Devoxx Poland - Krakow (Poland) 31 mai 2023–2 juin 2023 : Web2Day - Nantes (France) 1 juin 2023 : Javaday - Paris (France) 1 juin 2023 : WAX - Aix-en-Provence (France) 7 juin 2023 : Serverless Days Paris - Paris (France) 15–16 juin 2023 : Le Camping des Speakers - Baden (France) 29–30 juin 2023 : Sunny Tech - Montpellier (France) 8 septembre 2023 : JUG Summer Camp - La Rochelle (France) 19 septembre 2023 : Salon de la Data Nantes - Nantes (France) & Online 21–22 septembre 2023 : API Platform Conference - Lille (France) & Online 2–6 octobre 2023 : Devoxx Belgium - Antwerp (Belgium) 12 octobre 2023 : Cloud Nord - Lille (France) 12–13 octobre 2023 : Volcamp 2023 - Clermont-Ferrand (France) 6–7 décembre 2023 : Open Source Experience - Paris (France) 31 janvier 2024–3 février 2024 : SnowCamp - Grenoble (France) 1–3 février 2024 : SnowCamp - Grenoble (France) Nous contacter Pour réagir à cet épisode, venez discuter sur le groupe Google https://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs Contactez-nous via twitter https://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs Faire un crowdcast ou une crowdquestion Soutenez Les Cast Codeurs sur Patreon https://www.patreon.com/LesCastCodeurs Tous les épisodes et toutes les infos sur https://lescastcodeurs.com/

The Cloudcast
The Unexpected Pace of Technology Adoption

The Cloudcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2022 25:03


Every week we talk about new technologies and new trends. But studies show us that new technology adoption tends to be very slow, especially at high levels. What's behind the inability of new tech to displace legacy tech?  SHOW: 607CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotwCHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"SHOW SPONSORS:Datadog Monitoring: Modern Monitoring and AnalyticsStart monitoring your infrastructure, applications, logs and security in one place with a free 14 day Datadog trial. Listeners of The Cloudcast will also receive a free Datadog T-shirt.CloudZero - Cloud Cost Intelligence for Engineering TeamsstrongDM - Secure infrastructure access for the modern stack. Manage access to any server, database, or Kubernetes instance in minutes. Fully auditable, replayable, secure, and drag-and-drop easy. Try it free for 14 days - www.strongdm.com/signupSHOW NOTES:Why Enterprise software moves so slow, despite tech innovations (Matt Asay, TechRepublic) IF IT AIN'T BROKE, DON'T FIX ITFor existing companies, most of the budget (typically 70-80%) is spent maintaining existing systems. New technologies are rarely used to replace existing technologies, but are usually additive. New teams and new processes are created, and those teams are often expensive (rare skills).OUTSIDE OF CLOUD, THE COSTS OF CHANGE ARE DIFFICULT TO MANAGEThe learning curve can be long, so companies often hire new talent. For new technologies, talent is difficult to find, so often very expensive. And new technology takes a while to mature, so the number of available use-cases is initially limited. It's not unusual for wide-spread adoption to take 3-5 years (if it succeeds).  Oftentimes, existing technologies will see a market disruption coming and add similar capabilities. Many technology spaces have too many alternative options, so it can take a while before a “winner” emerges in the market. FEEDBACK?Email: show at the cloudcast dot netTwitter: @thecloudcastnet

The MongoDB Podcast
Ep. 87 Matt Asay and Joe Drumgoole Live at .Local London

The MongoDB Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 19:37


MongoDB .Local is a great conference concept featuring uniquely hybrid offerings including education, keynotes and product updates, and entertainment curated for those joining live in person, live from home, or on-demand. The latest .Local was held on November 9th, 2021 at Evolution, London. In this, the first in a series episodes recorded live at the event, we chat with two industry veterans, Matt Asay, and Joe Drumgoole.  Matt and Joe share their experience as long time (and in Matt's case, returning) MongoDB employees as well as their thoughts on the latest announcements from the event. 

BadGeek
Les Cast Codeurs n°263 du 17/09/21 - LCC 263 - Le maillot jaune du salon

BadGeek

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 81:31


Deux A et un E discutent des nouvelles de l'été et de la rentrée. #JDK17 #scala #Kotlin #spring6 #dockerdesktop #fitdesk et encore d'autres sujets. Enregistré le 10 septembre 2021 Téléchargement de l'épisode [LesCastCodeurs-Episode-263.mp3](https://traffic.libsyn.com/lescastcodeurs/LesCastCodeurs-Episode-263.mp3) ## News ### Langages [Au revoir AdopOpenJDK, bonjour Adoptium](https://blog.adoptopenjdk.net/2021/08/goodbye-adoptopenjdk-hello-adoptium/) * Eclipse Temurin runtimes pour la partie JDK * Grosse test suite * License oracle (que Adopt OpenJDK avait perdu) * Plus de OpenJ9 ni GraalVM (Oracle recule) mais IBM a [Rapatrié OpenJ9 sous le nom IBM Semurin](https://developer.ibm.com/languages/java/semeru-runtimes/) * Nouvelles API (backward compatibles ?) * Les anciens builds ne seront pas migrés [Une interview des architectes Java](https://blogs.oracle.com/javamagazine/java-architects-loom-panama-valhalla?source=:em:nw:mt::::RC_WWMK200429P00043C0036:NSL400176960) * Java longevity: stability (not removing things), readability, ecosystem' well defined stable interfaces (JVM etc) * Nouvelles fonctionnalités : qu'est que qui ne peut être fait en dehors de la plateforme * Rendre Java plus extensible (Valhalla) * Bloque en Java 8 * Perds argent (meilleure mémoire, performance, temps de démarrage, pauses 2ms G1 etc * Sécurité * Loom * Réactive programming pour mieux utiliser le,hardware * Mais opposé à certains designs de la JVM (error report, débug, flight recorder) * Loom résout le même problème mais en harmonie avec la JVM * Api familières * Next * Vallalah , panama * Tail call recursion * Etc [Article en passant sur l'utilisation du foreign API avec libsodium](https://blog.arkey.fr/2021/09/04/a-practical-look-at-jep-412-in-jdk17-with-libsodium/) * juste une mention [Quoi de neuf dans Scala 3](https://medium.com/scala-3/scala-3-whats-changed-since-scala-3-0-0-be0830c059f5) * Scala 3.0.1 * Syntaxe given simplifiée (pas de with) * `@experimental` * Scala 3.1 * Experimental safer exception (checked exceptions mais sans les ennuis) * Warnings de compilation plus configurable * Multiversal equality (des classes différentes qui peuvent être égales) [Kotlin a 10 ans](https://www.infoq.com/articles/kotlin-ten-years-qa/?utm_campaign=infoq_content&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=feed&utm_term=mobile) * annoncé en 2011, 1.0 en 2016, default Android en 2017 * pas theorique, problemes pragmatiques * multi plateforme encore experimental, on prend notre temps * ajoutent features dans le core lib plus lentement que Java * prochains 10 ans: multiplatforme, langage reste relevant, reactive programming et immuabilité du front vers le back ### Librairies [Spring 6 / SpringBoot 3 annoncé à SpringOne](https://twitter.com/mraible/status/1433072410182357000?s=21) * Java 17 et plus * Intègre Spring Native * Tomcat 10 min * Jakarta 9 avec cassage de packages * Q4 2022 * Spring 5.3 et SpringBoot 2.7 seront en maintenance open source entendue * [Autre lien](https://spring.io/blog/2021/09/02/a-java-17-and-jakarta-ee-9-baseline-for-spring-framework-6) [Quarkus 2.2 et 2.1](http://quarkus.io/blog/quarkus-2-2-1-final-released/) * 2.2 Solidification (utilisabilite, doc, corriger problèmes) * Mongodb service binding * RESTEasy Réactive automatiquement choisi le thread bloquant ou non bloquant * Plus facile quand on vient de RESTEasy Classic * [Détails ici](https://quarkus.io/blog/resteasy-reactive-smart-dispatch/) * 2.1 * Dev services pour keycloak * SQLServer réactive a son extension * Kotlin 1.5 * [Blog post expliquant les nouvelles modularités de quarkus platform](http://quarkus.io/blog/quarkus-2x-platform-quarkiverse-registry/) [Micronaut 3 est sorti](https://micronaut.io/2021/08/18/micronaut-framework-3-released/) * RxJava n'est plus un dépendance transitive (choix du moteur réactive streams) * Utilisent Reactor en dessous * Les annotations ne sont plus héritées par défaut * Support Jakarta lifecycle annotations, Jakarta inject * Injection qualifiée par le generic des arguments * Filtres servers plus consistant (appelés une seule fois) * `@Introspected` ne rajoute plus les metadonnes pour GraalVM, utiliser `@ReflectiveAccess` * Ajout des resources passe du compile time au build time donc utilisez les plugins maven de Micronaut ou faite le vous même * Quelques autres breaking changes * OpenRewrite règles changent le code pour migrer pour vous ### Infrastructure [Comment debugger son script Ansible](https://zwischenzugs.com/2021/08/27/five-ansible-techniques-i-wish-id-known-earlier/) * `--step` * In-line logging * Ansible-lint * Ansible-console * Ansible debugger ### Cloud [Apple nous protégeras des photos pedophiles mais en ouvrant une brèche sur la sécurité de ses téléphones ](https://www.apple.com/child-safety/) * [Une analyse techniques](https://twitter.com/MathisHammel/status/1425523073806110720) * Il y a deux choses distinctes * Détecter les images d'une base de donnée pedophile avec du hash sur le téléphone et en alertant quand trop'sonr flaggues positive (avec check humain) * Ça s'appuie sur iCloud photo car sur leur cloud mais pas un filtre serveur * Base de donnée Baked dans chaque iOS * NeuralHash * Hash résiste au ré cadrage et autres ajustement de photos * Threshold secret sharing * Au bout de n rapports remontés, on a capacité à reconstituer la clef de chiffrement * Et un troisième mécanisme pour éviter de montrer qu'elles photos intéressent Apple * Quid d'une puissance étrangère qui veut rajouter des photos de discidents? * Apple dit on n'acceptera pas * Où attaque sur le neural hash * Détection de nudité et demande si l'nfznt veut voir avec alerte aux parents * Ils se donnent quelques mois de retravail au final [AWS a 15 ans](https://aws.amazon.com/fr/blogs/aws/happy-15th-birthday-amazon-ec2/) * demarre avec une region, un seul type d'instance et tout ephemère (pas de block storage) * peu de feature et peu de details initialement * prix a l'heure initialement qui etait innovant ### Data [La guerre de la recherche - Les clients Elastic Search ne seront pas compatible avec OpenSearch](https://thenewstack.io/this-week-in-programming-the-elasticsearch-saga-continues/) * Elastic vs AWS - Clash numéro ? Dans ce dernier épisode, Elastic rajoute des controles dans ses APIs clientes pour ne se connecter qu'a ses propres clusters et empêcher de les utiliser avec opensearch. * Risques d'incompatibilité * Manque de chance ce changement bloque aussi l'utilisation de la version OSS d'elastic-search. * De son coté AWS promet de faire son possible pour fournir des drivers qui resteront compatibles Elasticsearch 7.10.2 (la version à partir de laquelle ils ont forké) et OpenSearch * Bref la guerre continue ... ### Outillage [AtomicJar release TestContainers 1.16](https://www.atomicjar.com/2021/07/testcontainers-1-16-0-release/) * https://www.atomicjar.com/2021/07/testcontainers-1-16-0-release/ Test Containers 1.16.0 est la première release faite par AtomicJar, la société créée par les fondateurs du projet. * Meilleure compatibilité Apple M1 * Couche de transport utilise Apache HTTP Client 5 au lieu de OKHTTP pour éviter la malediction Kotlin * Meilleure stabilité et compatibilité sur Windows pour process natifs Windows et WSL 2 * docker.host peut etre configuré dans $HOME/.testcontainers.properties * Aussi Support Podman amélioré récemment [Docker introduit un nouveau système d'abonnement avec Docker Business et différents niveaux: perso, pro, entreprise etc](https://www.docker.com/blog/updating-product-subscriptions/) * donc pour les boites de plus de 250 personnes ou qui font 10 millions, tu dois payer pour Docker Desktop * [Des articles paraissent listant les alternatives à Docker Desktop](https://matt-rickard.com/docker-desktop-alternatives/) * [Sur l'impact macOS](https://twitter.com/idriss_neumann/status/1432943504485986305) * [How Docker broke in half](https://www.infoworld.com/article/3632142/how-docker-broke-in-half.html) [Les différentes manières de déclarer les dépendances dans son projet Gradle](https://medium.com/agorapulse-stories/gradle-configurations-explained-4b9608dd5e35) * En particulier, les différences entre api, implementation, runtimeOnly, compileOnly, compileOnlyApi Avec des exemples concrets pour bien illustre ces différents scopes. * Gradle regroupe les dépendances dans des ensembles appelés des “configurations”. Ces configurations définissent le classpath lors de la compilation, ou le classpath pour le runtime lorsque votre code s'exécute. * Gradle définit 3 types de configuration : api, implementation et runtimeOnly * La configuration “api” est utilisée pour le classpath compilation et runtime et est exposé aux consommateurs de l'API aussi pour le classpath de compilation et runtime * La configuration “implementation” est utilisée pour le classpath de compilation et runtime, mais est exposée pour le consommateur de l'API que pour le classpath au runtime * La configuration “runtimeOnly” n'est utilisée que pour le classpath au runtime * La configuration “compileOnly” est utilisée pour le classpath de compilation, mais n'est pas exposée pour les consommateurs * Enfin la configuration “compileOnlyApi” est utilisée pour le classpath de compliation et est exposée au consommateurs à la compilation de leur code quand les metadata Gradle sont utilisées ### Méthodologies [Opinion sur Googlespeak et les pratiques anti concurrentielles](https://zyppy.com/googlespeak/) * Certains dont l'auteur voient Google utiliser Google search pour placer hautement leur propres services alternatifs. Google flight etc * Et les Googlers avec qui il interagissait trouvait ça « absurde » de penser ça. * Chercher un hôtel * Étude montre que Google offre 41% de sa première page à ses propres propriétés (inclus direct answers ) * Direct answer est mis rapide pour l'utilisateur mais prend le contenu 3rd party ( Wikipedia, IMDb etc) et nous fait rester sur une page Google. * Googlespeak d'après Orwell. Si le langage ne permet pas d'exprimer , on ne pense pas aux choses. * Pas dominant mais succès. Pas barrière à l'entrée , marché, effet réseau qui sont taboo dans un contexte de tension antitrust * Encourage à réfréner sa communication écrite. * Comme beaucoup de sociétés américaines à cause du processus de discovery * Market share -> user preference * Apple et epic ont levés des doc similaires mais Apple n'était pas gardé dans sa comm interne. Autour de l'app store. * Google dans ses formation mention non monopoly car beaucoup de compétiteurs. Et se defini en termes très large et donc avec de la compétition. (Dans la pub et dans la recuperation d'information. * Ils ne font pas d'analyse de marchés (sur les marchés dominants) quand demandés par le congrès. * 65% des recherches n'entraînent pas un clic sur un site externe - valeur réfutée par Google * C'est une réaction à la judiciarusarion de la vie des entreprises. ### Loi, société et organisation [Matt Asay quitte AWS et reflecte sur l'open source chez AWS](https://www.infoworld.com/article/3631376/what-you-dont-know-about-working-with-aws.html) * pleins de petites equipes et pas de décisions top down * en tous cas pas pour open source * Un langage specifique a Amazon pour convaincre * Les Leadership Principles tendent à ne pas investir dans les elements side de type open source * et quand on a deux pizza team, peut on contribuer sans se sentir trop contraint en temps * si c'est une équipe de 12 sur 200 equipes ca ne m'étonnes pas trop ???? [L'Open Source au secours du développeur (et de l'architecte) ?](https://philippart-s.github.io/blog/articles/dev/oss-for-developer/), un retour d'expérience très personnel mais instructif pour ceux qui souhaiteraient se lancer ... * Pourquoi l'Open Source ? * Par où commencer ? * Le choix du premier projet pour sa première contribution? (Le syndrome de l'imposteur) * La première contribution * Rythme de travail ## Outils de l'épisode [Fit Desk](https://thefitdesk.com) * Antonio passe au [Fit Desk](https://thefitdesk.com) pour travailler en pédalant * Promis, il écrira un blog dans 4/6 mois avec du feedback ## Rubrique débutant [RISC vs CISC](https://medium.com/swlh/what-does-risc-and-cisc-mean-in-2020-7b4d42c9a9de) * CISC roi quand la mémoire est chère, on crée des instructions haut niveau plus complexes * RISC paye en mémoire mais simplifie la chaîne de travail (instructions de taille fixe) * RISC plus d'opérations et donc de CPU clock mais pipelining possible * RISC compensé par plus de registers et par la compression d'instructions set * register mémoire interne CPU de taille fixe * CISC fait du hardware hyper threading * RISC philosophiquement fait travailler les compilateurs beaucoup plus mais on ne code plus en assembleur ## Conférences Crowdcast sur devfest Lille et CloudNord par Emmanuel Demey [Pas de Devoxx Belgique en 2021](https://twitter.com/stephan007/status/1432254876436815874?s=21) ## Nous contacter Soutenez Les Cast Codeurs sur Patreon [Faire un crowdcast ou une crowdquestion](https://lescastcodeurs.com/crowdcasting/) Contactez-nous via twitter sur le groupe Google ou sur le site web

Les Cast Codeurs Podcast
LCC 263 - Le maillot jaune du salon

Les Cast Codeurs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 81:31


Deux A et un E discutent des nouvelles de l'été et de la rentrée. #JDK17 #scala #Kotlin #spring6 #dockerdesktop #fitdesk et encore d'autres sujets. Enregistré le 10 septembre 2022 Téléchargement de l'épisode LesCastCodeurs-Episode–263.mp3 News Langages Au revoir AdopOpenJDK, bonjour Adoptium Eclipse Temurin runtimes pour la partie JDK Grosse test suite License oracle (que Adopt OpenJDK avait perdu) Plus de OpenJ9 ni GraalVM (Oracle recule) mais IBM a Rapatrié OpenJ9 sous le nom IBM Semurin Nouvelles API (backward compatibles ?) Les anciens builds ne seront pas migrés Une interview des architectes Java Java longevity: stability (not removing things), readability, ecosystem' well defined stable interfaces (JVM etc) Nouvelles fonctionnalités : qu'est que qui ne peut être fait en dehors de la plateforme Rendre Java plus extensible (Valhalla) Bloque en Java 8 Perds argent (meilleure mémoire, performance, temps de démarrage, pauses 2ms G1 etc Sécurité Loom Réactive programming pour mieux utiliser le,hardware Mais opposé à certains designs de la JVM (error report, débug, flight recorder) Loom résout le même problème mais en harmonie avec la JVM Api familières Next Vallalah , panama Tail call recursion Etc Article en passant sur l'utilisation du foreign API avec libsodium juste une mention Quoi de neuf dans Scala 3 Scala 3.0.1 Syntaxe given simplifiée (pas de with) @experimental Scala 3.1 Experimental safer exception (checked exceptions mais sans les ennuis) Warnings de compilation plus configurable Multiversal equality (des classes différentes qui peuvent être égales) Kotlin a 10 ans annoncé en 2011, 1.0 en 2016, default Android en 2017 pas theorique, problemes pragmatiques multi plateforme encore experimental, on prend notre temps ajoutent features dans le core lib plus lentement que Java prochains 10 ans: multiplatforme, langage reste relevant, reactive programming et immuabilité du front vers le back Librairies Spring 6 / SpringBoot 3 annoncé à SpringOne Java 17 et plus Intègre Spring Native Tomcat 10 min Jakarta 9 avec cassage de packages Q4 2022 Spring 5.3 et SpringBoot 2.7 seront en maintenance open source entendue Autre lien Quarkus 2.2 et 2.1 2.2 Solidification (utilisabilite, doc, corriger problèmes) Mongodb service binding RESTEasy Réactive automatiquement choisi le thread bloquant ou non bloquant Plus facile quand on vient de RESTEasy Classic Détails ici 2.1 Dev services pour keycloak SQLServer réactive a son extension Kotlin 1.5 Blog post expliquant les nouvelles modularités de quarkus platform Micronaut 3 est sorti RxJava n'est plus un dépendance transitive (choix du moteur réactive streams) Utilisent Reactor en dessous Les annotations ne sont plus héritées par défaut Support Jakarta lifecycle annotations, Jakarta inject Injection qualifiée par le generic des arguments Filtres servers plus consistant (appelés une seule fois) @Introspected ne rajoute plus les metadonnes pour GraalVM, utiliser @ReflectiveAccess Ajout des resources passe du compile time au build time donc utilisez les plugins maven de Micronaut ou faite le vous même Quelques autres breaking changes OpenRewrite règles changent le code pour migrer pour vous Infrastructure Comment debugger son script Ansible --step In-line logging Ansible-lint Ansible-console Ansible debugger Cloud Apple nous protégeras des photos pedophiles mais en ouvrant une brèche sur la sécurité de ses téléphones Une analyse techniques Il y a deux choses distinctes Détecter les images d'une base de donnée pedophile avec du hash sur le téléphone et en alertant quand trop'sonr flaggues positive (avec check humain) Ça s'appuie sur iCloud photo car sur leur cloud mais pas un filtre serveur Base de donnée Baked dans chaque iOS NeuralHash Hash résiste au ré cadrage et autres ajustement de photos Threshold secret sharing Au bout de n rapports remontés, on a capacité à reconstituer la clef de chiffrement Et un troisième mécanisme pour éviter de montrer qu'elles photos intéressent Apple Quid d'une puissance étrangère qui veut rajouter des photos de discidents? Apple dit on n'acceptera pas Où attaque sur le neural hash Détection de nudité et demande si l'nfznt veut voir avec alerte aux parents Ils se donnent quelques mois de retravail au final AWS a 15 ans demarre avec une region, un seul type d'instance et tout ephemère (pas de block storage) peu de feature et peu de details initialement prix a l'heure initialement qui etait innovant Data La guerre de la recherche - Les clients Elastic Search ne seront pas compatible avec OpenSearch Elastic vs AWS - Clash numéro ? Dans ce dernier épisode, Elastic rajoute des controles dans ses APIs clientes pour ne se connecter qu'a ses propres clusters et empêcher de les utiliser avec opensearch. Risques d'incompatibilité Manque de chance ce changement bloque aussi l'utilisation de la version OSS d'elastic-search. De son coté AWS promet de faire son possible pour fournir des drivers qui resteront compatibles Elasticsearch 7.10.2 (la version à partir de laquelle ils ont forké) et OpenSearch Bref la guerre continue … Outillage AtomicJar release TestContainers 1.16 https://www.atomicjar.com/2021/07/testcontainers–1–16–0-release/ Test Containers 1.16.0 est la première release faite par AtomicJar, la société créée par les fondateurs du projet. Meilleure compatibilité Apple M1 Couche de transport utilise Apache HTTP Client 5 au lieu de OKHTTP pour éviter la malediction Kotlin Meilleure stabilité et compatibilité sur Windows pour process natifs Windows et WSL 2 docker.host peut etre configuré dans $HOME/.testcontainers.properties Aussi Support Podman amélioré récemment Docker introduit un nouveau système d'abonnement avec Docker Business et différents niveaux: perso, pro, entreprise etc donc pour les boites de plus de 250 personnes ou qui font 10 millions, tu dois payer pour Docker Desktop Des articles paraissent listant les alternatives à Docker Desktop Sur l'impact macOS How Docker broke in half Les différentes manières de déclarer les dépendances dans son projet Gradle En particulier, les différences entre api, implementation, runtimeOnly, compileOnly, compileOnlyApi Avec des exemples concrets pour bien illustre ces différents scopes. Gradle regroupe les dépendances dans des ensembles appelés des “configurations”. Ces configurations définissent le classpath lors de la compilation, ou le classpath pour le runtime lorsque votre code s'exécute. Gradle définit 3 types de configuration : api, implementation et runtimeOnly La configuration “api” est utilisée pour le classpath compilation et runtime et est exposé aux consommateurs de l'API aussi pour le classpath de compilation et runtime La configuration “implementation” est utilisée pour le classpath de compilation et runtime, mais est exposée pour le consommateur de l'API que pour le classpath au runtime La configuration “runtimeOnly” n'est utilisée que pour le classpath au runtime La configuration “compileOnly” est utilisée pour le classpath de compilation, mais n'est pas exposée pour les consommateurs Enfin la configuration “compileOnlyApi” est utilisée pour le classpath de compliation et est exposée au consommateurs à la compilation de leur code quand les metadata Gradle sont utilisées Méthodologies Opinion sur Googlespeak et les pratiques anti concurrentielles Certains dont l'auteur voient Google utiliser Google search pour placer hautement leur propres services alternatifs. Google flight etc Et les Googlers avec qui il interagissait trouvait ça « absurde » de penser ça. Chercher un hôtel Étude montre que Google offre 41% de sa première page à ses propres propriétés (inclus direct answers ) Direct answer est mis rapide pour l'utilisateur mais prend le contenu 3rd party ( Wikipedia, IMDb etc) et nous fait rester sur une page Google. Googlespeak d'après Orwell. Si le langage ne permet pas d'exprimer , on ne pense pas aux choses. Pas dominant mais succès. Pas barrière à l'entrée , marché, effet réseau qui sont taboo dans un contexte de tension antitrust Encourage à réfréner sa communication écrite. Comme beaucoup de sociétés américaines à cause du processus de discovery Market share -> user preference Apple et epic ont levés des doc similaires mais Apple n'était pas gardé dans sa comm interne. Autour de l'app store. Google dans ses formation mention non monopoly car beaucoup de compétiteurs. Et se defini en termes très large et donc avec de la compétition. (Dans la pub et dans la recuperation d'information. Ils ne font pas d'analyse de marchés (sur les marchés dominants) quand demandés par le congrès. 65% des recherches n'entraînent pas un clic sur un site externe - valeur réfutée par Google C'est une réaction à la judiciarusarion de la vie des entreprises. Loi, société et organisation Matt Asay quitte AWS et reflecte sur l'open source chez AWS pleins de petites equipes et pas de décisions top down en tous cas pas pour open source Un langage specifique a Amazon pour convaincre Les Leadership Principles tendent à ne pas investir dans les elements side de type open source et quand on a deux pizza team, peut on contribuer sans se sentir trop contraint en temps si c'est une équipe de 12 sur 200 equipes ca ne m'étonnes pas trop

Software Defined Talk
Episode 302: Amsterdam hates cars

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 58:22


This week we try to make sense of Snowflake’s stance on open source and review the State of Serverless. Plus, some advice on parking cars in Amsterdam. Rundown Striking a balance with ‘open’ at Snowflake (https://www.infoworld.com/article/3617938/striking-a-balance-with-open-at-snowflake.html) Matt Asay’s Take on Snowflake (https://twitter.com/mjasay/status/1395809597806366720?s=21) Data Warehouse Wars: Snowflake Vs. Google BigQuery (https://seekingalpha.com/article/4429909-data-warehouse-wars-snowflake-vs-google-bigquery) The State of Serverless (https://www.datadoghq.com/state-of-serverless/) Relevant to your interests Tracking the San Francisco Tech Exodus (https://sfciti.org/sf-tech-exodus/) SolarWinds CEO reveals much earlier hack timeline, regrets company blaming intern (https://www.cyberscoop.com/solarwinds-ceo-reveals-much-earlier-hack-timeline-regrets-company-blaming-intern/) U.S. Treasury calls for stricter cryptocurrency compliance with IRS, says they pose tax evasion risk (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/20/us-treasury-calls-for-stricter-cryptocurrency-compliance-with-irs.html) The Full Story of the Stunning RSA Hack Can Finally Be Told (https://www.wired.com/story/the-full-story-of-the-stunning-rsa-hack-can-finally-be-told/) Coinbase suffers outages as cryptos plummet in massive sell-off (https://nypost.com/2021/05/19/coinbase-suffers-outages-as-cryptos-plummet-in-massive-sell-off/) Snapchat's partner summit this year was done entirely in augmented reality (https://www.axios.com/snapchat-ar-spectacles-partner-summit-8bb68470-aa48-402f-a531-aa6c5a78b17b.html) Snap says it now has 500 million monthly active users (https://www.axios.com/snapchat-500-users-developer-tools-92932ae6-a26c-445f-87b6-92775a454f71.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axioslogin&stream=top) Snap buys WaveOptics, a company that makes parts for augmented reality glasses, in $500 million deal (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/21/snap-buys-augmented-reality-company-waveoptics-in-500-million-deal.html) Azure services fall over in Europe, Microsoft works on fix (https://www.theregister.com/2021/05/20/microsoft_azure_outage/) Twitter previews Ticketed Spaces, says it’ll take a 20 percent cut of sales (https://www.theverge.com/2021/5/21/22447328/twitter-ticketed-spaces-monetization-stripe-approval) Oracle insiders say there is a ‘culture of fear’ under the leadership of its key cloud unit (https://nullednow.in/trending/oracle-insiders-say-there-is-a-culture-of-fear-under-the-leadership-of-its-key-cloud-unit/2021/) It took 'over 80 different developers' to review and fix 'mess' made by students who sneaked bad code into Linux (https://www.theregister.com/2021/05/21/linux_5_13_patches/) The Unstoppable Battery Onslaught (https://caseyhandmer.wordpress.com/2021/05/20/the-unstoppable-battery-cavalcade/) Netflix Reportedly Wants To Get Into The Video Games Industry (https://www.forbes.com/sites/carlypage/2021/05/23/netflix-reportedly-wants-to-get-into-the-video-games-industry/) Auto Makers Retreat From 50 Years of ‘Just in Time’ Manufacturing (https://www.wsj.com/articles/auto-makers-retreat-from-50-years-of-just-in-time-manufacturing-11620051251?mod=searchresults_pos1&page=1) Overwork Killed More Than 745,000 People In A Year, WHO Study Finds (https://www.npr.org/2021/05/17/997462169/thousands-of-people-are-dying-from-working-long-hours-a-new-who-study-finds) Oracle intros Arm-powered cloud, includes on-prem option for big spenders (https://www.theregister.com/2021/05/25/oracle_ampere_cloud/) Twilio invests in adaptive communications platform Hyro (https://techcrunch.com/2021/05/25/twilio-invests-in-adaptive-communications-platform-hyro/) Microsoft Build 2021 Book of News (https://news.microsoft.com/build-2021-book-of-news/) Announcing General Availability of Microsoft Build of OpenJDK (https://devblogs.microsoft.com/java/announcing-general-availability-of-microsoft-build-of-openjdk/) Microsoft has built an AI-powered autocomplete for code using GPT-3 (https://www.theverge.com/2021/5/25/22451144/microsoft-gpt-3-openai-coding-autocomplete-powerapps-power-fx) Green Software Foundation (https://greensoftware.foundation/) The 17 Ways to Run Containers on AWS - Last Week in AWS (https://www.lastweekinaws.com/blog/the-17-ways-to-run-containers-on-aws/) Please fix the AWS Free Tier before somebody gets hurt (https://cloudirregular.substack.com/p/please-fix-the-aws-free-tier-before?ck_subscriber_id=512830314) Colonial Pipeline Ransomware Attack: CISOs React (https://www.bankinfosecurity.com/colonial-pipeline-ransomware-attack-cisos-react-a-16698) Privacy on iPhone | Tracked | Apple (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8w4qPUSG17Y) Happy Blurpthday to Discord, a Place for Everything You Can Imagine (https://blog.discord.com/happy-blurpthday-to-discord-a-place-for-everything-you-can-imagine-fc99ee0a77c0) Nonsense The Ford F-150 Lightning Is the Electric Vehicle of Dystopia (https://www.wired.com/story/ford-lightning-f150-electric-vehicle-dystopia/) Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak has an unusual approach to his finance (https://twitter.com/robaeprice/status/1396483218954543113?s=21) Twitch launches a dedicated "hot tubs" category after advertiser pushback (https://www.theverge.com/2021/5/21/22447898/twitch-hot-tub-category-launches-amouranth-advertising) Nonstop flights to Amsterdam back on Austin's horizon (https://www.bizjournals.com/austin/news/2021/05/24/nonstop-flights-to-amsterdam-rescheduled-for-2022.html) Sponsors CBT Nuggets — Training available for IT Pros anytime, anywhere. Start your 7-day Free Trial today at cbtnuggets.com/sdt (https://cbtnuggets.com/sdt) strongDM — Manage and audit remote access to infrastructure. Start your free 14-day trial today at: strongdm.com/SDT (http://strongdm.com/SDT) Jobs Work with Coté (https://twitter.com/tiffanyfayj/status/1397339215021547521) Conferences RabbitMQ Summit (https://rabbitmqsummit.com), July 13-14, 2021. SpringOne (https://springone.io), Sep 1st to 2nd. June 3rd modernization webinar for EMEA (https://twitter.com/cote/status/1394655403468804105) THAT July 26,- July 29, in Wisconsin, Submissions Open Through (https://that.us/activities/call-for-counselors/wi/2021) June 14 (https://that.us/activities/call-for-counselors/wi/2021) 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 Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/sdtpodcast), Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) and LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/). 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. Become a sponsor of Software Defined Talk (https://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/ads)! Recommendations Brandon: Last Breath | Netflix (https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwj5q_Tm9ufwAhVFG80KHUbWCZUQFjAKegQIDBAD&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.netflix.com%2Ftitle%2F80215139&usg=AOvVaw2apUD-Dg8ldP5UFF1a7D5H) Coté: American Gods (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Gods_(season_3)), season 3 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Gods_(season_3)) laylacodesit (https://www.twitch.tv/laylacodesit)’s Twitch Channel The Leprechauns of Software Engineering (https://leanpub.com/leprechauns) Photo Credit (https://unsplash.com/photos/vMneecAwo34) Photo Credit (https://unsplash.com/photos/44EOhICreKo)

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HD)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

FLOSS Weekly (Video HD)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source - Openbase, Elastic vs AWS

FLOSS Weekly (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

FLOSS Weekly (Video HI)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source - Openbase, Elastic vs AWS

FLOSS Weekly (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

FLOSS Weekly (Video LO)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source - Openbase, Elastic vs AWS

FLOSS Weekly (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HI)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

FLOSS Weekly (MP3)
FLOSS Weekly 614: Ethics and Open Source - Openbase, Elastic vs AWS

FLOSS Weekly (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 63:29


Openbase, Elastic vs AWS. Matt Asay believes we need a new way to think about open source. This comes on the heels of the Elastic vs AWS controversy. Shawn Powers and new co-host Katherine Druckman join Doc Searls in a lively discussion of ethics and open source on FLOSS Weekly. The panel takes a look at three efforts currently making news: the Ethical Source Movement; Matt Asay's Infoworld post titled A New Way To Think About Open Source; and Openbase, which Venturebeat says "wants to be the Yelp for open source software packages." Hosts: Doc Searls, Shawn Powers, and Katherine Druckman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music.

Open||Source||Data
Open Source Sustainability with AWS Exec + Tech Columnist Matt Asay

Open||Source||Data

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2020 37:19


Matt Asay shares his journey through open source and behind-the-scenes stories on what gives these communities their strength: its people and their voices. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

tech exec columnist matt asay open source sustainability
Sustain
Episode 51: Working in Public: Nadia Eghbal and her new book about Making and Sustaining Open Source Software

Sustain

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2020 43:49


Sponsored by: https://www.honeybadger.io/images/navbar_logo.svg?1597697989 (https://www.honeybadger.io/) Panelists Allen "Gunner" Gunn | Eric Berry | Justin Dorfman | Richard Littauer Guest Nadia Eghbal (https://nadiaeghbal.com/) Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain! Today, we have special guest. Nadia Eghbal, a writer and researcher, works for Substack, and has a new book out which we will be talking about today! We discuss Nadia’s book, what it’s all about, why she wrote it, and why Eric refers to it as the “Open Source Bible.” She also talks about the report she did called, “Roads and Bridges,” published by the Ford Foundation. Find out why she has been called the “Open Source Archaeologist.” Download this episode now! [00:01:43] Nadia tells us all about her book, what it’s about, and why she wrote it. [00:02:56] Justin asks Nadia what her expectations were of writing her report, Roads and Bridges. [00:05:01] Eric mentions a talk Nadia gave a few years back, and she used a “lobster” reference throughout it, so he wonders what her motivation was behind going so deep into creating a legacy of documentation and knowledge that very few people in the world have. [00:09:16] Richard brings up Mike McQuaid’s sticker funds and Nadia brings up an example of this. [00:11:40] Eric talks about Nadia’s book which he refers to as the “Open Source Bible,” and Gunner adds his viewpoint as well. [00:13:24] Gunner asks Nadia if this book leads to actions and does she have any thoughts about what actions she would like it to lead to on the part of readers. [00:15:36] Gunner has an archaeology question for Nadia and is curious to know if she has reflected on the idea that when you’re not downloading, when you’re not installing the idea of a license or the idea of a piece of technology, being more community created, as a more abstract or removed concept. [00:17:52] Justin brings up a previous podcast guest, Matt Asay from AWS, talking about Amazon working hand in hand with Redis and all these other open source companies, and he asks Nadia what she thinks about this. [00:22:03] Richard is curious to know what to do with projects that don’t have a charismatic leader where it hasn’t focused on who they are, which may have really good documentation. Is there any hope for any of those projects or they doomed to just continually wither and run out of steam? Nadia gives us the run down. [00:27:28] Richard wants to know what Nadia is doing at Sub Stack that is so interesting to her and following the research that you’ve learned from this book, why there? She tells us why she wrote the book. [00:32:37] Justin mentions a book he read called, Hate Inc. by Matt Taibbi, who has a Sub Stack thing. This is a great read! ☺ [00:35:08] Richard wants to know how Nadia can help people who write low-level software projects, who don’t have the power or the means or they are shy. What can we do to help those people? [00:38:22] Nadia tells us where you can find her on the internet, where you can find her book, and work. Spotlight [00:39:02] Gunner’s spotlight is Gosh science. [00:37:27] Justin’s spotlight is Nadia’s book, Working in Public (real world version). [00:39:30] Eric’s spotlight is also Nadia’s book, Working in Public and a quote from the book. [00:41:32] Richard’s spotlight is the concept of Antilibraries. [00:42:25] Nadia’s spotlight is Brendon Schlagel’s anti-library. Quotes [00:11:39] “I think what we’re seeing happen in all of this is we’re working toward building a shared vocabulary of the universe of this ecosystem, where each project is going to have its own arcane vocabulary over time.” [00:17:49] “Depending on who you talk to, the term open source just means so many things to different people.” Links Nadia Eghbal Website (https://nadiaeghbal.com/oss/) Nadia Eghbal Twitter (https://twitter.com/nayafia?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Nadia Eghbal Linux Conf AU 2017- Consider the Maintainer (YouTube) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2AR1owg0ao) Working in Public: The Making and Maintenance of Open Source Software by Nadia Eghbal (https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578675862/) Substack (https://substack.com/) Gathering for Open Science Hardware (GOSH) (http://openhardware.science/) Antilibraries (https://www.antilibrari.es/) Hate Inc: Why Today’s Media Makes Us Despise One Another by Matt Taibbi (https://www.amazon.com/Hate-Inc-Todays-Despise-Another/dp/1949017257) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com) Rebase.fm (https://rebase.fm/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Ad Sales by Eric Berry Special Guest: Nadia Eghbal.

Sustain
Episode 47: People and Relationships with Matt Asay

Sustain

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2020 41:43


Hello and welcome to Sustain! On today's episode, we have special guest, Matt Asay, Cloud and open source executive with Amazon Web Services (AWS). Matt tells us how his office is different from the Open Source program office. We will learn all about his career and his HTML5 start-up Strobe that was acquired by Facebook. Also, Matt talks about some interesting things he's learned from interviewing project maintainers and it has to do with the importance of being nice, kind, and welcoming. Download this episode now for some great inspiration and advice. [00:00:58] Matt tells us the difference between the two offices and teams and also how he ended up in his role. [00:05:09] With the focus on what your customers are doing, Justin asks Matt how does how does he address the controversies like the MongoDB API and all that other stuff and what is he doing to combat that? [00:12:22] Here we will hear all about Matt's impressive career and his HTML5 start-up Strobe acquired by Facebook. [00:16:59] Matt tells us about interviewing project maintainers and things that have stood out during the interview process after talking to them. [00:25:00] Matt explains what the key to sustainability is and he goes into risk sustainability. [00:28:10] Richard gives some really good feedback on Matt's answer on how he solves problems and Matt says he is going to steal one of his answers. [00:32:39] Richard asks Matt what is he doing with his team, what do your partnerships look like with CouchDB and Confluent, and what are you doing to make sure that the work you have lasts beyond you? [00:37:48] Matt tells us where we can find out more about him on the internet. Spotlight: [00:39:30] Justin's spotlight is arweave.org. [00:39:56] Richard's spotlight is the IPFS stack. [00:40:30] Matt's spotlight is an interview he did with Hugh "Jim" Bailey at OBS (Open Broadcaster Software). Panelists: Richard Littauer Justin Dorfman Guest: Matt Asay Quotes: [00:06:00] "So I've always worked for those companies. It's always been an easy marketing sell for me to talk about that. But, with AWS it's different." [00:06:46] "The whole open source definition is around distributing software, but we're not distributing software anymore. It's being consumed as a service over the internet." [00:07:35] "I used to work at MongoDB. I love MongoDB. It's one of the best working experiences I've ever had." [00:10:42] "I have a lot of respect for people, these virtuoso engineers who develop great software. But I have just as much respect for those who can operationalize and make that software easy so that customers don't have to worry about how they're going do maintenance on my SQL, as an example." [00:16:16] "If you want to successful you've got to figure out how to work with people." [00:17:54] "You reflect the kind of community that you will encourage. And so, if you're a jerk, then you're going to struggle." [00:18:03] "This is their free time. They're volunteers. They don't have to show up and be abused by you." [00:20:17] "In general, life's too short to be dealing with mean people all the time." [00:20:32] "If you're rude to those volunteers they're going to go elsewhere, and in open source, those contributors are your most valuable asset." [00:25:00] "So I think one of the keys to sustainability has to be community." [00:27:44] "I think that's something we need to figure out because open source is only getting more and more significant with more and more dependencies on it." *Links: * Matt Asay Twitter (https://twitter.com/mjasay?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) The Newstack (https://thenewstack.io/youre-addicted-to-curl-you-just-didnt-know-it/) InfoWorld-Articles by Matt Asay (https://www.infoworld.com/author/Matt-Asay/) TechRepublic (https://www.techrepublic.com/meet-the-team/us/matt-asay/) AWS (https://aws.amazon.com/) Arweave (https://www.arweave.org/) IPFS (https://ipfs.io/) "How open source "selfishness" can lead to burnout" by Matt Asay with Hugh "Jim" Bailey. (https://www.techrepublic.com/article/how-open-source-selfishness-can-lead-to-burnout/) Credits Produced by Justin Dorfman Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Matt Asay.

The New Stack Context
Episode 123: What ‘Open Source' Means for the GitHub Generation

The New Stack Context

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 36:15


Welcome to The New Stack Context, a podcast where we discuss the latest news and perspectives in the world of cloud native computing. For this week's episode, we spoke with Matt Asay, principal from the open source office at Amazon Web Services about his new series of posts on The New Stack that documents the contributors and originators behind many of the most popular open source programs we use every day. TNS Editorial and Marketing Director Libby Clark hosted this episode, alongside TNS Senior Editor Richard MacManus, and TNS Managing Editor Joab Jackson. Over the past few weeks, AWS' Asay has been traveling the open source world — virtually — to write a set of fascinating series on The New Stack that documents the contributors and originators behind many of the most popular open source programs we use every day. In this series, we've met the developers behind more than a dozen projects, including Wireshark, Matplotlab, Curl and many other widely-used tools. The idea with the series is to, in Asay's words, “shine a spotlight on an array of open source projects (and their founders and/or lead maintainers) that quietly serve behind-the-scenes. In the process, I hope that we'll gain insight into both why and how these critically important projects have managed to thrive for so long. This, in turn, just might provide useful information on how best to sustain open source projects.” In this interview, we ask Asay what he has learned speaking with all these creators, about project management and open source itself. We chat about how to join an open source project, and why it is difficult for maintainers to attract more help (and, in some cases, why they may not want contributions at all). Also on the agenda was the importance of open source licensing, how the younger generation of developers think about the idea of “open source,” and the long path it has taken for worldwide acceptance. “I spent 10 years railing against the Microsoft machine for things with FUD around SUSE and Linux and whatnot. And now I've spent just as much time praising Microsoft for the great open source contributions that they make. But people don't know that history.”

The New Stack Podcast
Episode 123: What ‘Open Source' Means for the GitHub Generation

The New Stack Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 36:15


Welcome to The New Stack Context, a podcast where we discuss the latest news and perspectives in the world of cloud native computing. For this week's episode, we spoke with Matt Asay, principal from the open source office at Amazon Web Services about his new series of posts on The New Stack that documents the contributors and originators behind many of the most popular open source programs we use every day. TNS Editorial and Marketing Director Libby Clark hosted this episode, alongside TNS Senior Editor Richard MacManus, and TNS Managing Editor Joab Jackson. Over the past few weeks, AWS' Asay has been traveling the open source world — virtually — to write a set of fascinating series on The New Stack that documents the contributors and originators behind many of the most popular open source programs we use every day. In this series, we've met the developers behind more than a dozen projects, including Wireshark, Matplotlab, Curl and many other widely-used tools. The idea with the series is to, in Asay's words, “shine a spotlight on an array of open source projects (and their founders and/or lead maintainers) that quietly serve behind-the-scenes. In the process, I hope that we'll gain insight into both why and how these critically important projects have managed to thrive for so long. This, in turn, just might provide useful information on how best to sustain open source projects.” In this interview, we ask Asay what he has learned speaking with all these creators, about project management and open source itself. We chat about how to join an open source project, and why it is difficult for maintainers to attract more help (and, in some cases, why they may not want contributions at all). Also on the agenda was the importance of open source licensing, how the younger generation of developers think about the idea of “open source,” and the long path it has taken for worldwide acceptance. “I spent 10 years railing against the Microsoft machine for things with FUD around SUSE and Linux and whatnot. And now I've spent just as much time praising Microsoft for the great open source contributions that they make. But people don't know that history.”

The Art of Modern Ops
Does Open Source Drive Business Innovation? Matt Asay, AWS & Cornelia Davis, Weaveworks

The Art of Modern Ops

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Jun 23, 2020 37:13


In this thought-provoking conversation Cornelia Davis of Weaveworks and Matt Asay of AWS explore the history of the open source movement, and examine the motivating factors that have driven consumers to increasingly insist on open source.  Arguably launched by the success of Linux as an open source project, the shift has driven technology providers to include open source software as an integral component of an enterprise-wide technology strategy. A few defining moments led to this explosion of available open source projects, as well an increase in trust shown by the number of companies who have built businesses around open source. Matt has spent virtually his entire career experiencing these shifts first hand, and we think you'll agree, that he brings a wealth of fascinating insights to the open source conversation. 

Sustain
Episode 26: The Data Behind Open Source is CHAOSS with Georg Link

Sustain

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 42:30


Sponsored By: Panelists Richard Littauer | Eric Berry | Justin Dorfman Guest Georg Link (http://www.georglink.de/) Bitergia (https://bitergia.com/) | CHAOSS (https://chaoss.community) Show Notes In this episode we talk with Georg Link, an Open Source Strategist. He is Director of Sales for Bitergia and Co-Founder, Governing Board Member of the Linux Foundation CHAOSS Project. He’s a native of Germany, but currently resides in Omaha, Nebraska. 04:21 Georg explains how he spent his last five years as he joined the PhD program, how he dove into Open Source, and his research focus. 5:25 The topic of metrics is discussed for Open Source. 07:52 The roots of the CHAOSS Project is explained and how it started at the Open Source Leadership Summit in 2017. 10:36 The topic of Red Hat’s contribution to Prospector as part of Project CHAOSS is explained and how it took the approach of taking metrics and providing an interface for analysis. 11:55 A question was posed to Georg about his perspective of his view when he started getting into the data behind Open Source and what kind of revelations he had. 15:29 One of the guys wants to know what Georg’s expectations are of these projects when they use metrics outlined and what will they do with it. 19:09 Georg talks about the two main reasons why he sees the metrics being implemented. 19:26 Justin brings up how Drupal does a comprehensive state of their community once a year and how they really go into metrics and Richard wants to know what metrics we have, and Georg expands on this topic. 22:26 Georg shares checking out CHAOSS.community/metrics to see shared metrics. 25:10 Richard wants to know how people who are not in an OSPO, who have a project, or are solo maintainers, or a team of people working on a project, how can they use these metrics to make their code better in the long run? Georg gives his recommendations on how to do this. 29:08 Georg explains who metrics are useful to and a question was asked from one of the guys as to how people can learn about different things from metrics without getting involved in the CHAOSS community if they don’t have time. Georg gives his advice. 33:38 Georg chats about what was different at the recent CHAOSSCON, what he’s focused on, and what he’s doing moving ahead. Listen on as he states, “It was the BEST we’ve had!” Spotlights 39:11 Justin’s spotlight this week is a TechRepublic article called, “Linux Foundation study throws the open source sustainability debate into question,” by Matt Asay. 39:38 Eric’s spotlight is a controversial one called Web3 Sustain Event-Blockchain. 40:47 Richard’s pick is Jekyll, to build websites really easily and fast using Ruby. 41:15 Georg gives a shout out to the LibreOffice community. Links Georg Link, PhD (https://georg.link/) Georg Link (http://www.georglink.de/) Georg Link Twitter (https://twitter.com/georglink) Georg Link Linkedin (https://www.linkedin.com/in/georglink) Bitergia (https://bitergia.com/) Red Hat (https://www.redhat.com/en) OSPO (https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/what-does-open-source-program-office-do) CHAOSS Participate (https://chaoss.community/participate/) CHAOSS Metrics (https://chaoss.community/metrics/) Finos Foundation (https://finosfoundation.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/FINOS/overview) Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) (http://cve.mitre.org/index.html) Drupal (https://www.drupal.org/) Cauldron (https://cauldron.io/) Tech Republic article by Matt Asay (https://www.techrepublic.com/article/new-study-throws-the-open-source-sustainability-debate-into-question/) Sustain Web3 event-Blockchain (https://web3.sustainoss.org/) Jekyll (https://jekyllrb.com/) LibreOffice (https://www.libreoffice.org/) Special Guest: Georg Link.

Open Source – Software Engineering Daily
Open Source Business Models with Karthik Ranganathan, Heather Meeker, and Matt Asay

Open Source – Software Engineering Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2019 61:53


Open source software has evolved into a thriving, multifaceted ecosystem. Open source encompasses operating systems and databases. Open source embodies both altruism and self-interest. And open source enables thriving businesses from WordPress blogs to hundred billion dollar cloud providers. There is a large set of business models that can be built around a successful open The post Open Source Business Models with Karthik Ranganathan, Heather Meeker, and Matt Asay appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

Software Defined Talk
Episode 192: Coté still doesn’t understand how startup valuations work

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2019 69:27


We discuss WeWork vs. Regus, Cloudera, and tumblr. Plus, some clarifications on trans-dimensional bomb defusing. Mood board: You talk about the Pacific Northwest, but have you thought about Florida? I could be like the 35 year old Andy Rooney. Hey Google, where are my keys? We’re driving off hosts at this point Herbalife. Funny logs. Was it real money? It’s probably cheaper than severance. I am not following any of it. Where’s Tim Wu when you need him? This is Tumblr all over again. Nothing but insects please. Oh Andy Rooney, save me! Buy Coté’s book dirt cheap (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt)! And check out his other book that this guy likes (https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6559881947412340736/). Relevant to your interests Apple Card Review: The Credit Card of the Future Is No Card At All (https://www.wsj.com/articles/apple-card-review-the-credit-card-of-the-future-is-no-card-at-all-11565528401) - Banking. Matt Asay goes to AWS (https://twitter.com/mjasay/status/1161008574589308928) Verizon to Sell Tumblr to WordPress.com Owner (https://www.wsj.com/articles/verizon-to-sell-tumblr-to-wordpress-owner-11565640000) Automattic’s bargain-bin Tumblr deal plugs right into the WordPress business model (https://techcrunch.com/2019/08/12/automattics-bargain-bin-tumblr-deal-plugs-right-into-the-wordpress-business-model/) Verizon agrees to sell Tumblr to owner of Wordpress (https://www.axios.com/verizon-tumblr-wordpress-automattic-e6645edd-bc73-45c2-9380-9fe8ca34291f.html) Activist investor Carl Icahn shakes up Cloudera (https://siliconangle.com/2019/08/12/activist-investor-carl-icahn-shakes-cloudera/) Kubernetes open sourced their security audit. What can we learn? (https://snyk.io/blog/kubernetes-open-sourced-their-security-audit-what-can-we-learn/) GitHub Actions now supports CI/CD, free for public repositories (https://github.blog/2019-08-08-github-actions-now-supports-ci-cd/) Broadcom acquires Symantec’s enterprise security business for $10.7B (https://siliconangle.com/2019/08/08/broadcom-acquires-symantecs-enterprise-security-business-10-7b/) Broadcom's Strategy for its Symantec Deal Has a Lot in Common with its CA Deal (https://realmoney.thestreet.com/investing/technology/broadcom-s-strategy-for-its-symantec-deal-has-a-lot-in-common-with-its-ca-deal-15052809) Uber’s no-good, terrible-rotten bad Q2 loses more than $5 billion (https://arstechnica.com/?p=1548505) Cloud Computing without Containers (https://new.blog.cloudflare.com/cloud-computing-without-containers/?hH) Spiceworks acquired (https://www.bizjournals.com/austin/news/2019/08/15/undisclosed-number-of-layoffs-expected-after-ziff.html). Amazon announces general availability of AWS Lake Formation (https://venturebeat.com/2019/08/08/amazon-announces-general-availability-of-aws-lake-formation/) Standardizing WASI: A system interface to run WebAssembly outside the web (https://hacks.mozilla.org/2019/03/standardizing-wasi-a-webassembly-system-interface/) Developers schetsen gitzwart beeld van Booking.com (https://www.computable.nl/artikel/nieuws/development/6777910/250449/developers-schetsen-gitzwart-beeld-van-bookingcom.html) Introducing Certificate Transparency Monitoring (https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-certificate-transparency-monitoring/) The XY Problem (http://xyproblem.info/) - or (x)Y? Snap announces Spectacles 3 with an updated design and a second HD camera (https://www.theverge.com/2019/8/13/20802239/snapchat-spectacles-3-pricing-release-date-snap) A cofounder of NPM, a startup that 11 million developers rely on, has resigned in the wake of a period of employee unrest (https://www.businessinsider.com/npm-cofounder-laurie-voss-resigns-2019-6) He tried to prank the DMV. Then his vanity license plate backfired big time. (https://mashable.com/article/dmv-vanity-license-plate-def-con-backfire/) Clever Vanity License Plate Backfires On Man, Winds Up With Tons Of Tickets (https://knrs.iheart.com/content/2019-08-12-clever-vanity-license-plate-backfires-on-man-winds-up-with-tons-of-tickets/) I Tried Hiding From Silicon Valley in a Pile of Privacy Gadgets (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-08-08/i-tried-hiding-from-silicon-valley-in-a-pile-of-privacy-gadgets) Microsoft culls Office 2019 from its Home Use Program (https://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/3080394/microsoft-culls-office-2019-home-use-program) War and Peace (https://itrevolution.com/book/war-and-peace-and-it/) (Book) Nonsense Man dies after competing in California taco-eating contest (http://local21news.com/news/nation-world/man-dies-after-competing-in-california-taco-eating-contest) Real ad that a real restaurant in Mexico (https://twitter.com/goingonajournie/status/1161145837256228864) Sponsors SolarWinds Loggly Contest: SDT listeners can enter the contest by submitting a photo and short description of the funniest log entries you’ve found (or created) for a chance to win. Loggly will choose three winners and rank them, while sharing funny log photos along the way at twitter.com/loggly (https://twitter.com/loggly). The first-place winner will get a Lenovo® Chromebook® 2-in-1 Convertible Laptop. SDT listeners can enter the contest at loggly.com/funny (https://pages.solarwinds.com/funny-logs?utm_source=sdt&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=funnylogs?) or find the link on the @loggly (https://twitter.com/loggly) Twitter page. See terms and conditions for official rules on loggly.com/funny (https://pages.solarwinds.com/funny-logs?utm_source=sdt&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=funnylogs?). US and Canada only. Conferences, et. al. August 30th - Agile Scotland, Glasgow (https://www.agilescotland.com/august) - Coté giving 90 minute workshop (https://www.agilescotland.com/august#comp-jwjlafj0__item1inlineContent-gridWrapper). Use the code AS-SPEAKER-MICHAEL for a discount: from £70 to £56.13. Sep 26th to 27th - DevOpsDays London (https://devopsdays.org/events/2019-london/welcome/) - Coté at the Pivotal table, come get free shit. Oct 7th to 10th - SpringOne Platform, Oct 7th to 10th, Austin Texas (https://springoneplatform.io/) - get $200 off registration before August 20th, and $200 more if you use the code S1P200_Coté (make sure to use the accented e). Come to the EMEA party (https://connect.pivotal.io/EMEA-Cocktail-Reception-S1P-2019.html) if you’re in EMEA. Oct 9th to 10th - Cloud Expo Asia (https://www.cloudexpoasia.com/) Singapore, Oct 9th and 10th Oct 10th to 11th - DevOpsDays Sydney 2019 (http://devopsdays.org/events/2019-sydney/), October 10th and 11th December - 2019, a city near you: The 2019 SpringOne Tours are posted (http://springonetour.io/): Toronto Dec 2nd and 3rd (https://springonetour.io/2019/toronto), São Paulo Dec 11th and 12th (https://springonetour.io/2019/sao-paulo). December 12-13 2019 - Kubernetes Summit Sydney (https://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/kubernetes-summit-sydney-2019/) 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: Azlo (https://www.azlo.com) and TransferWise (https://transferwise.com/u/matthewr9). Matt: Eluvium An Accidental Memory In the Case of Death (https://eluvium.bandcamp.com/album/an-accidental-memory-in-the-case-of-death) Coté: Thunderspace (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/thunderspace-rain-thunder/id636485814) app. Outro: “Andy Rooney MONTAGE.” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIpGTcR2kAQ)

Community Pulse
Big Company, Little Company (Ep 32)

Community Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019 49:06


In this episode, our hosts discuss the similarities and differences of working in developer relations and advocacy in large organizations compared to small ones (or startups). Joining us in the conversation is Nathen Harvey of Google, Maureen McElaney from IBM, and Matt Asay from Adobe.

Community Pulse
Big Company, Little Company (Ep 32)

Community Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019 49:06


In this episode, our hosts discuss the similarities and differences of working in developer relations and advocacy in large organizations compared to small ones (or startups). Joining us in the conversation is Nathen Harvey of Google, Maureen McElaney from IBM, and Matt Asay from Adobe.

Getup Kubicast
#14 - Flame War - Redis,  Common Clause e nossas escolhas no mundo open source

Getup Kubicast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2018 36:25


Neste episódio começamos com a notícia de um novo unicórnio, o PagerDuty, que conquistou um investimento de $1.3Bi com uma avaliação de $90 Milhões. Você pode saber mais aqui na Forbes.Depois entramos em nosso tema principal, falando de nossas escolhas na adoção de ferramentas open source, mudanças que podem ocorrer nos projetos e como isso pode nos afetar.Começamos com a guerra que foi levantada pela alteração na licença do Redis, que fecha os módulos proprietários do RedisLabs com a Commons Clause. O motivo da mudança é tentar se defender das ações de grandes empresas, que apenas tiram proveito de projetos como esse, ganham seus milhões e não devolvem nem mesmo linhas de código.A treta no twitter.kellabyteFalamos do RethinkDB, que quase fechou as portas, pois não tinham mais fundos para continuar, sendo comprados pela CNCF apenas para manter o projeto.Passamos também por escolhas e mudanças dentro de projetos open source, como quando a internet quase parou, pois o “dono” do left-pad do NodeJS o removeu do NPM, impedindo os usuários de fazer build, o que levou até mesmo a alterações nas regras da NPM. Se você não lembra, veja aqui.Algumas citaçõesSurgimento do primeiro fundo de investimento focado em open source, o OSS Capital.Pessoas para seguir: Joseph Jacks e Matt Asay.E as recomendações da semanaJoão: The man in machine — Steve JobsTalita: Trilogia da Fundação de Isaac AsimovGuilherme: Jogos de altíssima qualidade duvidosa (Pororoca Adventures, Corruption, Cabo Daciolo e Raffa Moreira)Diogo: No sense — banheiros de aeroporto que não tem papel toalha, somente aquele secador de mãos com vento e luz azul. Primeiro, não seca nada. Segundo, como faço para secar o rosto ali? Viaje com lenços de papel.Até a próxima e fique por dentro de tudo que compartilhamos em:Blog.getupcloud.com

The Minnesota Beer Cast
MN State Fair Beer Preview with Jess Fleming & Freehouse

The Minnesota Beer Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2018 45:35


Drew and Schmitty are joined by Jess Fleming from The Pioneer Press and Matt Asay from The Freehouse for a special Minnesota State Fair Beer Preview. – Presented by Freehouse Beer Links https://www.twincities.com/2018/07/31/minnesota-state-fair-announces-27-new-beers-and-beverages/ http://bluebarnmn.com Photos Listen and share Like Minnesota BeerCast on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/MinnesotaBeerCast/ Follow @MN_BeerCast on Twitter https://twitter.com/MN_BeerCast Listen to the Minnesota BeerCast every Friday at 8pm on […]

Getup Kubicast
#6 - O que NÃO esperar de Kubernetes

Getup Kubicast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2018 45:30


O que não esperar de kubernetes! Nesse episódio temos um convidado ilustre, Ricardo Katz @katzsp Tópicos deste episódio: Brazil fora da copa e falta de estabilidade emocional e garra para vencer. Artigo: Aquece competição entre CRI-O e Containerd Mas a quem interessa saber se o ambiente está rodando containerd ou CRI-O? O artigo traz a discussão comparando como querer saber sobre qual a marca de rolamento que está na roda do nosso carro. Foco em dirigir, no caso, na API do kubernetes. O artigo ainda avança mais fundo no tema para aqueles que queiram entender os pormenores do funcionamento e fecha falando sobre a superioridade do CRI-O. CrunchTools Nosso tema central “O que não esperar de Kubernetes” Outros tópicos Matt Asay, Head of Developer Ecosystem for Adobe, escreve bastante sobre o mundo open source e vale a pena seguir - @mjasay Grupo do Telegram de kubernetes BR Tutorial de Kubernetes : aqui Recomendações João: Andar mais leve, não carregue mochila Katz: Aviação, turbulência e canal YouTube aviões e músicas , didático e curioso para quem gosta de aviação. Diogo: Filme A Quiet Place, mostra um mundo pós apocalipse onde as pessoas são forçadas a permanecer em silêncio enquanto se escondem de monstros que caçam pelo som.

The New Stack Analysts
#153: AWS and Kubernetes: Now What?

The New Stack Analysts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2017 33:57


Following Amazon's many announcements at AWS re:Invent 2017, including its support for Kubernetes in its new EKS offering, many wondered how Amazon is going to position itself within the Kubernetes community, and hows its EKS and Fargate offerings will impact ECS and the Kubernetes community as a whole. Developers noticed that 

Fargate almost negates the need for EKS, which raised questions with our guests on today's episode of The New Stack Analysts, where we were joined by Matt Asay, Head of Developer Ecosystems at Adobe, and Krishnan Subramanian, Founder and Chief Research Advisor, Infrastructure, Application Platforms and DevOps. 

Amazon noted its continued exponential growth of its ECS platform while at re:Invent. “I was surprised to see the numbers. That's pretty impressive. But if ECS is growing at such a fast rate, why would you want to bring in Kubernetes? That's a question I'm still trying to answer," said Subramanian.

Software Defined Interviews
Episode 56: The tech column/opinion piece

Software Defined Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2017 53:13


This week, we look at the tech editorial page, columns that people like Matt Asay and Coté write. First we discuss if this is even a category, and then go over three columns Coté has written recently.(Slightly) more detailed show notes over in paper.

Software Defined Interviews
Episode 56: The tech column/opinion piece

Software Defined Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2017 53:13


This week, we look at the tech editorial page, columns that people like Matt Asay and Coté write. First we discuss if this is even a category, and then go over three columns Coté has written recently.(Slightly) more detailed show notes over in paper.

Software Defined Interviews
Episode 56: The tech column/opinion piece

Software Defined Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2017 53:13


This week, we look at the tech editorial page, columns that people like Matt Asay and Coté write. First we discuss if this is even a category, and then go over three columns Coté has written recently.(Slightly) more detailed show notes over in paper.

Software Defined Talk
Episode 106: Is “observability” just “instrumentation”? Or, monitoring sucks? No, you suck.

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2017 59:11


The DevOps kids have decided to come up with a new term “observability.” We get to the bottom of the WTF barrel on what that is - it sounds like a good word-project. Also, there’s a spate of kubernetes news, as always, and some interesting acquisitions. Plus, a micro-iOS 11 review. 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). Is “observability” just “instrumentation”? Write-up (https://medium.com/@copyconstruct/monitoring-and-observability-8417d1952e1c) from Cindy Sridharan. This guy (https://medium.com/@steve.mushero/observability-vs-monitoring-is-it-about-active-vs-passive-or-dev-vs-ops-14b24ddf182f): “Thinking directionally, Monitoring is the passive collection of Metrics, logs, etc. about a system, while Observability is the active dissemination of information from the system. Looking at it another way, from the external ‘supervisor’ perspective, I monitor you, but you make yourself Observable.” So, yes: if developers actually make their code monitorable and manageable…easy street! It’s a good detailing of that important part of DevOps. Cloud Native Java (http://amzn.to/2jPJHcv) has a good example with the default “observability” attributes for apps, and then an overview of Zipkin tracing. Weekly k8s News Heptio gets funding (https://www.geekwire.com/2017/heptio-raises-25m-series-b-funding-round-kubernetes-takes-world/), now “has raised $33.5 million in funding to date.” I think we’ll cover this press release in a WP episode. Also, something called “StackPointCloud” now with the Istio (https://thenewstack.io/stackpointcloud-drops-istio-service-mesh-integration/). Mesosphere adding K8s support (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/06/mesosphere-says-its-not-bowing-to-kubernetes/) - “Guagenti also noted that he believes that Mesosphere is currently a leader in the container space, both in terms of the number of containers its users run in production and in terms of revenue (though the company sadly didn’t share any numbers).” "I think it’s fair to call Kubernetes the de facto standard for how enterprises will do container orchestration,” Derrick Harris (http://news.architecht.io/issues/with-oracle-on-board-kubernetes-has-to-be-the-de-facto-standard-for-container-orchestration-73880). Is Kubernetes Repeating OpenStack’s Mistakes? (https://www.mirantis.com/blog/is-kubernetes-repeating-openstacks-mistakes/) - Boris throwing bombs Meanwhile, an abstract of a containers penetration study (https://redmonk.com/fryan/2017/09/10/cloud-native-technologies-in-the-fortune-100/), from RedMonk: "Docker, is running at 71% across Fortune 100 companies. Kubernetes usage is running in some form at 54%, and Cloud Foundry usage is at 50%” This update from the Cloud Foundry Foundation (https://www.cloudfoundry.org/update-containers-2017-research-shows/) is a little more, er, “responsible” in pointing out flaws. Instead it just says there’s lots of growth and tire-kicking: 2016/2017 y/y shows those evaluating containers went up from 31% to 42%, while “using” ticked up a tad from 22% to 25%, n=540. Oracle’s in the CNCF (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/13/oracle-joins-the-cloud-native-computing-foundation-as-a-platinum-member/) club! K8s on Oracle Linux, K8s for Oracle Public Cloud. “At this point, there really can’t be any doubt that Kubernetes is winning the container orchestration wars, given that virtually every major player is now backing the project, both financially and with code contributions.” James checks in on Red Hat (http://redmonk.com/jgovernor/2017/09/21/red-hat-is-pretty-good-at-being-red-hat/). (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/13/oracle-joins-the-cloud-native-computing-foundation-as-a-platinum-member/) Acquisitions & more! Rackspace acquires Datapipe (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/11/rackspace-acquires-datapipe-as-it-looks-to-expand-its-managed-cloud-business/) “The reason we’re buying them is that we want to extend our leadership in multi-cloud services,” Rackspace chief strategy officer Matt Bradley told me. “It’s a sign and signal that we’re going for it.” Bradley expects that the combined company will make Rackspace the largest private cloud player and the largest managed hosting service. Datadog acquires Logmatic.io to add log management to its cloud monitoring platform (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/07/datadog-acquires-logmatic-io-to-add-log-management-to-its-cloud-monitoring-platform/) Puppet Acquires Distelli (https://www.geekwire.com/2017/puppet-acquires-distelli-bolster-cloud-computing-automation-platform/), known for their Kubernetes dashboard. Jay Lyman at 451 (https://451research.com/report-short?entityId=93381). Sizing Puppet: “The company has grown to more than 500 employees, and has estimated annual revenue in the $100m range.” Coverage from Susan Hall: “What we haven’t had up to this point is all the requisite automation for moving infrastructure code and application code through any kind of automated delivery lifecycle” and now they gots that. https://thenewstack.io/puppet-will-extend-infrastructure-automation-capabilities-distelli-acquisition/ “In May, the company launched its Kubernetes dashboard K8S. It allows users to connect repositories, build images from source, then deploy them to that Kubernetes cluster. You can also set up automated pipelines to push images from one cluster to another, promote software from test/dev to prod, quickly roll back and do all this in the context of one or more Kubernetes clusters… The Kubernetes service is offered as a hosted service or in an on-prem version. It provides notifications through Slack.” Google pays $1.1 billion for HTC team and non-exclusive IP license (https://www.axios.com/login-2487682498.html?rebelltitem=2&utm_medium=linkshare&utm_campaign=organic#rebelltitem2) Security Corner The Apple Effect? — Why BMW might get rid of car keys (http://www.autonews.com/article/20170915/OEM06/170919789/why-bmw-might-get-rid-of-car-keys) Don’t blame Apache — EQUIFAX OFFICIALLY HAS NO EXCUSE (https://www.wired.com/story/equifax-breach-no-excuse/) Is there anything to do here? Setup layers of credit cards? Require Touch ID (etc.) approval of all financial decisions and transactions in your “account”? Food & Safety like inspectors for security? Hackers respond to Face ID on the iPhone X (http://bgr.com/2017/09/21/iphone-x-release-date-soon-hackers-eye-face-id/) iOS 11 Coté has been running the beta. It seems fine. There’s the usual Re-arrangement of how some gestures work that’s jarring at first, but after using it for awhile, you forget what they even are. The extra control center stuff is nice. The Files.app is interesting, but not too featureful. The new photo formats are annoying because, you know, non-Apple things need to support it (which they seem to?) Bonus Links Coté gives up on defining DevOps, and more Interview about DevOpsDays Auckland (https://www.infoq.com/news/2017/09/michael-cote-devops-days-nz). (https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/13/oracle-joins-the-cloud-native-computing-foundation-as-a-platinum-member/) Is Solaris dead yet? Strongly confirmed rumors that Oracle is shutting it down (http://www.zdnet.com/article/sun-set-oracle-closes-down-last-sun-product-lines/). This guy has written a big Solaris-brain to Linux-brain manifesto/guide (http://www.brendangregg.com/blog/2017-09-05/solaris-to-linux-2017.html), plus: “[n]owadays, Sun is a cobweb-covered sign at the Facebook Menlo Park campus, kept as a warning to the next generation.” SICK BURN! Layoffs and more (http://dtrace.org/blogs/bmc/2017/09/04/the-sudden-death-and-eternal-life-of-solaris/): “In particular, that employees who had given their careers to the company were told of their termination via a pre-recorded call — “robo-RIF’d” in the words of one employee — is both despicable and cowardly.” HPE We Can See The New Hewlett Clearly Now, Says CEO Whitman (http://blogs.barrons.com/techtraderdaily/2017/09/05/hpe-we-can-see-the-new-hewlett-clearly-now-says-ceo-whitman/?mod=BOLBlog) - AI in storage arrays, Docker in OneView. Clearly (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/hp-enterprise-has-yet-another-confusing-plan-to-simplify-itself-2017-09-05)? Making money (https://www.cnbc.com/2017/09/05/hpe-earnings-q3-2017.html). They bought CTP!? (https://www.cloudtp.com/doppler/hewlett-packard-enterprise-to-acquire-cloud-technology-partners/) Selling hardware to cloud providers is rough (https://www.nextplatform.com/2017/09/06/prospects-leaner-meaner-hpe/). Huawei New board (http://talkincloud.com/cloud-services/chinas-huawei-braces-board-revamp-western-markets-beckon). Microsoft app support. We can all agree on food Someone has to pay attention to this real world stuff (http://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2017/09/holland-agriculture-sustainable-farming/). This Tiny Country Feeds the World More on VMware/AWS The possible failures in the partnership (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-01/how-vmware-s-partnership-with-amazon-could-end-up-backfiring) - sort of an odd article in that the larger point is “maybe it won’t work.” Meanwhile, Matt Asay does some loopty-loops on it all (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/09/11/kubernetes_envy/). JEE Code put in github (http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2017/09/06/oracle_java_ee_java_se_github/). They’re giving it over to the Eclipse Foundation (https://blogs.oracle.com/theaquarium/opening-up-ee-update). Probably a good idea. VMware’s OpenStack Little report form 451 (https://451research.com/report-short?entityId=93303&type=mis&alertid=693&contactid=0033200001wgKCKAA2&utm_source=sendgrid&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=market-insight&utm_content=newsletter&utm_term=93303-VMware+sheds+free+version+of+its+OpenStack+distribution). “Going forward, users pay a onetime $995-per-CPU socket license fee, in addition to ongoing support.” Recommendations Brandon: Prophets of Rage (http://prophetsofrage.com/). Matt: American Gods (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Gods_(TV_series)), the TV show. Zero History (https://www.amazon.com/Zero-History-Blue-William-Gibson-ebook/dp/B003YL4AGC/): finale(?) to William Gibson’s Blue Ant trilogy LOT (https://www.lot2046.com/): a subscription-based service which distributes a basic set of clothing, footwear, essential self-care products, accessories, and media content. Engineering the End of Fashion (https://www.ssense.com/en-gb/editorial/fashion/engineering-the-end-of-fashion) Coté: Rick & Morty (http://amzn.to/2xrHo3L). These cultural guides (http://www.commisceo-global.com/country-guides) are fucking awesome! See America (http://www.commisceo-global.com/country-guides/usa-guide), Australia (http://www.commisceo-global.com/country-guides/australia-guide), and Latvia (http://www.commisceo-global.com/country-guides/latvia-guide) (no one sang at the meals I was at!). Cardenal Mendoza (https://www.thewhiskyexchange.com/p/996/cardenal-mendoza-brandy-solera-gran-reserva), brandy de jerez (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brandy_de_Jerez). And, you know, cognac/brandy in general - be a fucking adult already, you damn kids.

The New Stack Analysts
#143: A Skeptical Look at Kubernetes

The New Stack Analysts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2017 42:02


The “eco-” part of the term “ecosystem” has the same root as both “ecology” and “economy.”  It's hard to build anything that's designed to be economically self-sustaining, around a core product that's essentially free. You've heard Apcera CEO Derek Collison sound such warnings before.  As readers of The New Stack will recall, Apcera produces a premium container management platform that lets customers deploy applications across clouds. In an InfoWorld interview published last month, Collison turned up the heat, suggesting to Matt Asay that Kubernetes may have value as an ecosystem core only to companies with a direct interest in it, such as Google.  But Google will inevitably improve its Cloud Platform business model around APIs, Collison said, creating efficiencies that steer the customer around Kubernetes.  And when that happens, the lifeline to the Kubernetes ecosystem could get pinched. Learn more at: https://thenewstack.io/analysts-apcera-ceo-derek-collison-flip-side-kubernetes/

Software Defined Talk
Episode 80: The case for flying Southwest and Oracle buying Dyn, and containers

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2016 45:37


With all the domestic, direct flight, the gang lays out the case for Southwest. Coté salivates at the prospect but is worried about sitting next to chicken cages, but there's plenty of $500 shoe sales people on board. We also discuss Oracle buying Dyn, AWS's power, the looming cloud success of Microsoft, and, of course, containers. Octogenarian style: It’s episode 80! The Brittle Bones Anniversary. Feedback & Follow-up At least one person came correct (https://twitter.com/scrub/status/800844876908789760) and said CostCo. I think we’re now in the 2,000 to 2,500 downloads range (https://twitter.com/SoftwareDefTalk/status/803315322996555781). Good job listeners! Mid-roll Coté: stop the container madness and just use Pivotal Cloud Foundry (http://cote.io/pivotal). Coté: the Cloud Native roadshows are over, but check out the cloud native WIP I have: - or, just check out some excerpts on working with auditors (https://medium.com/@cote/auditors-your-new-bffs-918c8671897a#.et5tv7p7l), selecting initial projects (https://medium.com/@cote/getting-started-picking-your-first-cloud-native-projects-or-every-digital-transformation-starts-d0b1295f3712#.v7jpyjvro), and dealing with legacy (https://medium.com/built-to-adapt/deal-with-legacy-before-it-deals-with-you-cc907c800845#.ixtz1kqdz). Matt: Dec 1st and 2nd - DevOps Days Australia 20% discount code - SDT2016 (https://ti.to/devopsaustralia/2016-sydney/discount/SDT2016). Matt: Sydney AWS Meetups: December 6 (https://www.meetup.com/Amazon-Web-Services-Sydney-North-User-Group/events/235116364/), December 7 (https://www.meetup.com/AWS-Sydney/events/230091220/). Oracle Buys Dyn Coté needs a dial-a-friend on this one. Fleshing out their cloud coverage (https://www.oracle.com/corporate/acquisitions/dyn/index.html) This is what Coté frequently concluded when doing cloud strategy (https://twitter.com/craig_tracey/status/800742523270402048) Softlayer and AWS compared (https://medium.com/worm-capital/does-ibm-have-an-accounting-problem-in-softlayer-ccafd582059c#.5fcng7ctc) Sorry Oracle, Taking Down AWS is Alibaba’s Job “Alibaba Cloud president Simon Hu has said the company is working to surpass AWS within four years.” (http://www.itnews.com.au/news/aws-rival-alibaba-to-open-sydney-data-centre-442145) We’ll see if YUGEly can wrap his head around IaaS protectionism. Skyliner.io “You only get one hill to die on, so choose wisely” (https://blog.skyliner.io/the-happy-genius-of-my-household-2f76efba535a) New AWS-native PaaS from Etsy/Stripe/SquareSpace veterans Coté: I feel like I’ve read this blog post before. Maybe I even wrote it? So much typing. Microsoft Joins the Linux Foundation - we’re beyond the cats and dogs mirror! Steve Ballmer is spinning in his grave (https://www.linuxfoundation.org/announcements/microsoft-fortifies-commitment-to-open-source-becomes-linux-foundation-platinum) More than just Linux (http://www.infoworld.com/article/3142128/open-source-tools/4-no-bull-takeaways-from-microsoft-joining-the-linux-foundation.html) Add to this Visual Studio on the Mac (http://www.theverge.com/2016/11/14/13621116/microsoft-visual-studio-coming-to-mac). Google joined .Net Foundation (https://cloudplatform.googleblog.com/2016/11/Google-Cloud-to-join-NET-Foundation-Technical-Steering-Group.html) Windows, internet, phone, cloud BONUS LINKS! Not covered in show Recent Coté Nonsense “Largile” (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/11/21/largile_for_management_babies/) Recent DevOps books review (http://thenewstack.io/review-understanding-devops-putting-place-even-scale/). Red Hat wants to make Kubernetes boring (and successful) They’ve certainly made OpenStack boring (zing!) “Not that Red Hat is calling Kubernetes "boring." (http://www.techrepublic.com/article/how-red-hat-aims-to-make-kubernetes-boring-and-successful/) Instead, they're calling it "Enterprise-Ready," which is basically the same thing.” I dig that Matt Asay style. Dude knows how to pick a quick topic. The End of General Purpose Computing More precisely, as the title says “The End of the General Purpose Operating System“ “What we're witnessing in the market is the development of vertically integrated stacks” (http://www.morethanseven.net/2016/11/05/the-end-of-the-general-purpose-operating-system-as-it-happens/) “In all of these cases the operating system is an implementation detail of the higher level software. It's not intended to be directly managed, or at least managed to the same degree as the general purpose OS you're running today.” Apple Drops AirPort Routers I’ve got 3 of them, pretty solid (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-11-21/apple-said-to-abandon-development-of-wireless-routers-ivs0ssec). We don’t talk about Apple much here. Possible topic: what’s up with Apple now-a-days? Trump vs. Tech “Now we will have a president whose affinity for high-tech seems limited to Twitter bullying” (https://backchannel.com/tech-ceos-nightmare-a-president-totally-at-odds-with-their-values-20dd7b01e037#.tbk9vft4z) Interesting when you think that the heads of Google, Microsoft, Apple and probably Amazon (Bezos owns Washington Post) are all at odds with Trump. Facebook is trying to not piss anyone off. Not sure if we want to talk about it, so maybe it’s just a show note. MacOS Security and Privacy Guide Lots of practical tips for a safer Mac experience (https://github.com/drduh/macOS-Security-and-Privacy-Guide) Black Friday & Cyber Monday "the sweet smell of cyber dealz" (https://twitter.com/rachelbinx/status/803335197785632769) Recommendations Brandon: Left, Right, Center (https://www.amazon.com/Left-Center-Right-Dice-Game/dp/B005UP14VY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1480369890&sr=8-1-spons&keywords=dice+game+left+center+right&psc=1) Matt: Thanksgiving in Sydney: http://www.musicalsoupeaters.com/thanksgiving/ Magpie Attacks (http://www.musicalsoupeaters.com/swooping-season/)! Play your music at 10x slowdown, makes for good ambient listening. It’s up on GitHub if you want to do it to your own music collection (http://slowradio.rumblesan.com/), currently Ogg-only :( Coté: It Follows (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It_Follows).

VB Engage - Mobile, Marketing, & Technology Podcast from VentureBeat
Matt Asay, mobile horror stories, and what's next for Twitter

VB Engage - Mobile, Marketing, & Technology Podcast from VentureBeat

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2016 32:25


This week, Travis and Stewart interview Matt Asay of Adobe who -- during Halloween week -- tells us a few horror stories about how some mobile app and game developers have complicated their marketing stacks beyond belief and how hard it is for web-focused businesses to make the move to mobile. We also discuss Twitter's latest news, including its earnings, user growth, and what this means for social advertising. Finally, we find out (thanks to Adobe's annual online sales predictions report, which is always spookily accurate) exactly what this holiday season holds for retail marketers. 

Good Day, Sir! Show
I Want to Introduce My Own Rat Hole

Good Day, Sir! Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2014 88:32


In this episode we discuss using SKUID to build custom user interfaces in Salesforce.com, developer pilot of Visualforce Remote Objects, a quick tangent on what the Salesforce1 brand is (mobile vs platform), Matt Asay’s article on buying from “…Tech Leaders, Not Haters”, Force.com and Heroku with a single click, Heroku as an enterprise platform, speculation that Oracle could make a bid to buy Salesforce.com, and Salesforce’s Q4 earnings.SKUIDVisualforce Remote ObjectsWhy You Should Buy Only From Tech Leaders, Not HatersSalesforce Bundles Force.Com and Heroku as Part of New Enterprise PushSalesforce's Three-headed Platform Play: Heroku1, Heroku, and Force.comSalesforce.com Beats Q4 Targets, Ended Fy2014 with $4.07b in RevenueSalesforce.com Shows Insane Growth at Any Price Download MP3 (64.2 MB, 01:28:33)

Overcast: Conversations on Cloud Computing
Overcast Show #11: May 8, 2009, Matt Asay on Open Source & the Cloud

Overcast: Conversations on Cloud Computing

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2009


Listen to the podcast: Download Show #11 in MP3 format Show Notes: In episode #11 we talk to Matt Asay, vice president of business development at Alfresco and author of the blog The Open Road: The Business and Politics of...