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Damian Brady is a Staff Developer Advocate at GitHub. He's a developer, speaker, and author specializing in DevOps, MLOps, developer process, and software architecture. Formerly a Cloud Advocate at Microsoft for four years, and before that, a dev at Octopus Deploy and a Microsoft MVP, he has a 25-year background in software development and consulting in a broad range of industries. In Australia, he co-organized the Brisbane .Net User Group and launched the annual DDD Brisbane conference. Topics of Discussion: [3:45] When Damian realized he was interested in the things surrounding software development. [6:40] GitHub Copilot and AI tools to improve developer workflows. [8:50] What can people love GitHub Copilot for today? [16:06] How GitHub Copilot can assist developers without replacing them. [21:11] AI-powered code generation and bug detection. [25:15] Improving AI's ability to complete tasks by providing context and grounding it in truth. [29:23] How the process of adding a new field works. [34:03] Using Copilot to improve code development workflows. [42:03] The “ship to learn” idea. Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Ep 258 with Damian Brady Github Copilot Workspace Damian on Twitter Damian Brady GitHub Next CoPilot for Docs GitHub Next CoPilot for CLI Copilot Voice Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Dan Garfield is the Co-founder of Codefresh, a CI/CD platform powered by GitOps and Argo now acquired by Octopus Deploy. As the VP Open Source and Argo Maintainer, he works primarily on Argo CD and Argo Rollouts. He helped create the GitOps Working Group and Open GitOps Principles. He helped create the most popular GitOps certification with Argo CD and writes consistently about best practices for GitOps involving Security, Development processes, and scaling. Topics of Discussion: [2:37] Dan Garfield's career journey and his interest in technology from a young age. [4:17] The inspiration behind creating Codefresh. [7:57] Going all in on Kubernetes. [9:55] Meeting Paul, the CEO of Octopus. [10:37] We're still in the early days of Kubernetes. [12:27] What's the default choice for deploying to Kubernetes? [15:08] The importance of unified software delivery. [16:50] Linux native crowd adopted containers first, while .NET developers were slow to adopt due to compatibility issues. [22:53] What does Argo CD do? [25:04] GitOps Principles. [29:28] Managing microservices in a dynamic infrastructure. [32:29] Environment management, promotion workflows, and traceability. [34:30] Where exactly the balance between Argo and CodeFresh fits in. [35:09] GitOps Certification. Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Dan Garfield LinkedIn What is GitOps? Learning Codefresh GitOps Certification Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Raziel is the Senior Vice President of Codefresh at Octopus Deploy. He is an entrepreneur, technology enthusiast, and software developer at heart. He is the Founder of Codefresh and is passionate about accelerating the way software is disrupting our day-to-day life by simplifying the way we deploy applications. Topics of Discussion: [2:23] When Raziel first got interested in making a difference in the industry. [3:05] The role of the software developer has evolved over time. [7:11] What is GitOps? [14:46] Overlap with the concept of infrastructure as code. [14:57] Simplifying software deployment using GitOps. [20:44] Why it's an exciting time to be in software development. [22:55] What can we do with Codefresh? [25:24] Does Codefresh work with other infrastructure types? [26:29] Storing and managing application configuration and infrastructure code in separate Git repositories. [29:10] What are the most common reasons this infrastructure repository would have a commit pushed to it? [35:27] Codefresh joining Octopus Deploy. Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Codefresh OpenGitOps Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Dan Garfield is VP Open Source at Octopus Deploy. I spoke with Dan about KubeCon, GitOps, DORA regulation, the future of Continuous Delivery, AI, and the bright future of Codefresh joining Octopus Deploy.Please leave a review on your favorite podcast platform or Podchaser, and subscribe to 0800-DEVOPS newsletter here.This interview is featured in 0800-DEVOPS #60 - GitOps with Dan Garfield.[Check out podcast chapters if available on your podcast platform or use links below](2:51)Introduction(5:07)Founding Codefresh(7:30)Maintaining ArgoCD(10:52)About GitOps(17:43)GitOps fueling organizational performance(22:50)GitOps and DORA regulation(27:10)Codefresh joining Octopus Deploy(32:05)State of DevOps in "regular" organizations(36:57)The future of Continuous Delivery and AI(41:16)Dan's recommendations
In today's episode of Tribe Talkin' Listener feedback "keep the sh*t bits in". Sophisticated investor changes are likely to happen: Bronwen Clune of Capital Brief summarises the key submissions from the ecosystem. Financial Services Council says hike the threshold to $5 Million. Berkshire Hathaway annual report. The first post Charlie's passing. Australia's venture capital scene is facing a 'cleansing' by Nick Bonyhady of the AFR. Rayn Wong explains what you need to be able to do to be good in VC. Blackbird heads to the US to find bigger deals. Octopus Deploy does its first large acquisition by Simon Thomsen of Startup Daily. Block's acquisition of Afterpay and what we can learn. A great deep dive by Jack Derwin of Capital Brief. Would you choose the same VC's? A survey from SaasTr. hello@tribeglobal.vc
I was working with a customer recently and they said they didn't want to set up a pipeline. Somehow they wanted magically to see changes that developers made to their database appear in their production database without making any effort to build or configure a pipeline in a tool like Octopus Deploy. As I was thinking about how to find them a solution they would accept, I realized that I've always had a pipeline for software. Early on, this was a copy of all the files in a folder sent to the client for Clipper and dBase apps. Later, my pipeline was copying around all the VB6 files from a .zip file and executing a few SQL scripts that were sent to me in emails. Read the rest of You Always Have a Software Pipeline
#228: The Agile Manifesto is now more than 20 years old. However, even after all this time, instead of helping organizations create and deliver software faster to satisfy customer needs, many times Agile principles are turned into rigid processes that stifle innovation and limit customer satisfaction. Have far have we strayed from the core principles of the manifesto? In this episode, we talk with Paul Stovell, CEO and founder of Octopus Deploy, about the realities of Agile in 2023. Also, find out about the backstory of how Paul was able to snag the octopus.com domain. Paul's contact information: Twitter: https://twitter.com/paulstovell LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulstovell/ YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/devopsparadox/ Books and Courses: Catalog, Patterns, And Blueprints https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/catalog/ Review the podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://www.devopsparadox.com/review-podcast/ Slack: https://www.devopsparadox.com/slack/ Connect with us at: https://www.devopsparadox.com/contact/
Bob started as a .NET Developer back in the early days of .NET 1.1 with the goal of converting ASP pages to ASP.NET web applications. During that time, his career progressed from .NET Developer to Lead Developer, to Architect, to where he is today. As a technical director at Octopus Deploy, he helps solve complex customer problems as Octopus Deploy. As a team, we help answer both technical and non-technical questions. Bob has been a fan of making it easier to deploy software since the early 2010s, when working for a company the only time to deploy to production was 2 a.m. Saturday. That has led him down the path of CI/CD, DevOps, TDD, and automating all things. He was exposed to Redgate tooling and Octopus Deploy while working at Farm Credit Services of America and has been a fan ever since. In his current role, Bob gets to work with a variety of technologies every day. Topics of Discussion: [1:41] One of the biggest high points in Bob's career was being one of the champions of automating database deployments, and seeing that spread across all these other teams. [3:51] Also, he adopted test-driven development and was able to improve the speed of his application from 500 milliseconds per request to 50 milliseconds. [5:20] Bob talks about test-driven development. [7:00] The rules of thumb for people to get right to make running their software system more painless. [8:14] The problem of database management. [10:10] There are two schools of thought: state-based management and migration approach. [12:59] Distributed source control and having a build server are two of the main tools to consider. [15:28] The critical ingredients of monitoring and recovery. [22:07] The two ways to define a tenant. [24:11] One of the advantages of multi-tenancy applications is having a shared application and a shared database, where all the data of all the customers is intermingled with one customer's data. [27:29] Managing complexity in the cloud. [33:53] I's all about improving a little, every day, and practicing to get better just a little bit more. Mentioned in this Episodes: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us programming@palermo.net Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Architect Tips — Video podcast! Azure DevOps Bob Walker Twitter Bob Walker LinkedIn Blog — Octopus Deploy Octopus Deploy Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Paul Stovell is the CEO of Octopus Deploy and an industry veteran building the tool supporting agile software development. I spoke with Paul about bottlenecks in the software delivery process today, deployment challenges in hybrid environments, and the future of application release automation. As Paul says, deployment time should be the time of happiness and satisfaction, not the time of fear and anxiety.Subscribe to 0800-DEVOPS newsletter here.This interview is featured in 0800-DEVOPS #51 - Agile software development with Paul Stovell.[Check out podcast chapters if available on your podcast platform or use links below](0:00)Introduction (5:11)About Octopus Deploy (9:36)Challenges in software delivery today (18:18)The complexity of hybrid environments (22:52)About Governance, Risk and Compliance (25:33)The future of application release automation (28:48)AI and deployment management (33:53)Book recommendations
In today's episode of Category Visionaries, we speak with Paul Stovell, CEO and Founder of Octopus Deploy, a deployment automation tool for DevOps that's raised over $170 Million in funding. Topics Discussed: Paul's background as a software engineer and the influence of other entrepreneurs on his business mindset Octopus Deploy's mission to automate software deployments and make the process stress-free for software teams. How Octopus Deploy differentiates itself from competitors by providing value in one specific area of contemporary business How Octopus Deploy was able to secure a profitable business model at a very early stage, confounding the startup economy standard Building a new category around a real-world pain point for contemporary businesses, and where Paul sees the business heading in the future Favorite book: Coder to Developer: Tools and Strategies for Delivering Your Software
Damian Brady is a Developer Advocate Manager at GitHub. He's a developer, speaker, and author specializing in DevOps, MLOps, developer process, and software architecture. Formerly a Cloud Advocate at Microsoft for four years, and before that, a dev at Octopus Deploy and a Microsoft MVP, he has a 25-year background in software development and consulting in a broad range of industries. In Australia, he co-organized the Brisbane .Net User Group and launched the annual DDD Brisbane conference. Topics of Discussion: [2:12] How did Damian get into the field? [5:50] What is GitHub Copilot, and what are some of the most impressive and time-saving features? [8:38] What is the model that GitHub Copilot uses? [10:32] How have they decided what code is appropriate for this model? [12:13] Damian talks about both the prompt engineering and the server side. [17:30] How do you know if your code is good code? [19:50] Damian shares some cool prompts he has seen in Copilot Chat. [26:10] Github Copilot Voice is an experimental tool, useful for people who find it hard to type or who can't type. [32:48] The aim of Copilot is to basically increase your productivity, but increase your happiness as a developer as well. [34:40] Will this eventually take the job of all developers? [38:14] Whether it's GitHub Copilot or a competitive tool that does AI programming, it's just going to be the way that you do software engineering. [43:07] The difference between junior and senior developers. Mentioned in this Episodes: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us programming@palermo.net Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Architect Tips — Video podcast! Azure DevOps Damian Brady on Twitter Damian Brady website GitHubNext CoPilot for Docs GitHubNext | Copilot for Pull Requests Copilot for CLI CoPilot Voice DDD Brisbane Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Colin is the SVP of Product at Octopus Deploy. As a technical product leader, his career has spanned music, health, financial, and technology industries with companies like Microsoft, Johnson Controls, Brink's, Orion Health, and officialCOMMUNITY. He is passionate about growing product people through his work with the Product Aotearoa community. You can learn more about him at ColinBowern.com. Topics of Discussion: [2:23] How Colin got involved in Octopus Deploy. [5:43] What is the value proposition for Octopus Deploy? [11:30] Who is Octopus Deploy built for? [12:52] How do we categorize all the after-deploy activities? [14:46] How do we get happy deployments? [18:36] What are some of the themes or categories that have emerged in Runbooks that are universally applicable? [21:51] What has happened in the DevOps space since 2010 when the term “DevOps Engineer” was first used? [24:01] Colin talks about infrastructure as code in the cloud. [30:01] Colin talks about his view on the future of Windows Server and Windows Server Operating System. [36:28] What is the easiest way for someone to get started in Octopus? Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's YouTube Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Programming with Palermo programming@palermo.network Colin Bowern on Twitter Colin Bowern Website Colin Bowern LinkedIn Colin Bowern Microsoft Octopus Deploy 30 Point Inspection Octopus Deploy Jumpstart Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Happy New Year to all here in 2023. It's going to be a great year. It's a great time to be a programmer. A great time to be building with .NET; you are going to do great things this year. You have what it takes. You are smart, you have great tools, and you have a great team. You are a great leader. This episode is going to be all about remembering what happened this past year at the podcast. Topics of Discussion: [1:15] Jeffrey talks about the architect forums he's hosting and facilitating in 2023. You can register here. [1:46] Huge announcement in Microsoft Developer news including: - Android apps on Windows 11 - ARM processors getting big investments - Microsoft Dev Box — in preview — dev workstation in the cloud - Power Pages websites - Large SKU app service; up to 256GB RAM available for those who need it - Azure Arc, the new name of Hybrid Azure. And a single-node Azure Stack for remote locations but the programming model of Azure — looking forward to testing it at the right time. - Azure Container Apps tooling got better, and it became ready for prime time. Every team should be looking at this. - .NET 7 released. [4:11] What might the default application stacks and environments look like on the platform in 2023? - Windows 11 - Visual Studio 2022 w/ ReSharper - .NET 7 - Onion Architecture - Blazor for interactive applications - .NET service workers for back-end jobs and queue listeners - Entity Framework with Azure SQL — add on other storage services as per application. - Azure App Service for hosting while prototyping Azure Container Apps. - Application Insights with the Open Telemetry NuGet packages. - Azure Pipelines paired with Octopus Deploy (keep an eye on GitHub Actions as they fill out support for scenarios you need). - NordVPN for developer workstation work-from-home or remote Wi-Fi. [9:11] When it comes to developer workstations, desktop computers are still giving the most bang for the buck with power, and only a few laptops do the job really well. I have not reviewed all computers, and there are a lot out there. I can vouch for Alienware R series desktops. Liquid-cooled, so they are really quiet, even under full load. Dell Precision laptops are amazing for software engineers. I really wanted to love the Lenovo P1, but the fan was just too loud when it was under load. And we all know that cooling is so important in laptops. When a laptop gets too hot, your BIOS will slow down the processor to keep it from burning up. Then you no longer have a fast processor. And video calls use a good deal of processor, surprisingly — or not. For super mobile laptops that you can use for programming, I really do like the Microsoft Surface Laptop. I wanted to like the Surface Studio laptop, but they inverted the cooling and the battery placement, so it's very uncomfortable on my lap and my wrists unfortunately under load. The wrist wrest gets really hot. Normally the battery is under the wrist rest, but Microsoft swapped it on this one, so it's not fun using it as a laptop on your lap or even on a desk while hot and under load. [13:11] Highlighting some past episodes that will be interesting: - Highlighting some past episodes over the year that might be interesting. - With Microsoft Orleans providing a new implementation of the Actor design pattern, we have a two-part series interview with Aaron Stannard, the creator of Akka.NET, episodes 172 and 173. - On the IoT front, Wilderness Labs has been trucking along creating system-on-a-chip options that run .NET natively and easily. I interviewed founder and CEO Bryan Costanich. - For those educating themselves for a career in software engineering, my interview with Henry Quillin might be useful. He talks about a programming internship and his education journey, his work earning his Eagle Scout, and how he became a working programmer even as he is just starting university. - More on embedded. Kevin Kirkus was with us in episode 186. He runs a testing team at Intel doing automated testing for their Xeon processor line. The design necessary for testing in this specialized environment gives us all plenty to think about. - For team leaders out there, I interviewed Mark Seemann. He wrote a recent book, Code That Fits In Your Head. He talks about the principles that are in the book. I subsequently bought and read the book, and I wish I had this book earlier in my career. Would have saved me a great deal of time. - On distributed systems, Udi Dahan is always a fascinating gentleman to listen to. Check out episode 192. As the founder and CEO of Particular Software, and the creator of NServiceBus, he is one of the world's leading experts on distributed systems, microservices, and messaging architectures. - Time-tested ideas are continually useful. I had the pleasure of interviewing Philippe Kruchten. He worked at Rational Software back when they were at the forefront of the software process in the 1990s. He published a paper outlining a framework for emergent, agile architecture. He didn't call it that. He called it the 4+1 Architecture, but only because it predated the agile manifesto. If you are an architect, and you aren't aware of this approach to architecture, give episode 195 a listen. - For the Blazor developers, I had Steve Sanderson on in episode 202. Steve is the original designer of Blazor, which has become the new default web application on .NET. He shared about the future of Blazor and WebAssembly. - Because there is so much going on in this space, Daniel Roth also joined me to discuss more Blazor Futures. - GitHub Actions is being talked about quite a bit. While loads of people are using it for builds, people are scratching their heads about where it fits in regarding deployments. Damian Brady, on the GitHub team and a former employee of Octopus Deploy, sheds light on this in episode 206. - Scott Hunter joined me in episode 211. He announced his new role at Microsoft running more of Azure development and .NET. He shared quite a bit behind the scenes regarding Microsoft's strategy there. - For the UX people. Mark Miller is the Chief Architect of DevExpress, the big UI components company. He has a brilliant user experience mind, and I was able to get him talking in episode 212. - Telemetry. We all need it to keep our software stable in production. The Serilog and AutoFac maintainer, Nicholas Blumhardt, joined me to discuss the fundamentals of modern logging and telemetry. Check out episode 217 for that. - More on the testing front, Eduardo Maltez, a software engineer doing some really interesting full system test work shares his thoughts on what makes tests reliable, stable, and fast — and how to fight brittle tests. Episode 224. - We closed out the year on the security front. With LastPass getting hacked and now Rackspace having a hacking-induced major outage, we all need to take action. Troy Vinson, a multi-certified security professional and certified ethical hacker, gave his perspective on the Rackspace breach and what every .NET team should learn from it. Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's YouTube Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Programming with Palermo programming@palermo.network Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Nick Sohnemann trifft im Podcast Studio auf einen weiteren Zukunftsexperten. Tim Cortinovis ist Autor, Speaker und Innovationsberater. Automatisierung ist sein Thema, um es genauer zu sagen, die Automatisierung des Vertriebs.Wie sieht er denn nun aus, der Vertrieb der Zukunft, möchte Nick wissen? Tim ist überzeugt, dass hier die Automatisierung der Schlüssel ist. Bereits heute werden viele Prozesse über Tools wie Expandi, Octopus Deploy u.a. gesteuert, beschleunigt und optimiert. Diese Entwicklung steht definitiv zukünftig weiter im Fokus, erklärt der Innovationsexperte im POD#89. Tim verrät, dass die Sektionen auf seiner Website, wie Blog oder Newsletter, entsprechend automatisiert aufgesetzt sind und auch seine Rechercheaktivitäten inzwischen bot optimiert wurden. Dazu braucht es mehr Insights, findet Nick. Und diese werden diskutiert.Im POD'89 geht es um KI-Assistenz, neue Plattformen als B2B-Vertriebs-Tools, GPT-3 und natürlich um das Metaverse. Was muss und wird passieren, um die neuen Räume niedrigschwellig zu nutzen? Wann wird das Metaverse entsprechend so nutzerfreundlich zugänglich sein, dass sein Potential auch im B2B Bereich entfaltet wird?Über didaktische und automatisierte Hands-on-Lösungen 3.0. hören wir im Innovations-Podcast, Folge 89.Tim Cortinovis ist Speaker, Autor und Innovationsberater mit Fokus auf Automatisierung und KI-Anwendungen in Vertriebsstrukturen.Noch mehr Zukunft auf die Ohren? Future Candy der Innovations-Podcast. Alle Folgen findest du hier. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Damian Brady is a Developer Advocate at GitHub. He's a developer, speaker, and author specializing in DevOps, MLOps, developer process, and software architecture. Formerly a Cloud Advocate at Microsoft for four years, and before that, a dev at Octopus Deploy and a Microsoft MVP, he has a 20-plus year background in software development and consulting in a broad range of industries. In Australia, he co-organized the Brisbane .Net User Group and launched the annual DDD Brisbane conference. Topics of Discussion: [2:45] How does Damian describe the landscape between Microsoft and GitHub? [4:12] What is it about automated development that jazzes Damian up? [5:57] Damian describes the lay of the land with GitHub Actions. [10:39] Does GitHub have a package repository? [14:19] For your build, you can keep them as just artifacts that are for that particular workflow, or you can create a package and put it into one of those package repositories for later retrieval. [14:25] Damian talks about the transition to deploying to the first pre-production environment in your chain. [19:12] What do the non-secret variables look like? [22:09] To what extent is there still overlap from Azure, and how does it deviate? [26:22] There are two options: there are actions that are in the marketplace, and then you can also run your own scripts. [30:10] Damian and his team are building around a pretty core experience where you have a project that you're deploying to multiple environments. [34:24] How is Octopus Deploy similar? How is it different? Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's YouTube Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Damian Brady On DevOps for Data Science and Machine Learning Chris Patterson on Github Actions Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Nous discutons avec Joël Quimper des défis des tests logiciel, du contept des "deployment rings", de la nécessité ou non d'avoir une équipe dédiée aux tests et du besoin de pouvoir tester directement en production en utilisant des déploiements de type canarie ou des "feature flags". Joel Quimper est responsable de l'équipe d'ingénierie logicielle chez mondata. Mondata travail sur un produit ayant pour but de guide l'ensemble des utilisateurs d'une entreprise vers l'adoption de comportements et de pratiques qui réduisent les risques de cyberincidents. Joel possède une vaste expérience dans la conception de solutions logicielles prenant avantage du cloud. Il est passionné par les plateformes PaaS et le développement autour de Office 365. Avant de rejoindre mondata, il a travaillé pour UMAknow qui est maintenant Lansweeper. Il a aussi travaillé chez Microsoft, à la Banque Nationale, à la Caisse de dépôt et placement et chez IBM Canada dans plusieurs rôles. Liens : Progressively expose your releases using deployment rings - Azure DevOps Progressive experimentation with feature flags - Azure DevOps Deployment rings make sequencing Windows updates fast and simple Deployment rings: The hidden [strategic] gem of Windows as a service Canary deployments - Octopus Deploy
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, John Bristowe talks about deploying software and managing the process with Octopus Deploy. John discusses his career in development, soft skills, and his hobby projects using Raspberry Pi.
Episode 158 of the #MVPbuzzChat interview series. Conversation between Microsoft Regional Director and MVP Christian Buckley (@buckleyplanet), and Azure MVP, Sarah Lean (@TechieLass), a Senior Solutions Architect at Octopus Deploy and based in Glasgow, Scotland. You can also find this episode on the CollabTalk blog at https://www.buckleyplanet.com/2022/03/mvpbuzzchat-with-sarah-lean.html
Join me this week as I catch up on the Octopus Deploy, AWS Re:Invent and Azure news. There's been a lot to talk about! If you'd like to support me creating video and audio content please consider "buying me a coffee" https://www.buymeacoffee.com/techielass My video graphics were created by the awesome Krist McKenna from Ratworks Music by https://www.bensound.com and https://youtube.com/ikson
Cairo Malet (she/her) is a cyber security professional, specialising in governance, risk and compliance. She currently works for Octopus Deploy, leading their GRC programme. Before moving to Octopus, she spent three years leading risk assessment and remediation at one of the world's largest mining companies, working with technology across both enterprise and operational environments. Her previous experience includes consulting and internal positions, working with organisations across finance, government, healthcare, telecommunications and resources to assess their security posture and implement policy and process to increase security maturity. She is passionate about providing pragmatic security advice, increasing female representation in the Cyber Security industry, and Stardew Valley. She also has a degree in International Relations and a CISSP. In our conversation, we talk about Cairo's indirect journey to cyber security, and what cyber security entails from policy to supply chain cyber security and social engineering. Show Notes (link) Connect with STEAM Powered: Website Facebook Instagram Twitter Patreon Ko-Fi
Another Friday and this week we are catching up on the GitHub Universe news, an awesome K8s YAML generator and security breaches. Octopus Deploy's Kubernetes YAML generator - https://k8syaml.com/ If you'd like to support me creating video and audio content please consider "buying me a coffee" https://www.buymeacoffee.com/techielass My video graphics were created by the awesome Krist McKenna from Ratworks Music by https://www.bensound.com and https://youtube.com/ikson
Geeks on Screens with Coffee Episode 61- Christmas Special Look who I bumped into at the water cooler/tea room/corridor? It's only Rob Sewell (@sqldbawithbeard) It's Christmas time, pandemic Christmas - we will have xmas jumpers and something else... no idea what. I've not planned it yet. Bio: Rob Sewell Rob is a SQL Server DBA, Devops engineer and PowerShell guru. Rob was also recognised a Microsoft Cloud and Datacenter MVP this year. Rob works with clients to enable automation, SQL Server best practices and Continuous Delivery using PowerShell, Git, VSTS, Jenkins, Octopus Deploy mainly on the Microsoft Azure platform or on-premises. I must dash, the kettle has almost boiled. Love you! youtube: https://youtu.be/gHl-F1fM9JY
PHARMACIST TO SOFTWARE DEVELOPER Having grown up in a family involved in healthcare, Susan followed into the path of pharmacy but realised that it wasn't her passion. She decided to dive into a bootcamp for software development at Le Wagon having tried out the free Harvard courses. She fell hard for programming and is now working as a software developer for Octopus Deploy! Listen to her experience of switching careers through a bootcamp and realising pharmacy wasn't it for her.
Alex Yates has become quite the DevOps consultant in the last few years. I used to work with Alex at Redgate before he left to start his own consulting firm. I hear nothing but good things about his work, and if you are looking for someone to help guide your database development team, he'd be a good choice. He wrote a piece on the Octopus Deploy blog about the title of DevOps Engineer and why that doesn't quite make sense. He essentially notes that this doesn't really describe what a person does and it might not be a good title. I tend to agree, since DevOps isn't a thing, per se, but rather a set of guiding principles. While this might include building software, or deploying it, there are titles for those things (build engineer or release engineer). It could include Infrastructure-as-code, but that's the domain of sysadmins. Read the rest of Titles and DevOps Confusion
What happens when your company brings on investors? Carl and Richard talk to Paul Stovell about the recent investment made by Insight Partners into Octopus Deploy. Paul talks about how a great investment group brings important skills and insights to a company - not just money. The conversation also digs into deciding when to take investment, what new opportunities open up, and how the investment can affect the culture of the company - preferably for the better!
What happens when your company brings on investors? Carl and Richard talk to Paul Stovell about the recent investment made by Insight Partners into Octopus Deploy. Paul talks about how a great investment group brings important skills and insights to a company - not just money. The conversation also digs into deciding when to take investment, what new opportunities open up, and how the investment can affect the culture of the company - preferably for the better!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
What happens when your company brings on investors? Carl and Richard talk to Paul Stovell about the recent investment made by Insight Partners into Octopus Deploy. Paul talks about how a great investment group brings important skills and insights to a company - not just money. The conversation also digs into deciding when to take investment, what new opportunities open up, and how the investment can affect the culture of the company - preferably for the better!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Welcome to another edition of the OTPBD News Special, our fortnightly series analysing the news that matters for Australian and Kiwi startups.Meet this week's panel...Mike Zimmerman, Partner at Main Sequence VenturesAndrew Horsley, Co-founder & CEO at Quantum BrillianceSarah Nolet, Partner at Tenacious VenturesTopics we discuss:Our panel discusses Main Sequence Ventures' new $250m deep tech fund, the huge $221m raise by Brisbane-based Octopus Deploy, a $34m raise by seaweed livestock feed supplement maker Sea Forest and the Ingenuity helicopter flight on Mars.__________________If you are a prospective angel investor based in Adelaide interested in joining Horizon Six Degrees, Innovation Bay's new community for angels, email membership@innovationbay.com to discuss your potential candidacy as a founding member. More info here.
Not many releases last week, but lots of shenanigans. I spelled that word on the first try which matters not a whit to anyone else but I'm proud of myself. The shenanigans themselves are an age old story: Big Corporation finds feeble consumers, and exploits them.
Founded almost a decade ago, Octopus Deploy has grown to serve 25,000 organizations, including Microsoft, NASA, Xero, Disney and Stack Overflow, through bootstrapping. Today the company announced its first outside investment.
Founded almost a decade ago, Octopus Deploy has grown to serve 25,000 organizations, including Microsoft, NASA, Xero, Disney and Stack Overflow, through bootstrapping. Today the company announced its first outside investment.
Welcome to the MS Dev Show, episode #242. This week we talk with Michael Levan about Octopus Deploy. How to build an invisible PC inside of a desk. A super cool debug visualizer for VS Code. And what's actually in a digital pregnancy test?
This is Last Week in .NET for the week that ended 17 October 2020. Lots of releases and CVE fixes last week, so let's get to it.
Brandon interviews Michael Levan from Octopus Deploy. (https://octopus.com/) They discuss developer relations, Go Programming and Code Quality. Plus, Michael offers some tips for lighting your home office. Show Links From Desktop to Developer in under Seven years (https://medium.com/@michael.levan/from-desktop-to-developer-in-under-seven-years-207bcd39dc18) Quality Code with Go on Gumroad (https://gumroad.com/l/ASyXy) Michael on the Web Blog: clouddev.engineering (https://www.clouddev.engineering/) LinkedIn: michaellevan (https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaellevan/) Twitter: @TheNJDevOpsGuy (https://twitter.com/thenjdevopsguy?lang=en) Special Guest: Michael Levan.
MLOps and DevOps have a large number of parallels. Many of the techniques, practices, and processes used for traditional software projects can be followed almost exactly in ML projects. However, the day-to-day of an ML project is usually significantly different from a traditional software project. So while the ideas and principles can still apply, it’s important to be aware of the core aims of DevOps when applying them. Damian is a Cloud Advocate specializing in DevOps and MLOps. After spending a year in Toronto, Canada, he returned to Australia - the land of the dangerous creatures and beautiful beaches - in 2018. Formerly a dev at Octopus Deploy and a Microsoft MVP, he has a background in software development and consulting in a broad range of industries. In Australia, he co-organised the Brisbane .Net User Group, and launched the now annual DDD Brisbane conference. He regularly speaks at conferences, User Groups, and other events around the world. Most of the time you'll find him talking to software engineers, IT pros and managers to help them get the most out of their DevOps strategies. || Links Referenced in the Show || MLOps, or DevOps for Machine Learning: https://damianbrady.com.au/2019/10/28/mlops-or-devops-for-machine-learning/ Microsoft Azure Machine Learning: http://ml.azure.com/ MLOps Coffee Sessions #6 Continuous Integration for ML // Featuring Elle O'Brien: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L98VxJDHXMM MLOps: Isn’t that just DevOps? Ryan Dawson speaks at MLOps Coffee Session: https://www.seldon.io/mlops-isnt-that-just-devops-ryan-dawson-speaks-at-mlops-coffee-session/ DVC - Data Version Control: https://dvc.org/ Pachyderm - Version-controlled data science: https://www.pachyderm.com/ Databricks - Unified Data Analytics: https://databricks.com/ Join our slack community: https://join.slack.com/t/mlops-community/shared_invite/zt-391hcpnl-aSwNf_X5RyYSh40MiRe9Lw Follow us on Twitter: @mlopscommunity Sign up for the next meetup: https://go.mlops.community/register Connect with Demetrios on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dpbrinkm/ Connect with David on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aponteanalytics/ Connect with Damian on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/damianbrady/
In their eternal quest for continuous delivery of perfectly deployed beer, Chris and Chris are joined by their favorite Dallas Blonde (but actually brunette) Ryan Rousseau, Continuous Delivery Architect at Octopus Deploy. Joining live from Dallas, Texas, Ryan takes our hosts on a Deep (Ellum Brewery) dive into deployments, talking all things Kubernetes, blue-green, canaries and even turquoise. So, grab a beer and tune in y’all - cheers!
How can a deployment tool make your disaster recovery process easier? Richard chats with Michael Richardson of Octopus Deploy about Operations Runbooks. Octopus Deploy handles deployments very effectively, and with Runbooks, you can expand that functionality to include all sorts of other related processes, like backing up and restoring data, running failover scripts and more. Through deployment, Octopus already knows where all your resources live and the rights they need, making it easy to expand your automation over all sorts of disaster recovery needs!
Today your host, Jeffrey Palermo, will be going solo to bring you a DevOps news update for the first week of July in 2019! He covers some of the latest advances in GitHub, big changes for Azure Pipelines, and .NET Framework news that will change the landscape. In the second half of the episode he also shares some news on what’s coming this fall for .NET Core 3.0: an update to .NET DevOps for Azure! He gives a sneak preview into the additional chapters that will be added and topics that will be covered to align with the release of .NET Core 3.0. Be sure to tune into to get the update you need for DevOps this month! Topics of Discussion: [:52] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for tons of past episodes! [2:40] If there are any particular topics you’d like to hear covered or guests you’d like to see featured, you can reach Jeffrey on Twitter @JeffreyPalermo to tweet him your suggestions! [2:55] Jeffrey covers some of the latest advances in GitHub. [4:54] Jeffery explains what Azure App Configuration is and its capabilities. [8:14] The big changes for Azure Pipelines. [12:04] Server-side Blazor and .NET Core 3.0: NET Framework news that will change the landscape. [13:27] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [13:51] What’s coming this fall for .NET Core 3.0: an update to .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo! [23:15] Do you think video training to accompany .NET DevOps for Azure would be helpful? Reach out to Jeffrey to let him know your thoughts! [24:00] Let Jeffrey know if you think he should offer a public course! [25:24] Jeffrey speaks about an interesting new product feature with Octopus Deploy. [26:31] How and where to see what is up and coming with Azure DevOps itself. [27:24] If there is some additional news Jeffrey has missed and you’d like to hear covered on a future episode, tweet him on twitter! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) — Reach out to Jeffrey @JeffreyPalermo on Twitter if you have a user group or conference and would like some free copies of .NET DevOps for Azure! .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject — Visit for an example of .Net DevOps for Azure The Azure DevOps Podcast Episode 01: “Buck Hodges on the introduction to Azure DevOps Services” Jeffrey’s Twitter: @JeffreyPalermo CODE Magazine GitHub Azure ReposAzure App Configuration LaunchDarkly The Azure DevOps Podcast Episode 17: “Gopinath Chigakkagari on Key Optimizations for Azure Pipelines” Microsoft Build Conference “What’s New with Azure Pipelines,” Blog Post by Gopinath Chigakkagari YAML“Server-Side Blazor in .NET Core 3.0,” Video on Channel 9 by Cecil Phillip, Shayne Boyer, and Daniel Roth Angular React Vue.jsWebAssembly Octopus Deploy Octopus.com/Workers docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/devops/release-notes Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Dan Barber, from the Customery Crew, wanted to know what it would be like inside some of Neil’s scrum events. In Scrum Dynamics 26, Neil walks Dan through one of his recent ten-day sprints day-by-day from sprint planning on Monday morning to the sprint review two weeks later. Here’s how it went… Day One. Sprint planning is at 3pm for two hours on Monday afternoon. We finalise the sprint goal, determine and determine the sprint backlog. On Tuesday morning, we start work on any stories carried over from the previous sprint, one-point stories and spikes. The Dynamics 365 squads hold their daily scrums at 9.15am and 9.30am. On Tuesday morning there’s a showcase for our business stakeholders. Tuesday afternoon is our retrospective for the previous sprint. Day Two. We have a technical design session on Wednesday morning to finalise the technical designs for the more complex stories. In the afternoon the analysts run a storytime workshop to elaborate and estimate stories for a future sprint. Day Three. The first product owner review session is on Thursday afternoon. It’s an opportunity for the tester to demonstrate any completed features for the product owner’s acceptance (fingers crossed). Day Four. Applause in Friday’s daily scrum as the first few accepted stories are moved to done. We sometimes hold back on completing all the definition of done activities until the end of the sprint so that developers can get working on another story and let the testers start testing as early as possible. Day Five. Monday doesn’t have any scrum events so it’s a solid development day. I’d love to say we’re halfway through the sprint backlog when we’re halfway through the sprint, but we’re often still playing catch up. Day Six. On Tuesday morning, some of the developers have finished all the stories they forecast they would complete. They help other developers complete their stories, work on spikes, chores and bugs. We can bring stories in from the product backlog, but only if the development team agrees that we can get the story developed and tested before the end of the sprint. Day Seven. Our aim is to be dev complete on all story cards by the end of the day on Wednesday so that our testers have sufficient time to test all our stories and have them accepted by the end of the sprint. Day Eight. We’re helping the testers by responding to feedback. We don’t track bugs reported by the testers or product owner. Instead, we just fix them on the spot. Unless they are low priority and we don’t want to fix them in this sprint, or they were reported by someone outside the scrum team. If there aren’t any bugs, then we’re finishing definition of done activities and working on spikes and chores. We’re helping our devops engineer automate all our deployment tasks. We don’t want to have any manual deployment steps. So we automate everything using Atlassian Bamboo and Octopus Deploy. We also have another storytime workshop to elaborate and esitmate stories for a future sprint on Thursday afternoon. Day Nine. Thank goodness it’s Friday. There aren’t any sprint events today. We might run an ad-hoc design workshop on Friday morning to take a look at any complex epics in the backlog and figure out what we might need to do with them. We have a quick, 30-minute meeting to plan Monday’s sprint review: what are we going to demonstrate, and who’s going to do the demo? Our developments rotate this responsibility so that everyone gets a turn. Day Ten. It’s Monday morning and never as calm and relaxed as we’d like as we rush to finish any last-minute stories and get them accepted. Sprint review is a 1pm and an opportunity for all the work streams in the program to come together. We recap our sprint goal, describe the stories we got done, and highlight the stories we didn’t get done. Then we demonstrate some of the done stories. We get some good technical questions from the audience. Phew. Time to take a short, unpaid vacation before sprint planning starts at 3 o’clock. The cadence of my other recent Dynamics 365 scrum teams has been similar. We all have the give events of scrum, and we’ve added in storytime, technical design workshops and the product owner review. How does your sprint cadence differ? What other technical practices and workshops have you found it useful to add to your sprints? Let me know in the comments below.
Paul Stovell, the founder and CEO of Octopus Deploy, joins the podcast today. Paul is an expert on all things automated deployment and Cloud operations. He started Octopus Deploy back in 2011, but prior to that, he worked as a consultant for about five years. Octopus Deploy is a pretty major player in the market. Their mission? To do automated deployments really, really well. Today, it helps over 20,000 customers automate their deployments, and employs 40 brilliant people. It can be integrated with Azure DevOps services and many other build services. On this week’s episode, Paul talks about his career journey and what led him to create Octopus Deploy; his accomplishments, goals, and visions for Octopus Deploy; which build servers integrate best with Octopus Deploy; his tips and tricks for how to best utilize it; and his vision for the future of DevOps. Topics of Discussion: [:51] About today’s guest — Paul Stovell. [1:06] Paul introduces himself and gives some background on his career journey. [3:36] Paul’s take on continuous integration in the past and now. [5:05] Paul’s original vision for his company, Octopus Deploy. [7:54] Where Octopus Deploy fits in for Visual Studio developers. [12:03] Paul speaks about the two approaches to doing deployments. [16:11] About the depth of the Octopus Deploy library. [17:27] A word from the Azure DevOps Podcast sponsor: Clear Measure. [17:54] Out of all of the build servers, which integrate best with Octopus Deploy? [19:47] How Octopus Deploy could be a big game-changer with the newest release. [26:17] When adopting a serverless environment, where does Octopus Deploy’s tentacle agent go? How does it configure? [29:23] Which tasks should go with Octopus Deploy and what’re the boundaries? [31:11] Paul’s vision for the future of DevOps 5-10 years down the road. [37:13] Jeffrey and Paul talk incident prevention and incident management. [39:16] Paul’s recommendations on where to follow-up to learn more about Octopus Deploy after this podcast. Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) Paul Stovell Octopus DeployTeamCity Atlassian BambooRed Gate Octopus.com/blog (to join the Slack channel) Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
This week, your host, Jeffrey Palermo, interviews Damian Brady. Damian is a Senior Cloud DevOps Developer Advocate at Microsoft, helping customers implement DevOps methods on the Microsoft platform. He’s been with Microsoft for just over a year now and formerly served as a developer for Octopus Deploy. In this episode, Damian and Jeffrey talk all things data science and machine learning. Damian answers key questions such as: what has been the biggest change in the area of data science since the Azure DevOps release? What does source control look like for data science projects in DevOps? And more. He also explains some of the interesting architectures he has put together for machine learning and walks Jeffrey through the process of his machine learning model from source control, building, packaging, and finally, to deploying. He also gives his recommendations for those who want to go even further with data science after listening to this week’s episode. Topics of Discussion: [:52] About today’s guest, Damian Brady. [1:06] Damian introduces himself and explains his role at Microsoft. [1:46] Which group Damian is presently on at Microsoft. [4:14] With the Azure DevOps release, what’s the big change in the area of data science? What is going to be different for people building or running models? [6:47] For data science projects what does the source control look like? [8:49] For the Microsoft ML, is there a particular format that the data is stored in, in source control? [9:09] If the data is large and needs to be versioned, what are the current methods people are using? [11:06] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [11:39] Some of the interesting architectures Damian has put together for machine learning. [16:10] Damian walks Jeffrey through his machine learning model from source control to building, to packaging up the release, to deploying. [19:20] For this type of model, where would be the physical environment where it’s measuring information? [20:24] Damian talks firewall rules, permissions, and security. [23:16] The advantages of using Azure’s IoT Hub. [24:46] Damian talks about the new open source features that were added with the release. [28:20] Does Damian still encounter customers who say they don’t want to use Microsoft products because they don’t realize they’re open source? [29:36] Is it true that VS Code is the most popular editor? [31:03] One of the huge advantages of using open source. [31:53] Damian talks build agents. [33:33] About the new Windows-hosted container build agent. [35:50] Damian’s recommendation for listeners who want to go further with data science after listening to this week’s podcast! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Azure Pipelines Octopus Deploy Clear Measure (Sponsor) Buck Hodges on the introduction to Azure DevOps Services - Episode 001 Donovan Brown on How to Use Azure DevOps Services - Episode 002 Source control in Azure DevOps Ubuntu Machine Learning (ML) Amazon Web Services (AWS) Azure Cognitive Services CustomVision.ai Raspberry Pi Azure Data Center .NET Core Python GitHub Azure IoT Hub ADP Summit VS Code Docker Compose Subversion Chocolatey Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes. Follow Up with Our Guest: Damian Brady’s LinkedIn
Deployments are hard: nothing runs the same in production as it does on your local machine, and orchestrating the right changes at the right time, in a repeatable and reliable way, can be really tricky, and make you fear deployment time. Octopus Deploy is a deployment automation tool that helps to ease this pain, and give you confidence that your deployments will work consistently on every release. In this talk we'll have a look at the anatomy of a deployment, and some key Octopus features to help you eliminate your deployment pains for good.
Tweet this Episode John-Daniel Trask is the CEO and developer at Raygun.io. JD and Chuck talk in this episode about learning to program as a kid, the arc of JD's career, and entrepreneurship. Links: 154 JSJ Raygun.io Error Reporting and Workflow with John-Daniel Trask JSJ 263 Moving from Node.js to .NET and Raygun.io with John-Daniel Trask C C++ Delphi NetScape Navigator VBScript JQuery Mindscape Raygun.io CoffeeScript Visual Studio Scott Hanselman on Dark Matter Developers Tensorflow Stripe @traskjd Picks: JD: Keygen.sh Octopus Deploy JavaScript x86 Chuck: The Miracle Morning Meditations App Vision Board App LootCrate Game of Thrones Journal Zelda Theme Journal
Tweet this Episode John-Daniel Trask is the CEO and developer at Raygun.io. JD and Chuck talk in this episode about learning to program as a kid, the arc of JD's career, and entrepreneurship. Links: 154 JSJ Raygun.io Error Reporting and Workflow with John-Daniel Trask JSJ 263 Moving from Node.js to .NET and Raygun.io with John-Daniel Trask C C++ Delphi NetScape Navigator VBScript JQuery Mindscape Raygun.io CoffeeScript Visual Studio Scott Hanselman on Dark Matter Developers Tensorflow Stripe @traskjd Picks: JD: Keygen.sh Octopus Deploy JavaScript x86 Chuck: The Miracle Morning Meditations App Vision Board App LootCrate Game of Thrones Journal Zelda Theme Journal
Tweet this Episode John-Daniel Trask is the CEO and developer at Raygun.io. JD and Chuck talk in this episode about learning to program as a kid, the arc of JD's career, and entrepreneurship. Links: 154 JSJ Raygun.io Error Reporting and Workflow with John-Daniel Trask JSJ 263 Moving from Node.js to .NET and Raygun.io with John-Daniel Trask C C++ Delphi NetScape Navigator VBScript JQuery Mindscape Raygun.io CoffeeScript Visual Studio Scott Hanselman on Dark Matter Developers Tensorflow Stripe @traskjd Picks: JD: Keygen.sh Octopus Deploy JavaScript x86 Chuck: The Miracle Morning Meditations App Vision Board App LootCrate Game of Thrones Journal Zelda Theme Journal
In this episode we find out what Octopus Deploy is all about with Chris Hey http://cynicaldeveloper.com/podcast/30/
In this interview, Senior DevOps Program Manager Donovan Brown interviews Damian Brady about DevOps and Octopus Deploy.You can download the Octopus Deploy Build and Release Task here.Blog: DonovanBrown.comFollow @DonovanBrown Follow @damovisa
In this interview, Senior DevOps Program Manager Donovan Brown interviews Damian Brady about DevOps and Octopus Deploy.You can download the Octopus Deploy Build and Release Task here.Blog: DonovanBrown.comFollow @DonovanBrown Follow @damovisa
Octopus Deploy con Roberto Cappelletti
Rilasci automatizzati per ambienti di test, staging o produzione ? Octopus deploy è uno dei prodotti più flessibili presenti sul mercato. In questa puntata, Roberto ci spiegherà le caratteristiche e le potenzialità offerte da questo strumento.
We first interviewed Paul Stovell a few years back when he started a micro-ISV he was calling "Octopus Deploy." Now it's a fully formed and successful company whose flagship product Octopus Deploy is used all over. Damian Brady joins Scott and explains why deployment is more subtle then you think.
Paul lives in Australia and works for Octopus Deploy - a software tool for pushing your code out to all of your servers.You can use Octopus Deploy for free for small teams, so it's really easy to try it, realize the benefit, and then move into a higher scale production scenario.Octopus is works for pushing code to both Windows and Linux.Go to octopus.com to check it out. Watch the video and see what it looks like to get started and what the benefits will be.By the way, at around 4:49 we referred to writing BASH scripts on Windows machines, and what we're talking about is the relatively recent ability to run BASH on Ubuntu on Windows. I'm really using and loving this feature on Windows 10 now. You can read more about that on this post on the Windows blog.
How do you deploy your applications? While at DevIntersection, Carl and Richard chatted with Damian Brady from Octopus about the latest version of Octopus Deploy. Damian talks about all the changes that have come in Octopus 3, using SQL Server to store deployment information, getting more involved with deployment to Azure, and so on. The conversation also digs into the impact of open source and support for Linux and OSX, which means looking at a change of dependencies when it comes to things like nuget. There's lots to talk about in deployment, things are only getting better!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
How do you deploy your applications? While at DevIntersection, Carl and Richard chatted with Damian Brady from Octopus about the latest version of Octopus Deploy. Damian talks about all the changes that have come in Octopus 3, using SQL Server to store deployment information, getting more involved with deployment to Azure, and so on. The conversation also digs into the impact of open source and support for Linux and OSX, which means looking at a change of dependencies when it comes to things like nuget. There's lots to talk about in deployment, things are only getting better!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Deploying Enterprise Applications can be an art unto itself. Sophisticated, distributed systems often have a lot of moving parts. Databases often need to be updated with schema changes and new reference data with each new release. Octopus Deploy takes a lot of the heavy lifting out of complex deployments. Being an automated process, it removes opportunities for human error to occur during a deployment. It also integrates well with Continuous Integration servers, resulting in end-to-end automation from code commits to deployment of compiled code. In this presentation, we'll take a look at the basics of Octopus Deploy and see how it can significantly free up developers to focus on actual development, rather than having to also worry about the deployment aspects as well.
Jake Ginnivan is a Senior Consultant at Readify. He's an open source enthusiast, blogger, speaker, microsoft MVP and a fan of good beer. He is a contributor to a number of open source projects including AutoMapper, Shouldly, NSubstitute, XBehave, DbUp and Funnelweb. The best way to get in touch with Jake is to flick him a tweet. Today I gave him a call to talk about his latest efforts on a project called GitVersion. GitVersion is an Easy Semantic Versioning solution for projects using Git. We started the conversation by taking a quick look at what Semantic Version. Jake is taking the lead on the next release of GitVersion. To give you some background. GitVersion has been on GitHub since August 2013. Since then it's had 22 releases with 54 contributors and it's used by the team NServiceBus and Octopus Deploy. I got to using GitVersion on a project this week and I found it interesting to see how many different ways it can be used for different solutions. GitVersion works on many levels. It can assess your commit messages, tags and branches. It gathers up all that data and creates a useful version number. Depending on your configuration it will then include that version number in your solution. GitVersion is useful for whatever pipeline you've got going on. Whether it be Team City, Visual Studio Team Services, Chef, Puppet, Octopus Deploy. It's going to work because at the end of the day it can be encapsulated into a single simple to use command line tool that can be plugged in whereever you like. GitVersion is a tool that will help your project remain semver compliant. Thinking about what this means and how this sort of standardisation can help your project continue to evolve whilst others depend upon it got me thinking... Spending some time exploring semver has got me thinking about transitive dependencies and how this sort of idea is often at the core of backlog management, grooming and prioritisation. Perhaps semver could be a useful tool early in the scrum cadence. Perhaps the idea of semver could be useful for versioning many things, not just released packages of code.
Carl and Richard chat with Paul Stovell, one of the principals behind Octopus Deploy. Octopus Deploy is all about getting your organization to continuous delivery - by automating every step. Paul talks about how the product came to be, from the frustrations he was having with deployment using Word documents and remote desktop. Octopus Deploy is free to download and use for small projects. Once you're addicted to one-button deployment, you can pay for larger projects and teams. And under the hood, it's technologies like PowerSshell that make it all work. This is a great addition to your DevOps toolkit.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard chat with Paul Stovell, one of the principals behind Octopus Deploy. Octopus Deploy is all about getting your organization to continuous delivery - by automating every step. Paul talks about how the product came to be, from the frustrations he was having with deployment using Word documents and remote desktop. Octopus Deploy is free to download and use for small projects. Once you're addicted to one-button deployment, you can pay for larger projects and teams. And under the hood, it's technologies like PowerSshell that make it all work. This is a great addition to your DevOps toolkit.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard chat with Nicholas Blumhardt about his work on Serilog, a structured logging tool. But first, the conversation dives a bit into Octopus Deploy, an awesome tool for helping you manage your application packages and help deploy them to testing, pre-production, production, and so on. Then on to the main event - Nicholas' amazing Serilog product. Logging is a pain, and Serilog makes it as painless as possible - one line per log entry, and configuration to write your log anywhere: text files, other logging products, even Event Tracing for Windows!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Carl and Richard chat with Nicholas Blumhardt about his work on Serilog, a structured logging tool. But first, the conversation dives a bit into Octopus Deploy, an awesome tool for helping you manage your application packages and help deploy them to testing, pre-production, production, and so on. Then on to the main event - Nicholas' amazing Serilog product. Logging is a pain, and Serilog makes it as painless as possible - one line per log entry, and configuration to write your log anywhere: text files, other logging products, even Event Tracing for Windows!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
This week Scott skypes with Paul in London. He's recently moved from Australia and has simultaneously launched his own micro-ISV focused on convention-based deployments made easy. What's involved? How did it get started and what does this Octopus Deploy do?