POPULARITY
Rosemary Wang and Michael Kosir (developer advocates at HashiCorp, an IBM Company) discuss new releases like Vault and Nomad on IBM Z and LinuxONE, Nomad 1.10, and HCP Vault Radar as well as updated features to HCP Boundary and the Terraform Enterprise provider. Podcast Notes - https://www.ibm.com/new/announcements/ibm-vault-self-managed-for-z-and-linuxone-and-ibm-nomad-self-managed-for-z-and-linuxone-generally-available - https://www.hashicorp.com/en/blog/nomad-1-10-adds-dynamic-host-volumes-extended-oidc-support-and-more - https://www.hashicorp.com/en/products/vault/hcp-vault-radar - https://developer.hashicorp.com/hcp/docs/boundary/configure-ttl - https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-provider-tfe/releases/tag/v0.65.0
Rosemary Wang and Michael Kosir (developer advocates at HashiCorp, an IBM Company) discuss what's new in Vault 1.19 and Terraform 1.11, including automatic rotation of root credentials, post-quantum cryptography, Terraform test enhancements, and write-only arguments for ephemeral values. Podcast Notes - https://www.hashicorp.com/en/blog/vault-enterprise-1-19-reduces-risk-encryption-updates-automated-root-rotation - https://www.hashicorp.com/en/blog/terraform-1-11-ephemeral-values-managed-resources-write-only-arguments - https://developer.hashicorp.com/terraform/language/resources/ephemeral
We've been taught to stash our secrets. Passwords, credentials, and tokens shouldn't be shared lest they fall into the wrong hands. When it comes to building and running large-scale systems, that thinking has to change. But maybe only a little bit.Rosemary Wang and Steve Almy of HashiCorp share how business as usual for secrets management means putting your business at risk.The guests featured in this episode work for HashiCorp, a Red Hat partner.
Rosemary Wang of HashiCorp, author of Infrastructure as Code, Patterns and Practices, talks about her experience in the open source world, and her passion for infrastructure as code. She discusses automation and common pitfalls, as well as the need to explore 'break glass scenarios' in case automation goes wrong. 00:00 Introduction and Welcome 00:00 Open Source Conferences 00:52 Automation and Infrastructure as Code 01:19 Exploring the Concept of 'Break Glass' Scenarios 03:48 Common Pitfalls in Automation 06:31 The Importance of Auditing and Inspecting Automation 08:02 Advice for Early Career Engineers 18:16 Introduction to the Book 'Infrastructure as Code Patterns and Practices' Guest: As the author of “Infrastructure as Code, Patterns and Practices”, Rosemary Wang works to bridge the technical and cultural barriers between infrastructure, security, and application development. She has a fascination for solving intractable problems as a contributor, public speaker, writer, and advocate of open source infrastructure tools. When she is not drawing on whiteboards, Rosemary debugs stacks of various infrastructure systems on her laptop while watering her houseplants.
Rosemary Wang is a Senior Developer Advocate at HashiCorp and author of "Infrastructure as Code, Patterns and Practices: With examples in Python and Terraform"! In this episode she discusses tools, lessons learned and best practices for testing Terraform! Resources: https://joatmon08.github.io/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/rosemarywang/ https://twitter.com/joatmon08 https://tinyurl.com/rosemary-iac
In this episode, we are joined by Rosemary Wang, an Infrastructure Automation Engineer turned Developer Advocate at HashiCorp.Rosemary shares with us her journey from electrical engineering to cloud DevOps, the importance of understanding the foundations of technology, and how she transitioned into her current role as a Developer Advocate to scale knowledge and educate others. She also discusses her experience writing a book on Infrastructure as Code and the benefits of having an "accountabuddy" to stay motivated.Join us as we delve into Rosemary's journey in the world of technology and her insights on how to navigate it successfully.-“Be brave, and think outside of technology, too. What you think is difficult, oftentimes, in technology is not the technology, it's oftentimes the people.” -Links:TwitterLinkedInGitHubBook--Thanks for being an imposter - a part of the Imposter Syndrome Network (ISN)! We'd love it if you connected with us at the links below: The ISN LinkedIn group (community): https://www.linkedin.com/groups/14098596/ The ISN on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ImposterNetwork Zoë on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RoseSecOps Chris on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChrisGrundemann Make it a great day.
Welcome to the Cables2Clouds Podcast! In today's episode, hosts Chris Miles, Alex Perkins, and Tim McConnaughy are joined by special guest Will Collins, Principal Architect at Alkira and LinkedIn Learning Instructor. The topic of discussion is "Terraform for the Network Engineer."The conversation begins with a brief overview of Terraform and its benefits, as well as its relevance to network engineers in the cloud. Will explains how Terraform allows network engineers to automate infrastructure deployment and management, saving time and reducing the risk of human error.The hosts and guest discuss the fundamentals of Terraform, including its declarative language and infrastructure-as-code approach. They explore how Terraform compares to other automation tools and the role it plays in cloud infrastructure management.Will shares his experience teaching Terraform to network engineers and how it can revolutionize their day-to-day operations. The group also discusses the importance of proper planning and testing when implementing Terraform and the potential pitfalls to avoid.As the episode wraps up, the hosts and guest share their final thoughts and recommendations for network engineers interested in implementing Terraform.Join us for this insightful discussion on Terraform for the Network Engineer with Will Collins on the Cables2Clouds Podcast. Don't forget to subscribe and leave a review!How to connect with Will:Twitter: [https://twitter.com/WCollins502]Blog: [https://wcollins.io/]LinkedIn: [https://www.linkedin.com/in/william-collins/]Show Links:Will's LinkedIn Learning Course "Terraform: Managing Network Infrastructure" : [https://www.linkedin.com/learning/terraform-managing-network-infrastructure]Hashicorp links:Terraform: [https://www.hashicorp.com/products/terraform]TF Cloud: [https://developer.hashicorp.com/terraform/cloud-docs]IaC, Patterns and Practices by Rosemary Wang: [https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/infrastructure-as-code/9781617298295/]Check out the Fortnightly Cloud Networking NewsVisit our website and subscribe: https://www.cables2clouds.com/Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cables2cloudsFollow us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@cables2clouds/Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@cables2cloudsMerch Store: https://store.cables2clouds.com/Join the Discord Study group: https://artofneteng.com/iaatjArt of Network Engineering (AONE): https://artofnetworkengineering.com
Commiting to the journey of running in the cloud is quite as simple as moving your code or writing a new application on a cloud offering. Between a diverse service catalog, greater developer autonomy, rapid provisioning, surprise billing, and changing security requirements, you might find that hosting applications on the cloud does not make the most of the cloud. In this episode of the podcast, Rosemary Wang talks about the patterns and practices that help you move from cloud-hosted to cloud-native architecture and maximize the benefit and use of the cloud. The discussion covers essential application and infrastructure considerations, as well as cost and security concerns you need to think about when approaching a cloud-native architecture. Read a transcript of this interview: https://bit.ly/3LQKzY2 Subscribe to the Software Architects' Newsletter [monthly]: www.infoq.com/software-architect…mpaign=architectnl Upcoming Events: QCon New York qconnewyork.com/?utm_source=sound…tm_campaign=qny23 June 13-15, 2023 QCon San Francisco: qconsf.com/?utm_source=soundcl…&utm_campaign=qsf23 Oct 2-6, 2023 Follow InfoQ: - Mastodon: techhub.social/@infoq - Twitter: twitter.com/InfoQ - LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/infoq - Facebook: bit.ly/2jmlyG8 - Instagram: @infoqdotcom - Youtube: www.youtube.com/infoq Write for InfoQ - Join a community of experts. - Increase your visibility. - Grow your career. www.infoq.com/write-for-infoq/?u…aign=writeforinfoq
Zero trust infrastructure is an approach to security that requires all users, devices, and services to be authenticated and authorized before being granted access to resources. Unlike traditional security models that assume everything inside the network is trusted, zero trust assumes that all traffic is untrusted. In today's world, where cyber threats are becoming increasingly sophisticated, Zero trust infrastructure is crucial for protecting sensitive data and preventing unauthorized access. Hashicorp is a company that provides a suite of tools for building and managing secure systems. Their products, such as Vault, Consul, and Boundary, can help organizations implement a zero trust approach to security. Vault is a tool for securely storing and managing secrets such as passwords, API keys, and certificates. It provides a centralized place to manage access to secrets and has several features to ensure the security of these secrets, such as encryption, access control, and auditing. Consul is a service discovery and configuration tool that provides a secure way to connect and manage services across different networks. It provides features such as service discovery, health checking, and load balancing, and can be integrated with Vault for secure authentication and authorization. Boundary is a tool for securing access to infrastructure and applications. It provides a secure way to access resources across different networks and can be integrated with Vault and Consul for secure authentication and authorization. Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at Hashicorp joins the show to explain zero trust infrastructure and how Vault, Consul, and Boundary help organizations build zero trust into their architecture. Topics: Why do you think we need developer tooling for access and authorization at a lower level within someone's infrastructure? Can you explain what zero trust is and why it's important for modern security architectures? How does HashiCorp Vault, Boundary, and Consul fit into a zero trust security model? What is HashiCorp Vault and what problem does it help a company solve? What are some common use cases for HashiCorp Vault, and how can it help organizations with their security and compliance requirements? How does HashiCorp Vault handle secrets rotation and expiration? What is application based networking and how does this concept relate to HashiCorp Consul? Can you walk us through the process of setting up and configuring HashiCorp Consul for a typical enterprise environment? What are some common challenges or pitfalls that organizations face when using HashiCorp Consul, and how can they overcome them? How does Boundary simplify remote access to critical resources in a zero trust environment? What are some common use cases for HashiCorp Boundary, and how can it help organizations with their security and compliance requirements? How does HashiCorp approach balancing security with ease of use for its products? Can you talk about any upcoming features or developments in Vault, Boundary, or Consul that users should be excited about? Resources: @joatmon08
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast we talk about Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and software practices you might want to put in place for the parts of your team who know what they're doing with infrastructure but may not be familiar with developer practices that can help make code more reliable and operational processes more repeatable. Our guest is author Rosemary Wang.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast we talk about Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and software practices you might want to put in place for the parts of your team who know what they're doing with infrastructure but may not be familiar with developer practices that can help make code more reliable and operational processes more repeatable. Our guest is author Rosemary Wang. The post Day Two Cloud 181: Implementing Patterns And Practices For Infrastructure as Code appeared first on Packet Pushers.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast we talk about Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and software practices you might want to put in place for the parts of your team who know what they're doing with infrastructure but may not be familiar with developer practices that can help make code more reliable and operational processes more repeatable. Our guest is author Rosemary Wang.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast we talk about Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and software practices you might want to put in place for the parts of your team who know what they're doing with infrastructure but may not be familiar with developer practices that can help make code more reliable and operational processes more repeatable. Our guest is author Rosemary Wang. The post Day Two Cloud 181: Implementing Patterns And Practices For Infrastructure as Code appeared first on Packet Pushers.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast we talk about Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and software practices you might want to put in place for the parts of your team who know what they're doing with infrastructure but may not be familiar with developer practices that can help make code more reliable and operational processes more repeatable. Our guest is author Rosemary Wang.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast we talk about Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and software practices you might want to put in place for the parts of your team who know what they're doing with infrastructure but may not be familiar with developer practices that can help make code more reliable and operational processes more repeatable. Our guest is author Rosemary Wang. The post Day Two Cloud 181: Implementing Patterns And Practices For Infrastructure as Code appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Bret is joined by Rosemary Wang from HashiCorp to show off Vault for Kubernetes, an an open source secrets provider.Rosemary is a return guest and does her usual fantastic job at explaining the complex topics around storing secrets, who needs Vault and why, running Vault on Kubernetes, the Vault storage backend and so much more.Streamed live on YouTube on September 29, 2022. Includes demos.Unedited live recording of this show on YouTube (Ep #186)★Topics★Vault websiteHashiCorp CloudRaft storage for Vault, how Raft worksExample repo: HashiCorp Vault for Development Teams★Rosemary Wang★Rosemary on TwitterRosemary on Linkedin★Join my Community★Best coupons for my Docker and Kubernetes coursesChat with us and fellow students on our Discord Server DevOps FansHomepage bretfisher.com ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Hi, Spring fans! In this episode, Josh Long (@starbuxman) talks to Hashicorp Developer Advocate Rosemary Wang (@joatmon08) about a few Hashicorp technologies and their integrations with Spring Boot.
Today we are joined by our special guest Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at HashiCorp and author of the book "Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and practices" and the topic is, quite obviously: Infrastructure as Code. In this last episode with Rosemary, we end with the required people skills and some lessons learned! Head over to the Manning Publications website for more information about Rosemary's book: "Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and Practices" Please use the Contact Form on this blog or our twitter feed to send us your questions, or to suggest future episode topics you would like us to cover.
Today we are joined by our special guest Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at HashiCorp and author of the book "Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and practices" and the topic is, quite obviously: Infrastructure as Code. In this second episode with Rosemary, we continue with move information on the components you'll likely need. Head over to the Manning Publications website for more information about Rosemary's book: "Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and Practices" Please use the Contact Form on this blog or our twitter feed to send us your questions, or to suggest future episode topics you would like us to cover.
Today we are joined by our special guest Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at HashiCorp and author of the book "Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and practices" and the topic is, quite obviously: Infrastructure as Code. In this first episode with Rosemary, we start with an introduction on the topic. Head over to the Manning Publications website for more information about Rosemary's book: "Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and Practices" Please use the Contact Form on this blog or our twitter feed to send us your questions, or to suggest future episode topics you would like us to cover.
Bret is joined by Rosemary Wang, a developer advocate at Hashi Corp. She recently finished a Manning book, titled Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and Practices. They discuss how infrastructure as code fits into DevOps and Gitops, and how you can get started with IaC and run over some important patterns, such as controlling versioning, IaC testing and managing costs.Rosemary worked at ThoughtWorks previously, and it was interesting to hear her experiences on learning from senior engineering, and how pairing and other types of mentorship can help. Streamed live on YouTube on April 28, 2022.Unedited live recording of this show on YouTube (Ep #168).★Topics★Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and Practices, with examples in Python and Terraform ★Rosemary Wang★Rosemary on Twitter ★Join my Community★Best coupons for my Docker and Kubernetes coursesChat with us on our Discord Server Vital DevOpsHomepage bretfisher.com★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Rob Barnes (a.k.a. Devops Rob) and Rosemary Wang (author of Infrastructure as Code - Patterns & Practices) are joining us today to talk about infrastructure secrets. What do Rosemary and Rob think about committing encrypted secrets into a repository? How do they suggest that we improve on storing secrets in LastPass? And if we were to choose HashiCorp Vault, what do we need to know? Thank you Thomas Eckert for the intro. Thank you Nabeel Sulieman (ep. 46) & Kelsey Hightower (ep. 44) for your gentle nudges towards improving our infra secrets management.
Rob Barnes (a.k.a. Devops Rob) and Rosemary Wang (author of Infrastructure as Code - Patterns & Practices) are joining us today to talk about infrastructure secrets. What do Rosemary and Rob think about committing encrypted secrets into a repository? How do they suggest that we improve on storing secrets in LastPass? And if we were to choose HashiCorp Vault, what do we need to know? Thank you Thomas Eckert for the intro. Thank you Nabeel Sulieman (ep. 46) & Kelsey Hightower (ep. 44) for your gentle nudges towards improving our infra secrets management.
Keith and Rosemary Wang of Hashicorp catch up with each other and talk about security and policy. They also discuss the best practices and patterns across the various applications for policy implementation. Show Notes: Rosemary's Scaling Infrastructure as Code CTO Advisor Virtual Conference Rosemary's book Patterns and Practices for Infrastructure as Code Podcast episode with [...]
#131: HashiCorp recently did their first-ever State of Cloud Strategy survey. In this episode, Rosemary Wang, developer advocate from HashiCorp, rejoins us to discuss the survey. Patterns and Practices for Infrastructure as Code https://www.manning.com/books/patterns-and-practices-for-infrastructure-as-code Use the code "podparadox20" to save 40% when you purchase the book from Manning.com HashiCorp State of Cloud Strategy Survey: https://www.hashicorp.com/state-of-the-cloud What Everyone Should Know About DevOps, Cloud, or Platform diagram: https://twitter.com/joatmon08/status/1046745482377273346 HashiCorp State of Cloud Strategy Survey: https://soundcloud.com/hashicast/episode-34-hashicorp-state-of-cloud-strategy-survey HashiCast: https://soundcloud.com/hashicast YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/devopsparadox/ Books and Courses: Catalog, Patterns, And Blueprints https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/catalog/ Kubernetes Chaos Engineering With Chaos Toolkit And Istio https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/chaos/ Canary Deployments To Kubernetes Using Istio and Friends https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/canary/ 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/
Managing infrastructure as code (IaC) instead of using manual processes makes it easy to scale systems and minimize errors. Rosemary Wang (Developer Advocate, HashiCorp, and author of “Essential Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and Practices”) is an infrastructure engineer at heart and an aspiring software developer who is passionate about teaching patterns for infrastructure as code to simplify processes for system admins and software engineers familiar with Python, provisioning tools like Terraform, and cloud service providers. The definition of infrastructure has expanded to include anything that delivers or deploys applications. Infrastructure as software or infrastructure as configuration, according to Rosemary, are ideas grouped behind infrastructure as code—the process of automating infrastructure changes in a codified manner, which also applies to DevOps practices, including version controls, continuous integration, continuous delivery, and continuous deployment. Whether you're using a domain-specific language or a programming language, the practices used to collaborate between you, your team, and your organization are the same—create one application and scale systems.The ultimate result and benefit of infrastructure as code is automation. Many developers take advantage of managed offerings like Confluent Cloud—fully managed Kafka as a service—to remove the operational burden and configuration layer. Still, as long as complex topologies like connecting to another server on a cloud provider to external databases exist, there is great value to standardizing infrastructure practices. Rosemary shares four characteristics that every infrastructure system should have: ResilienceSelf-serviceSecurityCost reductionIn addition, Rosemary and Tim discuss updating infrastructure with blue-green deployment techniques, immutable infrastructure, and developer advocacy. EPISODE LINKS: Use PODCAST100 to get $100 of free Confluent Cloud usage (details)Use podcon19 to get 40% off “Essential Infrastructure as Code: Patterns and Practices”Watch the video version of this podcastJoin the Confluent CommunityLearn more with Kafka tutorials, resources, and guides at Confluent DeveloperLive demo: Intro to Event-Driven Microservices with Confluent
Join hosts Rosemary Wang and Taylor Dolezal as they dish their extra spicy takes on the cloud while going through HashiCorp's state of cloud strategy survey.
Rosemary Wang joins the adventure to dive into a discussion on what Infrastructure as Code is and how to begin thinking about what it is and how it goes together. She focuses on maintainability, security, and reliability. Panel Jeffrey Groman Will Button Guest Rosemary Wang Sponsors Dev Influencers Accelerator Links Essential Infrastructure as Code Scaling Infrastructure as Code to Improve Delivery & Maintain Security - YouTube Testing HashiCorp Terraform Workshop: Exploring Policy as Code for Cloud Infrastructure - YouTube HashiCorp Presents at Security Field Day 5 Test-Driven Development (TDD) for Infrastructure LinkedIn: Rosemary Wang GitHub: Rosemary Wang ( joatmon08 ) Twitter: Rosemary Wang ( @joatmon08 ) Picks Jeffrey- Eco Dual-Motor Adjustable Height Sit/Stand Desk Rosemary- Essential Infrastructure as Code Will- Evodesk Contact Jeffrey: Groman Cyber Contact Will: DevOps For Developers Twitter: Will Button ( @wfbutton )
Rosemary Wang joins the adventure to dive into a discussion on what Infrastructure as Code is and how to begin thinking about what it is and how it goes together. She focuses on maintainability, security, and reliability. Panel Jeffrey Groman Will Button Guest Rosemary Wang Sponsors Dev Influencers Accelerator Links Essential Infrastructure as Code Scaling Infrastructure as Code to Improve Delivery & Maintain Security - YouTube Testing HashiCorp Terraform Workshop: Exploring Policy as Code for Cloud Infrastructure - YouTube HashiCorp Presents at Security Field Day 5 Test-Driven Development (TDD) for Infrastructure LinkedIn: Rosemary Wang GitHub: Rosemary Wang ( joatmon08 ) Twitter: Rosemary Wang ( @joatmon08 ) Picks Jeffrey- Eco Dual-Motor Adjustable Height Sit/Stand Desk Rosemary- Essential Infrastructure as Code Will- Evodesk Contact Jeffrey: Groman Cyber Contact Will: DevOps For Developers Twitter: Will Button ( @wfbutton )
#112: Are you still clicking around in consoles to create and manage your infrastructure? If so, you'll want to listen to today's episode with Rosemary Wang, the author of Essential Infrastructure as Code. Order your copy of Essential Infrastructure as Code at: https://www.manning.com/books/essential-infrastructure-as-code and be sure to use the code "podparadox20" to save 40% off of Essential Infrastructure as Code and any other purchases at Manning Publications. Rosemary's contact information: https://twitter.com/joatmon08 https://linkedin.com/in/rosemarywang YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/devopsparadox/ Books and Courses: Catalog, Patterns, And Blueprints https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/catalog/ Kubernetes Chaos Engineering With Chaos Toolkit And Istio https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/chaos/ Canary Deployments To Kubernetes Using Istio and Friends https://www.devopstoolkitseries.com/posts/canary/ 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/
Stateful vs stateless? We will stately be stating our statutes regarding the status of the state of statefulness and statelessness on k8s- oh yea! In the DoK Community, one of the main issues that folks have are how in the world can they flatten the learning curve when it comes to running stateful applications in k8s. That's why we've brought on 3 experts from 3 different countries to tell us what state state (intentionally doubled) is in! Rosemary Wang works to bridge the technical and cultural barriers between infrastructure engineers and application developers. She has a fascination for solving intractable problems with code, whether it be helping an infrastructure engineer learn to code or an application developer troubleshoot infrastructure failures. She also interfaces with vendors, clients, startups, and open source projects to find creative software solutions for infrastructure. When she is not drawing on whiteboards, Rosemary valiantly attempts to hack stacks of various infrastructure systems on her laptop while watering her houseplants. Lili Cosic is a Principal Software Engineer at Red Hat, working on OpenShift monitoring. She is also a kube-state-metrics, prometheus-operator and kube-prometheus project maintainer. Previously she worked at Weaveworks on the Weave cloud integration with Kubernetes and before that, she found her passion for Kubernetes operators at Kinvolk creating first operators. In her free time, Lili enjoys experimenting with Kubernetes, cooking and distributed systems. Tomasz Cholewa is the co-founder of Cloud Code Labs and he believes that good applications deserve even better environments where they can spread their wings and it's his job to help you create them. To achieve it he uses cloud and containers, but mostly he listens carefully to understand and use the right mix of proper technology and processes around it. His field of expertise is public cloud (AWS), containers and their orchestration engines - OpenShift and Kubernetes. Jacquie Grindrod is a developer advocate for HashiCorp with a focus on delivery and orchestration, where she's able to apply her passion for solving problems with a holistic approach by bridging the gaps between teams and systems. In 2019, Jacquie was recognized as one of Canada's Top 30 Under 30 Developers and has spoken at conferences including DevOpsDays Toronto and Grace Hopper Celebration.
Accurics sponsored this podcast. Who doesn't love hotcakes? And to make them right, you need to wait until the batter starts to bubble up before you flip them. Immutable infrastructure management and related security challenges are also “bubbling up” these days, as many organizations make the shift to cloud native environments, with containerized, serverless and other layers. In this The New Stack Analysts podcast, TNS founder and publisher Alex Williams asked served up pancakes with KubeCon attendees who joined him for a “stack” at the “Virtual Pancake Breakfast and Podcast” while they offered their deep perspectives on what is at stake as immutable infrastructure security and other related concerns take hold. The guests joining the virtual breakfast were Om Moolchandani, co-founder and CTO for Accurics, Rosemary Wang, developer advocate for HashiCorp, Krishna Bhagavathula, CTO, for the NBA (who also brought his own L.A. Lakers-branded spatula), Chenxi Wang, Ph.D., managing general partner of Rain Capital, and Priyanka Sharma, general manager, for the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).
Accurics sponsored this podcast. Who doesn't love hotcakes? And to make them right, you need to wait until the batter starts to bubble up before you flip them. Immutable infrastructure management and related security challenges are also “bubbling up” these days, as many organizations make the shift to cloud native environments, with containerized, serverless and other layers. In this The New Stack Analysts podcast, TNS founder and publisher Alex Williams asked served up pancakes with KubeCon attendees who joined him for a “stack” at the “Virtual Pancake Breakfast and Podcast” while they offered their deep perspectives on what is at stake as immutable infrastructure security and other related concerns take hold. The guests joining the virtual breakfast were Om Moolchandani, co-founder and CTO for Accurics, Rosemary Wang, developer advocate for HashiCorp, Krishna Bhagavathula, CTO, for the NBA (who also brought his own L.A. Lakers-branded spatula), Chenxi Wang, Ph.D., managing general partner of Rain Capital, and Priyanka Sharma, general manager, for the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).
Terraform Cloud, from HashiCorp, is a SaaS-based service that provides governance, auditing, and collaboration for your infrastructure-as-code initiatives. Our guest to walk us through Terraform Cloud is Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at HashiCorp.
Terraform Cloud, from HashiCorp, is a SaaS-based service that provides governance, auditing, and collaboration for your infrastructure-as-code initiatives. Our guest to walk us through Terraform Cloud is Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at HashiCorp.
Terraform Cloud, from HashiCorp, is a SaaS-based service that provides governance, auditing, and collaboration for your infrastructure-as-code initiatives. Our guest to walk us through Terraform Cloud is Rosemary Wang, Developer Advocate at HashiCorp.