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From our Sponsors at SimmerGo to TeamSimmer and use the coupon code DEVIATE for 10% on individual course purchases.The Technical Marketing Handbook provides a comprehensive journey through technical marketing principles.A new course is out now! Chrome DevTools for Digital MarketersLatest content from Juliana & SimoArticle: Cookie Access With Shopify Checkout And SGTM by Simo AhavaArticle: Unlocking Real-Time Insights: How does Piwik PRO's Real-Time Dashboarding Feature work? by Juliana JacksonAlso mentioned in the EpisodeStape's blog: https://stape.io/blogStape website: https://stape.ioMeasure Slack: https://www.measure.chat/Connect with Denis Golubovskyi This podcast is brought to you by Juliana Jackson and Simo Ahava. Intro jingle by Jason Packer and Josh Silverbauer.
Thibault Louis-Lucas (@tibo_maker), or Tibo for short, is the indie hacker and innovator behind successful ventures like TweetHunter and Taplio — which he sold for over $10M!In this episode, we unravel Thibault's thrilling journey from the joys of product creation to the intricacies of selling a business on the global stage. He shares his strategies for tripling revenue post-acquisition, the pivotal role of community engagement, and his candid insights on AI risks, nomadic lifestyles, and the ever-evolving tech landscape. Whether you're an aspiring entrepreneur or a seasoned developer, join us for an enlightening conversation that's as much a masterclass in the art of SaaS as it is a celebration of community and adaptability in the digital age.Tibo on Twitter: https://twitter.com/tibo_maker00:00:00 Building Products00:17:22 Building Stable Efficient Software Product00:24:59 AI Risks and Nomadic Lifestyle Discussion00:33:52 Video Content for Indie Hackers00:41:31 Building in Public, Power of FeedbackThis episode is sponsored by Acquire.comThe blog post: https://thebootstrappedfounder.com/thibault-louis-lucas-selling-a-10m-saas-and-building-another-one/The podcast episode: https://tbf.fm/episodes/288-thibault-louis-lucas-selling-a-10m-saas-and-building-another-one The video: https://youtu.be/csp6vI8lKt4You'll find my weekly article on my blog: https://thebootstrappedfounder.comPodcast: https://thebootstrappedfounder.com/podcastNewsletter: https://thebootstrappedfounder.com/newsletterMy book Zero to Sold: https://zerotosold.com/My book The Embedded Entrepreneur: https://embeddedentrepreneur.com/My course Find Your Following: https://findyourfollowing.comHere are a few tools I use. Using my affiliate links will support my work at no additional cost to you.- Notion (which I use to organize, write, coordinate, and archive my podcast + newsletter): https://affiliate.notion.so/465mv1536drx- Riverside.fm (that's what I recorded this episode with): https://riverside.fm/?via=arvid- TweetHunter (for speedy scheduling and writing Tweets): http://tweethunter.io/?via=arvid- HypeFury (for massive Twitter analytics and scheduling): https://hypefury.com/?via=arvid60- AudioPen (for taking voice notes and getting amazing summaries): https://audiopen.ai/?aff=PXErZ- Descript (for word-based video editing, subtitles, and clips): https://www.descript.com/?lmref=3cf39Q- ConvertKit (for email lists, newsletters, even finding sponsors): https://convertkit.com?lmref=bN9CZw (00:00) - Building Products (17:22) - Building Stable Efficient Software Product (24:59) - AI Risks and Nomadic Lifestyle Discussion (33:52) - Video Content for Indie Hackers (41:31) - Building in Public, Power of Feedback
In this whirlwind episode, we dive into the quirky world of tech, where features sometimes turn into bugs and vulnerabilities pop up like unexpected plot twists. We'll also jump into the epic showdown between AWS Lambda and Kubernetes, unravel the mystery behind 'done' vs 'done done' in tech speak, and wrap up with the curious case of Phantom Vibration Syndrome – is our tech dependency tickling our brains?Stay updated with new weekly episodes every Thursday – and don't forget to subscribe! For more behind-the-scenes content, follow us @justshiftleft on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
In this episode, I spoke with Sandro Volpicella, who is a platform lead at Hashnode, a fully serverless blogging platform. He is also the co-author of AWS Fundamentals (https://awsfundamentals.com).We explored Hashnode's architecture and went deep into its caching strategy, which is a crucial ingredient of a scalable and performant blogging platform.Links from the episode:Hashnode's overall architectureAWS FundamentalsCloudWatch BookStellateUpstashHow Hashnode implements the user feedOctoLenseServerlessQChoosing a database for serverless applications You can find Sandro on X as @sandro_vol-----For more stories about real-world use of serverless technologies, please subscribe to the channel and follow me on X as @theburningmonk.And if you're hungry for more insights, best practices, and invaluable tips on building serverless apps, make sure to subscribe to our free newsletter and elevate your serverless game! https://theburningmonk.com/subscribeOpening theme song:Cheery Monday by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3495-cheery-mondayLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
In this episode I talk to Yan Cui, who is an AWS Serverless Hero, all about Serverless technologies. Chapters: 00:00 Serverless Architecture with Yan Cui 01:58 What do we mean by Serverless Architecture? 05:42 What is the core problem Serverless solves? 11:06 Do we need to think differently to be able to use Serverless? 15:27 What is the difference between serverless and managed services? 19:17 Is Vendor Lock-in really a problem? 27:42 Multicloud - Is it really worth it? 33:46 Is ColdStart a real problem? What kind of apps get impacted? 43:25 Monitoring serverless applications 48:22 Usecases when serverless may not be the best solution 54:27 Future of serverless 57:31 How should a developer learn about serverless? I hope you enjoy the discussion and learn from it. Please hit the like button, share it with your network and also subscribe to the channel. References: Yan Cui - https://theburningmonk.com Courses - https://productionreadyserverless.com/ Corey Quinn on MultiCloud - • Corey Quinn: The ... Linkedin Yan - https://www.linkedin.com/in/theburnin... Twitter Yan - https://twitter.com/theburningmonk Other playlists to watch: Distributed Systems and Databases - • Distributed Syste... Software Engineering - • Software Engineering Distributed systems practices - • Distributed Systems Cheers, The GeekNarrator
Lane chats with Dax Raad, SST framework maintainer about the future of serverless infrastructure. They cut through the hype to figure out how serverless can help backend developers build robust and scalable systems.Learn backend development - https://boot.devDax on Twitter: https://twitter.com/thdxrDax on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/thdxr
These days it seems like everyone's walking around with their head in a cloud. On-prem hardware has an almost antiquated feel, while serverless options promise reduced cost, greater scalability, and increased team productivity. But is that really the case? To find out, Jerome talked with Bill Wanjohi, a principal crafter at 8th Light, who brings deep experience in web services, relational databases, batch data processing pipelines, and the support systems needed to deploy, maintain, and secure them. In other words, he has a ton of experience helping organizations manage the tradeoffs of different approaches to server management.In this conversation, they dive into the world of serverless architectures by looking back at its technical foundations—defining the first steps into the cloud, exploring unintended consequences created, and questioning whether stopping at Docker containers would've been preferable.(01:44) - Bill's bona fides(04:07) - The technical foundation for serverless (05:12) - Hardware virtualization: the first sea change(08:40) - Proliferation of virtual private servers(11:51) - Docker containers: solving the portability problem(14:21) - Reintroducing old problems(17:17) - Defining serverless(20:25) - Containers as a Service(23:17) - An orchestration nightmare?(28:00) - The upside of AWS Lambda(36:07) - Is a serverless future inevitable?Jerome Goodrich leads amazing software teams to design and develop thoughtful solutions to complex problems as a principal software crafter at 8th Light. He loves pairing strenuous hikes with deep conversations and is always trying to see things clearly and with an open heart. Jerome lives much of his life off of the internet, but he occasionally writes on his website.Bill Wanjohi is a principal crafter at 8th Light who brings deep experience in web services, relational databases, batch data processing pipelines, and the support systems needed to deploy, maintain, and secure them. He's currently leading a team of engineers building an auction platform with common building blocks, and he delivered an 8LU presentation on de-risking data migrations.Prior to joining 8th Light Bill consulted as a generalist software engineer, began and led a DevOps practice at a fast-growing cloud-based product company, administered many flavors of relational and analytical databases in several contexts, and generally gravitated to messy systems problems.Bill doesn't consider himself a worrier by nature, but he doesn't like getting caught flat-footed and has seen enough things go wrong that others might find him a tad paranoid. You can listen to Collaborative Craft via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Don't forget to subscribe to receive notifications of the latest episodes. And if you enjoy what you're hearing, please consider leaving a review in Apple Podcasts. It really helps others...
In today's episode, Sophie DeBenedetto emphasizes the importance of the Elixir community's commitment to education, documentation, and tools like liveBook, fostering an environment where people with varying skill levels can learn and contribute. The discussion highlights LiveView's capabilities and the role it plays in the future of Elixir, encouraging members to share knowledge and excitement for these tools through various channels. Sophie invites listeners to attend and submit their talks for the upcoming Empex conference, which aims to showcase the best in Elixir and LiveView technologies. Additionally, the group shares light-hearted moments, reminding everyone to contribute to all types of documentation and promoting an inclusive atmosphere. Key topics discussed in this episode: • Updates on the latest release of the Programming Phoenix LiveView book • The importance of community connection in Elixir conferences • The future of documentation in the Elixir ecosystem • The Elixir community's commitment to education and documentation • LiveBook as a valuable tool for learning and experimenting • Encouraging contributions across experience levels and skill sets • Importance of sharing knowledge through liveBooks, blog posts, and conference talks • Core Components in Phoenix LiveView, and modal implementation • Creating a custom component library for internal use • Reflecting on a Phoenix LiveView Project Experience • Ease of using Tailwind CSS and its benefits in web development • Advantages of LiveView in reducing complexity and speeding up project development • LiveView's potential to handle large datasets using Streams • The role of Elixir developers in the rapidly evolving AI landscape Links in this episode: Sophie DeBenedetto – https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophiedebenedetto Programming Phoenix LiveView Book – https://pragprog.com/titles/liveview/programming-phoenix-liveview Empex NYC - https://www.empex.co/new-york SmartLogic - https://smartlogic.io/jobs Phoenix LiveView documentation: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenixliveview/Phoenix.LiveView.html Live sessions and hooks: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenixliveview/Phoenix.LiveView.Router.html#livesession/1 LiveView: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenixlive_view/Phoenix.LiveView.html Tailwind CSS: https://tailwindcss.com/ Reuse Markup With Function Components and Slots (https://fly.io/phoenix-files/function-components/) LiveView Card Components With Bootstrap (https://fly.io/phoenix-files/liveview-bootstrap-card/) Building a Chat App With LiveView Streams (https://fly.io/phoenix-files/building-a-chat-app-with-liveview-streams/) Special Guest: Sophie DeBenedetto.
In the episode, Thorsten explains that multi-cloud adoption can be challenging due to the many moving parts involved. However, he emphasizes that the biggest challenge lies in ensuring compliance and governance across multiple clouds, especially in highly regulated industries. To achieve compliance, companies need to document every aspect of their operations, including security, networking, legal compliance, and risk mitigation strategies. Creating documentation for each cloud provider can be time-consuming and costly and this can be a major hurdle for companies looking to adopt multi-cloud solutions. However, he also points out that multi-cloud adoption is often driven by cloud vendors and software providers who want to provide services across diverse infrastructures. While the benefits of multi-cloud adoption can be significant, companies must be prepared to invest time and resources in ensuring that they are compliant with all relevant regulations. ... Featured Guest: Thorsten Höger, Cloud Evangelist & CEO, Taimos GmbH
The podcast begins with both guests introducing themselves and providing more information about EDJX before diving into mesh computing and serverless IoT. They then talk about serverless at the edge and their companies' offerings. The conversation then moves more high-level with discussion around challenges in development, the biggest drivers of growth, the evolution of serverless IoT, and advice for how developers can approach the onboarding process.Benjamin Thomas is the CEO of EDJX, the intelligent edge OS and computing platform that makes it easy to write, deploy, and execute IoT and other applications using serverless computing and an edge mesh network of micro-compute and storage nodes to minimize latency, eliminate expensive backhauling of data, accelerate content delivery, and rapidly deploy IoT sensors at the far edge. His diverse technology and business experience includes being an industry disrupter in the travel and veterinary services industry. In previous ventures, he managed large-scale offshore development teams, overseeing the development of over 100 software applications. Benjamin grew a chain of veterinary practices to $42 million in revenue and 450 employees through 28 acquisitions in 7 states. Benjamin was a nominee for Ernst and Young's Entrepreneur of the Year award. He holds a BS in Mechanical Engineering with Honors from Tulane University and an MS in Management from Stanford University.Delano Seymour is a visionary founder, pioneer, and disruptive innovator, with several technology patents to date. He is the former founder and President of a high revenue-generating Managed Services company headquartered in the Caribbean. Delano is also a global technology speaker at prestigious industry forums such as Cloud Expo Container & Microservices Summit, Red Hat Summit, and OpenShift Commons Briefings.EDJX is an intelligent Edge OS and computing platform that makes it easy to write, deploy and execute applications using serverless computing to increase responsiveness and security. EDJX's edge mesh network of micro-compute and storage nodes minimizes latency, eliminates expensive backhauling of data, accelerates content delivery, and rapidly deploys IoT sensors at the far edge. EDJX helps businesses handle the explosive demand for data processing to serve real-world edge computing applications, including industrial IoT, artificial intelligence, augmented reality, and robotics. EDJX is a privately held company based in Raleigh, NC.
Did you know that Jupyter Notebooks can be automated? Join this episode with Julie Koesmarno to see an example of how you can use automate diagnostic notebooks automatically executed as an issue is assigned to you. We will be using Azure serverless architecture to illustrate this example. You will learn how you can leverage Azure Logic Apps and API that is available for executing Jupiter Notebook from command lines. [01:30] Automating Diagnostic Notebooks Overview[03:10] Demo[08:02] ArchitectureResources:Troubleshooting SQL Server made easy via Notebook
Did you know that Jupyter Notebooks can be automated? Join this episode with Julie Koesmarno to see an example of how you can use automate diagnostic notebooks automatically executed as an issue is assigned to you. We will be using Azure serverless architecture to illustrate this example. You will learn how you can leverage Azure Logic Apps and API that is available for executing Jupiter Notebook from command lines. [01:30] Automating Diagnostic Notebooks Overview[03:10] Demo[08:02] ArchitectureResources:Troubleshooting SQL Server made easy via Notebook
Serverless architecture is a method to build and run applications and services without having to manage infrastructure. You no longer have to provision, scale, and maintain servers to run your applications, databases, and storage systems. Agility, scalability, and security are a few clear advantages in the adoption of serverless technology. So where we understand and know the accelerated adoption rate of this model, we should also broaden our horizons learning what opportunities it brings for you as developers. Listen to Shantanu Preetam, the Chief Technology Officer from PayU India elaborate on this. #TechGig #Podcast #Technology #TechCommunity
ConnecTech - Discussions on DevOps, Infrastructure, and Technology
In this episode, Bijoy (https://www.linkedin.com/in/bijoypaul) takes us through the AWS migration journey of one of his clients at To The New and how Serverless architecture increased their performance and costs. He also walks us through how they set up the architecture to run complex queries on AWS S3 files which replicates data in near real-time. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/connect-tech/support
AWS Morning Brief Extras edition for the week of January 13, 2021.
Data Talks is Exago's podcast on business intelligence, analytics, and application software. This month, we are joined by our very own Senior Software Architect, Ryan Bazinet, for a deep dive on serverless architectures. What are they, how do they differ from traditional horizontal scaling models, and what is their potential impact on SaaS? We explore all this and more with Exago’s resident architecture wonk.
On this episode, Jeremy chats with Xavier Lefevre about what a typical serverless architecture looks like in AWS, why you need to think more about your total cost of ownership (TCO), and how to use his serverless cost calculator to estimate common serverless workloads.
Show Description****************Brian Leroux chats with us about building modern web apps using Begin and other cloud services like it including a deep dive on AWS Lambda. Listen on Website →Links***** Begin / Learn.Begin.com Brian on GitHub Heroku Linode Netlify CodePen Stackbit ClaudiaJS Serverless Stackery.io Amazon Route 53 EC2 Firecracker Arc Codes Phone Gap Phone Gap […]
Podcast : Stuff Developer Should Know By : Vishal Kukreja (https://vishalkukreja.com/) - In this episode I've shared about what is serverless architecture? what are the benefits and use cases for serverless architecture. Who all are the cloud service providers and users of serverless. Happy Learning :) #developers #programmer #coder #microservice #serverless #cloud -- Music from https://filmmusic.io "Funkorama" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Music from https://filmmusic.io "On My Way" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
There is more than one type of Cloud Provider. We take a look at two of the more notable options, Containers and Serverless, and determine if one is better than the other. On this episode of the Centric Biz and Tech Talks podcast, Jason Fisher leads a discussion about Containers versus Serverless architectures. Centric technologists Mike Brooks and Matt Miller join Jason Fisher to talk about Containers versus Serverless – the major differences, pros, cons and trends. Containers are a light-weight standalone execution environment for your application, with a complete operating system, applications, and all dependencies including your network. We discuss how containers benefit you. In Serverless, you only care about the code, since the Cloud Provider manages the servers. You write your code and deploy it to the Cloud, and they manage and scaling how it is run. Listen in to hear what Serverless is ideal for. Finally, we discuss trends for both and determine if one Cloud Provider is better than another. Join in the discussion on this installment of the Centric Biz and Tech Talks podcast! Listen Here https://centricconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Containers-vs-Serverless_FinalWNoiseRemoved-1-1.mp3
There is more than one type of Cloud Provider. We take a look at two of the more notable options, Containers and Serverless, and determine if one is better than the other. Episode 10 On this episode of the Centric Read More › The post [Podcast] Containers Versus Serverless Architecture appeared first on Centric Consulting.
Hosts: Fahad Shoukat and Andrew WolfeToday's Guest: Mike Jones; VP of Engineering at MedaSync.Mike brings nearly 10 years of software development experience to MedaSync. He oversees the development of the MedaSync platform and works with other engineering team members to program and launch new features.MedaSync is the managed care software solution for skilled nursing facilities that helps to improve revenue integrity, increase efficiency, better control costs, and analyze business performance. Using MedaSync, operators strengthen their businesses and improve their patient care experience.
Eric's app (Cast/Snip) is launching soon, and Libby is awesome. Marriott discloses much more information about the previous Starwood breach, and Amazon has their own Project Zero. Microsoft releases a Windows 7 patch to add SHA-256 support, and Jon spends 15 minutes talking about serverless and serverless vulnerabilities. For fun we have potential dinosaurs, quantum mechanics turning back time, and new synthetic DNA pairs. Scientific fun FTW. 0:00 - Intro 0:33 - Cast/Snip 4:27 - Libby is Awesome 5:20 - Starwood Details 9:51 - Amazon Project Zero 14:05 - Windows 7 Signature Update 17:52 - Windows 7 Market Share 21:56 - Serverless Architecture 28:16 - 12 Serverless Risks 31:00 - Little Bobby Tables 36:48 - Making Dinosaurs 37:23 - Jeff Goldblum's Response 38:09 - Quantum Time Reversal 41:26 - 4 New DNA Letters
Serverless has become the buzzword du jour. But what does it mean? What are the implications for your enterprise applications when you’re using services where you’re not responsible for the infrastructure that they run on? How do AWS Lambda, Azure Functions and GCP Cloud Functions fit in To explore these issues, our co-hosts Mike Mason and Zhamak Dehghani are joined by Paula Paul, a Tech Principal at ThoughtWorks and Mike Roberts, an external cloud engineering consultant and former ThoughtWorker.
What does "serverless" really mean, and how do you get started working with it? Why is serverless infrastructure becoming a popular option? Join us as we have first time guest, Jesse Carter, a talented developer here at Vehikl, talk about his vast experience working with serverless architecture.
Brian Zambrano, Cloud Architecture Lead at Very and author of "Serverless Design Patterns and Best Practices" joins us to explore the benefits and challenges of serverless architecture Links Brian's book "Serverless Design Patterns and Best Practices" Serverless Framework
The term serverless gets thrown around a lot, but what does it really mean? What are the benefits and the drawbacks? It’s a TechSNAP introduction to Serverless Architecture. Plus new research with ideas to dramatically improve private web browsing, the growing problem of tracking security vulnerabilities with CVE’s, and much more!
In this session, go on a journey from traditional, on-premises applications and architecture to pure cloud-native environments. This transformative approach highlights the steps required to incrementally move to AWS technologies while increasing resiliency and efficiency and reducing operational overhead. We challenge traditional understanding and show you how different types of workloads can be migrated using real-world examples. Additionally, we demonstrate how you can assemble and use the AWS building blocks available today to bolster your success and position yourself to inherit the power of our managed services, such as Amazon API Gateway, AWS Lambda, Amazon Cognito, Amazon S3, Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS), Amazon SNS and our AWS CodeStar suite. You leave this session armed with the knowledge you need to begin your own voyage towards serverless architecture.
Today's retail customers want to set the rules on how and when they buy, receive, and return their product. But many retailers are struggling to unify their sales channels using existing legacy e-commerce software stacks. To consistently serve customers across retail channels, retailers must adopt a modern architecture that is elastic, cost effective, and based on loosely coupled application services. In this session, we dive deep into how retailers can leverage serverless architectures using Amazon API Gateway, AWS Lambda, and Amazon DynamoDB. Learn how Amazon Fresh quickly responded to customer feedback on the Totes Pickup feature, developing a cost-effective and scalable self-service serverless application to deliver a 1-click experience for the customer, while providing faster insights back to the business.
Mike and Chris discuss the types of workloads that better suit Serverless Architecture systems like Lambda & when you should roll a server. Plus Mike has major hardware woes, makes a surprising move on air & Chris is left pontificating on the future of AR.
In this series of interviews I will be speaking with people on the frontline of Salesforce architecture & development. In this first episode of the Architect Series my guest is Francis Pindar which is very fitting as he was one of the pioneers of the UK Salesforce Community scene and one of the first people that I came into contact with when I got involved with Salesforce back in 2010. Since then he’s continues to be a source of ideas and wisdom to me and countless others. Francis is: 5x Salesforce MVP (2012 – Present) Salesforce Certified Sales Consultant, Service Consultant, Developer, Administrator & Advanced Administrator. AWS Certified Architect – Associate TOGAF9 Certified Enterprise Architect BCS Certified Enterprise Architect Francis has worked in internet technologies for 20 years, the last 10 of which have been on the Salesforce Platform. He is a specialist in the areas of Enterprise Architecture Design, Business Process Improvement, Project Leadership, Business Analysis & Migration strategies. Follow Francis: https://twitter.com/radnip http://www.radnip.com/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbPyfToAJcUCDxIEuqlfVqA Recorded in June 2017 This podcast interview was first published by Technologyflows.com © TechnologyFlows
We’ll share an overview of leveraging serverless architectures to support high performance data intensive applications. Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) built the Seller Inventory Authority Platform (IAP) using Amazon DynamoDB Streams, AWS Lambda functions, Amazon Elasticsearch Service, and Amazon Redshift to improve results and reduce costs. Scopely will share how they used a flexible logging system built on Kinesis, Lambda, and Amazon Elasticsearch to provide high-fidelity reporting on hotkeys in Memcached and DynamoDB, and drastically reduce the incidence of hotkeys. Both of these customers are using managed services and serverless architecture to build scalable systems that can meet the projected business growth without a corresponding increase in operational costs.
As of 2016 AWS has more than 70 services, estimated 2 Million servers and 31 percent cloud market share. The recent Yearly AWS Summit is one of a good place to feel the excitement with 32000 engineers gathering, collaborate with boot camps, and see how things are getting put in reality and what others think about Cloud in general. Atish Narlawar talks about recent AWS Con 2016 to Stanley TSO, DevOps Engineer at @Huge. They start the conversation with the most major topic of the year AWS Lambdas. Stanley talk about Serverless Architecture and architecture patterns emerged from it AWS Serverless API w/ API Gateway, Mobile, and Live Video Stream Processing. Cost is one of the biggest factors for switching from current cloud-based servers to AWS Lambda serverless architecture, and Stanley thinks these savings are going to be the game changer. In one survey it was noted on actual production servers savings goes up to 50-90% of total current cloud expenses. Second, they talk about Alexa, and the concept of Voice user interfaces (VUIs). AWS hosted a workshop to develop Alexa skills using Raspberry PI. User Conversation is the design paradigm and interactions with the application services with little straightforward and natural way going to be a big thing in the upcoming year. Stanley thinks Amazon is pushing hard to make this transition sooner than later. He also speaks cover about AI, Machine learning presentations he attended, and how dev teams can use AWS AI services to build AI functionalities from scratch. Third, they talk about "How DevOps Culture getting evolved" across worldwide since its inception in 2009. Stanley finds DevOps became the necessary for agility; moving towards the direction of "Infrastructure as a Code" and gets into the Continous Integration workflows along with application code. Finally, He talks about Security Automation, and how Automation in the security has taken overall security to the next level. He shares the "Psychology of Security Automation," its placement from day one in the project. And how tools from NetFlix like Lemur and Repoman automates SSL creations and User permissions and facilitates development team a pace of “Move and Fast Break the things, ” and fulfills testing and security compliance. Venue: Huge, Brooklyn, NY. Host: Atish Narlawar Contact: techpodcast@aol.com Guest: Stanley Tso@stso
Serverless is the new hot buzzword - but what does it really mean? Carl and Richard talk to Ben Godwin about his work building serverless applications - no servers, but lots of services! Ben talks about Amazon Lambda, which is similar to Azure Functions. Both these environments allow individual bits of code to run within them, written in a variety of languages, but often that language is Javascript in the Node style. The advantage of this approach is eliminating a lot of the ceremony around your services set, but at the price of some new working patterns and organization. Ben also mentions the Serverless Framework as a great free tool for getting started!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Serverless is the new hot buzzword - but what does it really mean? Carl and Richard talk to Ben Godwin about his work building serverless applications - no servers, but lots of services! Ben talks about Amazon Lambda, which is similar to Azure Functions. Both these environments allow individual bits of code to run within them, written in a variety of languages, but often that language is Javascript in the Node style. The advantage of this approach is eliminating a lot of the ceremony around your services set, but at the price of some new working patterns and organization. Ben also mentions the Serverless Framework as a great free tool for getting started!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
“Serverless” usually refers to an architectural pattern where the server side logic is run in stateless compute containers that are event-triggered and ephemeral. Mike Roberts has written a series of articles about serverless computing, in which he discusses theories and patterns around serverless architecture. In this episode, Mike and I discuss how to reimagine our The post Serverless Architecture with Mike Roberts appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
On this weeks episode we are lucky to be joined by Jason Marden, to discuss the world of Amazon Web Services. We start off the show talking about Jason’s recent visit to the AWS Summit in London, and what the talking points were from the conference. From here we delve into the Serverless Architecture, how AWS Lambda is paving the way of FAAS, containers and view-based aggregation services. The Immutable Server is next brought up, highlighting the change in deployment philosophy that can be achieved by using such a concept. Finally, we discuss the value of a good debugger, bringin’ back awesome screen-savers and the craze of Pokemon Go.