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What a time it's been - the sheer scale of the mess around Cyberpunk's release means that we had to look at it all in its own episode, so that's what we did! We run through the timeline of events leading to the garbage fire of year, and what it might all mean for the industry going forward. Full Episode Notes: http://shouldiplaythisgame.com/?p=1105 Music by Kevin MacLeod: https://incompetech.com/music
Charles Fitzgerald is a Seattle-based angel investor with more than three decades of experience in tech who’s the managing director at Platformonomics, a consultancy that helps early-stage tech startups succeed. Prior to this position, Charles worked as a platform consiglieri at VMware and a VP of product management at Mozy. He also did a 19-year stint at Microsoft, where he ended up as general manager of platform strategy, and has served on the board of several tech startups, including buuteeq, Shippable, and Rec Room. Join Corey and Charles as they discuss what Charles worked on during his 19 years at Microsoft, including 16-bit Windows, 32-bit Windows, OLE, ActiveX, and .NET; what Charles invests in these days; how the big cloud players are so big that you’d struggle to catch them if someone gave you $100 billion; the three arguments IBM people made to Charles after he predicted they wouldn’t have a successful cloud transition in 2013; why Charles expects there to be more niche cloud offerings in the future; why no one will challenge the hyperscale cloud providers; how the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the deglobalization trend; and more.
A two minute talk on Working in Agile - Creating Shippable Functionality - Verifying. w: 2andh.com
A two minute talk on Working in Agile - Creating Shippable Functionality. w: 2andh.com
A two minute talk on Working in Agile - Creating Shippable Functionality - Elaborating. w: 2andh.com
A three minute talk on Working in Agile - Creating Shippable Functionality - Developing. w: 2andh.com
A threat to The Funk is a threat to all. And it's all up to our favorite colorblind dwarven monk to save us! MUSIC AND SOUND EFFECTS Finding The Balance by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/5020-zigzag License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Heartbreaking by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/3773-fork-and-spoon License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Ether Disco by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/5018-your-call License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Invariance by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/3773-fork-and-spoon License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Switch by Sascha Ende Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/489-switch License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Imagefilm 024 by Sascha Ende Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/489-switch License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Music: Stars and Laurels by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com Sound Effects and Additional Music: store.syrinscape.com/what-is-syrinscape/?att
In this episode, we learn about the story of the Shippable pipeline tool and the luck behind the bets made before and during its evolution from Avi Cavale. Voices in DevOps – Episode 21: A Conversation with Avi Cavale of JFrog
In this episode, we learn about the story of the Shippable pipeline tool and the luck behind the bets made before and during its evolution from Avi Cavale. Voices in DevOps – Episode 21: A Conversation with Avi Cavale of JFrog
In this episode, we learn about the story of the Shippable pipeline tool and the luck behind the bets made before and during its evolution from Avi Cavale. Voices in DevOps – Episode 21: A Conversation with Avi Cavale of JFrog
In this episode, we learn about the story of the Shippable pipeline tool and the luck behind the bets made before and during its evolution from Avi Cavale. Voices in DevOps – Episode 21: A Conversation with Avi Cavale of JFrog
In this gold mine of an episode Ryan and Patrick try to make a dick shape out of audio spikes in this quality content. Also, Ryan never watched the movie Patrick was going to ask him about, so they have to improvise. It’s... Kinky.
There's a line we have to cross when creating any form of content and I call that the Shippable line. It's the point when a project is good enough to get out there into and have the potential impact it's going to have. Many of us don't know where this line is because this line comes with experience. You have to determine where that line is, and part of being a designer with a client or agency is knowing where that line is and educating others on where that line. This happens so you don't waste time and resources on polishing something that can't be polished any further or that the impact becomes significantly less with each updated iteration. At some point you have to ship and let the market decide if it's good. bit.ly/brandblaster --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/brandblaster/support
Airports, the challenges of the CI/CD market, authentication woes. Plus: “Why don’t you just do this.” 86.1 degrees. The cold side of the pillow. Relevant to your interests Apple Watch authentication expanding beyond unlocking your Mac in macOS 10.15 (https://9to5mac.com/2019/04/18/apple-watch-mac-password/). IBM is preparing to close its $34 billion acquisition of Red Hat, but Wall Street has 'real question marks' after its 'mediocre' quarter (https://www.businessinsider.com/ibm-prepares-red-hat-acquisition-wall-street-has-questions-2019-4). IBM pulls the plug on drug-discovering Watson AI (https://futurism.com/the-byte/ibm-watson-ai-drug-discovery). Fastly Going Public — Here is the S1 (http://FASTLY, INC.). How the Boeing 737 Max Disaster Looks to a Software Developer (https://spectrum.ieee.org/aerospace/aviation/how-the-boeing-737-max-disaster-looks-to-a-software-developer) Jessie Frazelle on Anthos (https://twitter.com/jessfraz/status/1117962623226531840?s=21). Check out Weird Trick Mafia podcast (https://weirdtrickmafia.fm/) too. Apple spends more than $30 million on Amazon's cloud every month, making it a top AWS customer (https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/22/apple-spends-more-than-30-million-on-amazon-web-services-a-month.html): “The company has said in the past that it uses AWS for iCloud storage but has not disclosed whether any other Apple services use AWS or other third-party clouds.” NPM is Not Particularly Magnanimous? Staff fired after trying to unionize – complaints (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/04/22/npm_fired_staff_union_complaints/). Accenture sued over website redesign so bad it Hertz: Car hire biz demands $32m+ for 'defective' cyber-revamp (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/04/23/hertz_accenture_lawsuit/). How to Calculate Your Innovation’s Odds of Success (https://hbr.org/2019/03/the-innovation-equation). Whole lotta CI/CD goin’ on CloudBees acquires software automation startup Electric Cloud (https://venturebeat.com/2019/04/18/cloudbees-acquires-software-automation-startup-electric-cloud/), French coverage (https://www.silicon.fr/devops-cloudbees-automatisation-deploiement-applicatif-239081.html). Jay@451’s summary (https://clients.451research.com/reportaction/96949/Toc?SearchTerms=Electric%20Cloud): “Given the sprawl of tools and platforms for enterprise DevOps and CI/CD software releases, CloudBees' purchase of Electric Cloud represents a welcome consolidation in the industry. It also continues DevOps M&A that began with JFrog's acquisition of Shippable earlier this year. The deal should also have a broad impact on enterprise DevOps since CloudBees – backer of the widely used Jenkins CI server – will add release management, orchestration, automation and other aspects of CD from Electric Cloud, a leading enterprise DevOps specialist. The combined offerings should help provide feedback for enterprises throughout CI/CD release processes, enabling and enhancing feedback loops that are critical to successful DevOps implementations. The move may also help both vendors address the use of cloud-native software such as containers and Kubernetes, as well as hybrid cloud infrastructures that span on-premises, public and private cloud environments.” Electric Cloud has ~110 employees, CloudBess ~400. Harness raises $60 million to automate continuous app delivery with machine learning (https://venturebeat.com/2019/04/23/harness-raises-60-million-to-automate-continuous-app-delivery-with-machine-learning/): “brings Harness’ total raised to around $80 million and values the company at $500 million, will be put toward R&D and hiring, said CEO Jyoti Bansal — particularly on the development, sales, and customer success side of the business.” (So, not marketing, HR, or finance.) Nonsense 'Jeopardy' winner James Holzhauer is likely shaking up the game show's budget (https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2019/04/22/jeopardy-winner-james-holzhauer-is-shaking-up-the-game-shows-budget.html) Sponsors This is sponsored by Solarwinds Loggly. It’s scalable cloud-based log management that won’t break the bank. Learn more or try it FREE for 14 days. Just go to http://loggly.com/sdt. Conferences, et. al. ALERT! DevOpsDays Discount - DevOpsDays MSP (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/), August 6th to 7th, $50 off with the code SDT2019 (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/devopsdays-minneapolis-2019-tickets-51444848928?discount=SDT2019). 2019, a city near you: The 2019 SpringOne Tours are posted (http://springonetour.io/). Coté will be speaking at many of these, hopefully all the ones in EMEA. They’re free and all about programming and DevOps things. Coming up in: Paris (May 23rd & 24th), San Francisco (June 4th & 5th), Atlanta (June 13th & 14th)…and back to a lot of US cities. ChefConf 2019 (http://chefconf.chef.io/) May 20-23. Matt’s speaking! (https://chefconf.chef.io/sessions/banking-automation-modernizing-chef-across-enterprise/) ChefConf London 2019 (https://chefconflondon.eventbrite.com/) June 19-20 Jobs posted in the SDT Slack Riot Games L.A. based Systems Engineers (https://www.riotgames.com/en/work-with-us/job/1404829) and Software Engineers (https://www.riotgames.com/en/work-with-us/job/1404827) ## SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you a free laptop sticker! Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/) Listen to the Software Defined Interviews Podcast (https://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/). Check out the back catalog (http://cote.coffee/howtotech/). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Recommendations Coté: Check out Weird Trick Mafia podcast (https://weirdtrickmafia.fm/) too. Anti: worth sticking to your carrier even if there’s a code-share flight at better time. Brandon: The OA (https://www.netflix.com/title/80044950), Season 2 (https://www.netflix.com/title/80044950).
This article and episode is aimed at a technical audience: architects, developers and release managers. A foundation for rapidly building microservices on Kubernetes We’re looking now at the DevOps stack we’re building with, notably the stack that we are using to build Glu (https://www.glu.lu/ (https://www.glu.lu/?utm_source=ep08&utm_medium=Podcast&utm_campaign=345TechTalks) ) that will go into live Beta next month. If you’ve been following the podcast series you’ll know that we’re building a microservices platform leaning heavily on Kubernetes hosted in AWS. The tech stack we describe here is our way of doing this – if you’re looking to put in place a similar stack elsewhere you should be able to get some great ideas from what we’re discussing here. You can always book a free call with us to talk about your technology stack and your DevOps needs, we love hearing from you! Going through the stack one piece at a time We’ll step through the stack piece by piece and explain what we use each of these for. This is a whistlestop tour of what we discuss in the episode, so please take time to listen to the episode in full! GitHub As we’ve said in the last episode (https://www.345.systems/podcast/episode-6-our-10-principles-for-devops-part-one/) , Git is the source of truth. This is true for both infrastructure and applications. You can use any flavour of Git; we have chosen GitHub (https://github.com/) for a number of reasons: Cloud-based, no maintenance, developers can access from anywhere. The ecosystem of apps that play well with GitHub via webhooks. The tooling around pull requests, branch permissions and protecting branches, meaning we can keep our core code branches clean, tested and high quality. Shippable We use a cloud-based CI tool called Shippable (https://www.shippable.com/) that integrates with GitHub. This runs our CI process. We use this because: Builds run in containers so we can control the build stack easily. It works well with GitHub for reporting build success and code coverage. It’s easy to use. It’s inexpensive. It’s cloud-based and hosted. Minimal maintenance. Spinnaker We use Spinnaker (https://www.spinnaker.io/) as a deployment platform. We host this in AWS using a dedicated Kubernetes cluster just for Spinnaker. This is because the DevOps tools need to run outside of the other environments. Spinnaker comes from the Netflix stable, and supports a number of deployment models we’re interested in using such as canary and blue-green. Pypyr Pypyr (https://github.com/pypyr) is an opensource pipeline runner developer by fellow 345 partner Thomas (https://www.345.systems/author/thomas/) . We use Pypyr because it lets us do many of the DevOps tasks that you normally write shell scripts for, but Pypyr lets you express them as YAML files. This gives us a more readable script, plus the underlying code to execute the steps is tested and high quality. ClickUp We use ClickUp (https://clickup.com/) for project management. Tasks integrate with GitHub well, and the software is not opinionated in how it is used, unlike some others (JIRA, we might be looking at you here). ClickUp lets us organise tasks very flexibly through its tagging system, which lets a task belong to multiple hierarchies at the same time. We can prioritise, organise by actor, organise by size, area of the system. It’s easy to search, filter and update. The software is still maturing and there are areas where it can be seen as weak, however the flexibility we gain more than offsets this (to us, at any rate). Developer Workstation We use a posix workstation for development. A lot of the devs like to work natively on Macs, whereas if you’re on Windows we use virtual machines running a flavour of Linux. Arch Linux (https://www.archlinux.org/) is a popular one, as it’s so lean. IDE We are not prescriptive about IDE, but our default choice is Visual Studio Code (https://code.visualstudio.com/) . Some of the guys use other editors, it depends on their personal choice. Slack For internal communications we use Slack (https://slack.com/) . This gives us a flexible ChatOps platform that integrates with the tools above so we get a feed from GitHub for pull requests and merges, we get a feed from Shippable for builds, and we can get feeds from ClickUp when actions have taken place on tasks.
Nobody’s going to take it over, sorry startups! The 4 Horsemen of Configuration Management They need Java in Cincinnati. The Mongols have no wine. Coté’s going to filibuster ChefConf. https://d2mxuefqeaa7sj.cloudfront.net/s_496DF11063CDFDD5ADCDE2994265DC79C0316721C26F879BC276FEB51BCD7829_1551997391988_image.png Relevant to your interests Red Hat launches Operator Hub, a repository of quality-tested Kubernetes Operators (https://news.google.com/articles/CAIiENvILOykuSzXahegtrj67r0qEwgEKgwIACoFCAowsGkw8AYwgxM?hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US%3Aen) Bitbucket Simplifies Building CI/CD Pipelines with Pipes - The New Stack (https://thenewstack.io/bitbucket-simplifies-building-ci-cd-pipelines-with-pipes/) DevOps consolidation continues with JFrog and Shippable (https://searchsoftwarequality.techtarget.com/news/252458615/DevOps-consolidation-continues-with-JFrog-and-Shippable) The Digital Maginot Line (https://www.ribbonfarm.com/2018/11/28/the-digital-maginot-line/) Former Kaspersky Lab Expert Sentenced in Russia for Treason (https://www.darkreading.com/vulnerabilities---threats/former-kaspersky-lab-expert-sentenced-in-russia-for-treason/d/d-id/1333972) Amazon Web Services CEO: We're a $30 billion revenue run rate business in the 'early stages (https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/28/amazon-cloud-ceo-we-have-a-30-billion-run-rate-in-our-early-stages.html)’ Data manager DataStax prepares for IPO: sources (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-datastax-ipo/data-manager-datastax-prepares-for-ipo-sources-idUSKCN1QI5K0) The New Bellwether For Enterprise IT (https://www.nextplatform.com/2019/03/01/the-new-bellwether-for-enterprise-it/) What happened to OpenStack (https://aeva.online/2019/03/what-happened-to-openstack/) Chronicle: Can I Get The Backstory? (https://medium.com/@chroniclesec/introducing-backstory-45dd9b4d4a6d) and more on Backstory (https://chronicle.security/products/backstory/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axioscodebook&stream=technology) RIP passwords | Product Hunt (https://www.producthunt.com/newsletter/2570?utm_campaign=2570_2019-03-04&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Product+Hunt) Phone numbers are the new SSNs (https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-login-59a4e953-dc46-49ea-bc8b-a097d09b0dfb.html?chunk=0&utm_term=emshare#story0) (https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-codebook-17f78023-b099-4a6b-b48b-843d28b87e32.html?chunk=0&utm_term=emshare#story0)- NSA's new cybersecurity tool (https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-codebook-17f78023-b099-4a6b-b48b-843d28b87e32.html?chunk=0&utm_term=emshare#story0) State of Open Source Security report 2019 (https://snyk.io/blog/top-ten-most-popular-docker-images-each-contain-at-least-30-vulnerabilities/) Lyft has to pay Amazon's cloud at least $8 million a month until the end of 2021 (https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.businessinsider.com/lyft-ipo-amazon-web-services-2019-3) Build your own Data Center….It is going to cost you? (https://twitter.com/mohapatrahemant/status/1102401615263223809?s=21) Introducing Kraken, an Open Source Peer-to-Peer Docker Registry (https://eng.uber.com/introducing-kraken/) Nonsense Tesla launches long-awaited standard Model 3 starting at $35,000 (https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/28/tesla-suspends-online-orders-ahead-of-announcement-redirects-website.html) Luminary. A better way to podcast (https://luminarypodcasts.com) Farm Sim Steering Wheels, Side Panels, Shifters for Farm Simulator Games | Logitech G (https://www.logitechg.com/en-us/products/farm.html) Sponsors Solarwinds To learn more or try the company’s DevOps products for free, visit https://solarwinds.com/devops. Conferences, et. al. ALERT! DevOpsDays Discount - DevOpsDays MSP (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/), August 6th to 7th, $50 off with the code SDT2019 (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/devopsdays-minneapolis-2019-tickets-51444848928?discount=SDT2019). 2019, a city near you: The 2019 SpringTours are posted (http://springonetour.io/). Coté will be speaking at many of these, hopefully all the ones in EMEA. They’re free and all about programming and DevOps things. Free lunch and stickers! Mar 7th to 8th, 2019 - Incontro DevOps in Bologna (https://2019.incontrodevops.it/), Coté speaking. Mar 13th, 2019 - Coté speaking at (platform as a product) (https://www.meetup.com/Continuous-Delivery-Amsterdam/events/258120367/) - Continuous Delivery, Amsterdam. Mar 18th to 19th, 2019 - SpringOne Tour London (https://springonetour.io/2019/london). Get £50 off ticket price of £150 with the code S1Tour2019_100. Mar 21st to 2nd, 2019 (https://springonetour.io/2019/amsterdam) - SpringOne Tour Amsterdam. Get €50 off ticket price of €150 with the code S1Tour2019_100. ChefConf 2019 (http://chefconf.chef.io/) May 20-23. Matt’s speaking! ChefConf London 2019 (https://chefconflondon.eventbrite.com/) June 19-20 ## Get a Free SDT T-Shirt Write an iTunes review of SDT and get a free SDT T-Shirt. Write an iTunes Review on the SDT iTunes Page. (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/software-defined-talk/id893738521?mt=2) Send an email to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and include the following: T-Shirt Size (Only XL remain), Preferred Color (Gray, Black) and Postal address. First come, first serve. while supplies last! Can only ship T-Shirts within the United State Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send Listener Feedback Justin Garrison told us the Kubecon Keynote mentioned on last week’s episode was by Julia Evans a.k.a @b0rk (https://twitter.com/b0rk) who works at Stripe and here’s a list of her talks (https://jvns.ca/talks/). CodeRanch Review by Rookie (https://coderanch.com/t/707185/Blatant-advert-Software-Defined-Podcast) SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you a free laptop sticker! Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/) Listen to the Software Defined Interviews Podcast (https://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/). Check out the back catalog (http://cote.coffee/howtotech/). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Recommendations Coté: U (https://www.uniqlo.com/us/en/men-heattech-crew-neck-long-sleeve-t-shirt-408111.html?dwvar_408111_color=COL02&cgid=)niqlo (https://www.uniqlo.com/us/en/men-heattech-crew-neck-long-sleeve-t-shirt-408111.html?dwvar_408111_color=COL02&cgid=) (https://www.uniqlo.com/us/en/men-heattech-crew-neck-long-sleeve-t-shirt-408111.html?dwvar_408111_color=COL02&cgid=)MEN HEATTECH EXTRA WARM LONG JOHNS (https://www.uniqlo.com/us/en/men-heattech-crew-neck-long-sleeve-t-shirt-408111.html?dwvar_408111_color=COL02&cgid=). Brandon: Big Little Lies (https://www.hbo.com/big-little-lies) Matt: Death’s End (https://www.amazon.com/Deaths-End-Remembrance-Earths-Past/dp/0765377101) by Liu Cixin
Show: 387Description: Aaron and Brian talk with Armon Dadgar (@armon, Founder/CTO @HashiCorp) about the problems service mesh can solve, the underlying technologies, control plane vs. data plane considerations, and who is making decisions about service meshes within an IT organization.Show Sponsor Links:Liquid Technology - IT Value RecoveryTry CloudLast Service, get a free t-shirt and chance at Amazon Gift CardDatadog Homepage - Modern Monitoring and AnalyticsTry DataDog yourself by starting a free, 14-day trial today. Listeners of this podcast will also receive a free Datadog T-shirtCloud News of the WeekJFrog acquires Shippable, adding continuous integration and delivery to its DevOps platformAmazon launches third Alexa Accelerator for conversational startupsAzure Kinect DK - Build computer vision and speech models using a developer kit with advanced AI sensorsFollow the CAPEX: Cloud Table Stakes 2018 Edition (Charles Fitzgerald - Platformnomics)Show Interview Links:Hashicorp - http://hashicorp.comWhat is a Service Mesh - https://www.hashicorp.com/resources/what-is-a-service-meshConsul - https://www.consul.io/Show Notes:Topic 1 - Welcome to the show. It’s been a couple years since HashiCorp has been on the show, so give us an update on the company - big round of funding ($100M) in November.Topic 2 - A couple months ago we saw you in a video called “What is a Service Mesh?”. It was intended to be a “let’s make this simple” and you realize that a Service Mesh could be a lot of things - L4-L7 routing, Proxy, Encryption, Authentication, Application patterns. Is a Service Mesh solving a new problem, or is it pulling together lots of things that have existed at L4-L7 and application stacks in the past? Topic 3 - “Service Mesh” has become a pretty crowded and fragmented market over the last couple years. HashiCorp Consul has been around since 2014 (was originally “Service Discovery”) and now there’s Linkerd, Istio, Envoy and a bunch of variations. As you talk to people in the market, how are they evaluating the options out there? Topic 4 - Consul has evolved from Service Discovery to Service Mesh, and seems to have come from more of an authentication and security perspective (some others tends to be more routing-centric). Are there use-cases when one Service Mesh is a better fit than others, or should we expect that all/most of them will more or less converged on features over the next 12-24 months? Topic 5 - Can you give us some examples of how companies are using Service Meshes today (parts or all of the capabilities) and what teams are usually driving the adoption (infra/ops, security, app-dev, etc.)?Feedback?Email: show at thecloudcast dot netTwitter: @thecloudcastnet and @ServerlessCast
The big news in DevOps today was the acquisition of Shippable by JFrog. This adds a CI/CD solution to the JFrog Enterprise + platform and further expands JFrog's end to end DevOps offering beyond Artifactory and more. In this DevOps chat we speak with Shippable CEO Avi Cavale, JFrog CEO Shlomi Ben Haim and JFrog VP of marketing , Ayally Goldschmidt about what was behind this acquisition and what are the plans going forward.
Avi Cavale, CEO of Shippable, says slow and steady wins the continuous delivery race.
In the 19th podcast, we meet Avi Cavale from Shippable talking about entrepreneurship and shipping code faster.
At our first WarmUp of 2015, on March 3rd in Seattle, we talked about the transition to new distributed environments, and the ways in which platform providers, app developers, operations pros and enterprises are adapting. In this episode of The New Stack Analysts podcast, which was recorded live at the event, host Alex Williams is joined by four excellent panelists who are on the front lines of managing and analyzing distributed systems: Avi Cavale, co-founder and CEO at Shippable, Heather McKelvey, vice president of engineering at Basho, Richard Seroter, director of product management for CenturyLink Cloud, and, Kit Merker, product manager at Google. Learn more at: https://thenewstack.io/tns-analysts-show-35-discussing-all-things-distributed-from-the-new-stack-warmup/
Aaron talks with Avi Cavale (CEO of @BeShippable), about utilizing Docker containers for Continuous Integration/Delivery. Music Credit: Nine Inch Nails (nin.com)
Flynn.io is one of the most popular and powerful open source Docker PaaS solutions around. This week we talk to one of the creators of Flynn, Jonathan Rudenberg. Jonathan is a super smart guy who used to work at Shopify and has brings his experience with large distributed systems into Flynn. Flynn believes that ops should be a product team, not consultants. Flynn is the single platform that ops can provide to developers to power production, testing, and development, freeing developers to focus. CenturyLink has sponsored the Flynn project and I am thrilled to have Jonatahan on the podcast this week. Here are some of the questions we ask: * Tell us about Flynn and who should use it? * Why not just run your own Docker? * How is Flynn different from traditional PaaS like Heroku or Cloud Foundry? * How is Flynn different from other Docker PaaS like Deis or Dokku? * How is Flynn different from CoreOS? * How easy is it to get Flynn setup? * How does Flynn handle database services? * How does Flynn manage inter-container networking communication? * How does Flynn manage the disk volumes and filesystem management? * Does Flynn interact well with CI/CD like Shippable and Drone? * What isn’t good about Flynn yet? * Can you explain pinkerton to our audience? * What does the future of Linux Containers look like? * What’s next for Flynn? Hosted Flynn?
This week we discuss the future of Docker hosting with one of the pioneers in the Docker hosting space: Borja Burgos. Borja started Tutum, which is one of the world's first pure Linux Container hosters. For as little as $4/month you can get a Linux Container managed by Tutum. Here are just some of the questions from this week's interview: * Tell us about Tutum and who should use it? * Why not just run your own Docker? * How is Tutum different than PaaS like Heroku or even Deis or Flynn? * Where are the Tutum Docker containers hosted? * What happens to my Tutum Docker containers if one of Tutum's Amazon servers goes down? * Does Tutum interact well with CI/CD like Shippable and Drone? * What isn’t good about Tutum yet? * Are Docker containers going to replace virtual machines in the future? * What is possible when you combine Tutum with Github and Docker Hub all together? Seems like combining Github and Docker Hub is going to create a lot of interesting opportunities for new startups. * What does the future of Linux Containers look like? * What’s next for Tutum?
This week we discuss the future of CI/CD with Shippable founder and CEO, Avi Cavale. * Tell us about your background * Tell us about Shippable and who should use it? * How is Shippable 2.5x Faster than other hosted CI/CD services? * How does Shippable use Docker? * How is Shippable different than Drone or Jenkins? * Why is Docker particularly well suited for CI/CD? Last week interview with Docker’s CEO Ben Golub said the ideal use of Docker includes CI/CD. * How will technologies like Puppet and Chef and SaltStack interact with CI/CD? * What isn’t good about Shippable yet? * How is Shippable different than Travis or Circle? * What is possible when you combine Shippable with Github and Docker Hub all together? Seems like combining Github and Docker Hub is going to create a lot of interesting opportunities for new startups. * What’s next for CI/CD in general? What does the future of CI/CD look like? * Why are customers switching to Shippable? * What’s next for Shippable?
Clayton Lengel-Zigich, Roy van de Water and Jade Meskill talk about potentially shippable software.