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Every enterprise now knows the reality of hybrid cloud, the struggle of reconciling on-prem systems with Software-as-a-Service. Most understand the growing reality of multi-cloud, where several major cloud providers are used to transact business. But what about metacloud? or supercloud? Check out this episode of DM Radio to learn more as Host @eric_kavanagh interviews industry veteran David Linthicum, along with special guests Kirat Singh of Beacon, Ben Haynes of Directus and Tammy Butow of Statype.
https://go.dok.community/slack https://dok.community/ ABSTRACT OF THE TALK Prima and Tammy join us to discuss the bridges between Security and SRE. How can these two teams work best together? What can they learn from each other? Prima is a Security Engineer and Tammy is a Site Reliability Engineer. They are both Australians living in the USA with 10+ years of experience each working in tech. TALK TAKEAWAYS 1.You'll learn tips for SRE and Security teams to work together 2.You'll learn what SREs can learn from Security and vice versa 3.You'll learn about the new field of DevSecOps and how it can help your organisation improve BIO Tammy Bryant Butow is a principal SRE at Gremlin, where she works on chaos engineering—the facilitation of controlled experiments to identify improvements. Gremlin's enterprise Chaos Engineering platform makes it easy to build more reliable applications in order to prevent outages, innovate faster, and earn customer trust. Previously, Tammy led SRE teams at Dropbox responsible for the databases and storage systems used by over 500 million customers and was an IMOC (incident manager on call), where she was responsible for managing and resolving high-severity incidents across the company. She has also worked in infrastructure engineering, security engineering, and product engineering. Tammy is the cofounder of Girl Geek Academy, a global movement to teach one million women technical skills by 2025. Tammy is an Australian and enjoys riding bikes, skateboarding, snowboarding, and surfing. She also loves mosh pits, crowd surfing, metal, and hardcore punk. Prima is a seasoned Security professional who has worked in a variety of industries such as Consumer Tech, Oil & Gas, Media, and Fin-tech. She is a Senior Security Engineer on the SIRT team at Segment where she enjoys creating automation tooling for Incident Response and occasionally dabbles in Security DevOps. She loves sharing her experiences with the industry and has spoken at many meetups and conferences globally including, but not limited to, Agile India 2020, MacDevOpsCon Vancouver 2019, and Grace Hopper Conference 2017.
Listen now | Tammy Butow is a Principal SRE at Gremlin, a Failure as a Service platform company that helps engineers build more resilient software. She’s also the co-founder of Girl Geek Academy, an organization to encourage women to learn technology skills. She previously held IC and management roles in SRE at Dropbox and Digital Ocean. Get on the email list at www.softwareatscale.dev
Starting your new job as Infrastructure Engineer in a large bank with your to-be boss and his key architects just leaving feels like Chaos! Maybe that’s why Tammy Butow has made a career in Chaos and Site Reliability Engineering. In this episode, Tammy shares her experiences of bring reliability into highly complex systems at NAB, Digital Ocean, DropBox or now Gremlin through chaos engineering. You learn about the importance to know and baseline your metrics, to define your SLIs and SLOs and to continuously run your fire drills to ensure your system is as reliable as it has to be.If you want to learn more check out Tammy’s presentations on speakerdeck and make sure to join the chaosengineering slack channel.https://www.linkedin.com/in/tammybutow/https://speakerdeck.com/tammybutowhttps://slofile.com/slack/chaosengineering
Starting your new job as Infrastructure Engineer in a large bank with your to-be boss and his key architects just leaving feels like Chaos! Maybe that’s why Tammy Butow has made a career in Chaos and Site Reliability Engineering. In this episode, Tammy shares her experiences of bring reliability into highly complex systems at NAB, Digital Ocean, DropBox or now Gremlin through chaos engineering. You learn about the importance to know and baseline your metrics, to define your SLIs and SLOs and to continuously run your fire drills to ensure your system is as reliable as it has to be.If you want to learn more check out Tammy’s presentations on speakerdeck and make sure to join the chaosengineering slack channel.https://www.linkedin.com/in/tammybutow/https://speakerdeck.com/tammybutowhttps://slofile.com/slack/chaosengineering
In episode 6 of Ship Happens, Tammy Butow joins Benton to talk all about SRE, availability and training on-call teams. Tammy is a Principal Site Reliability Engineer and executive team member at Gremlin, software dedicated completely to chaos engineering. Tammy is an industry leader in SRE and chaos engineering and brings loads of valuable experience from the National Australia Bank, Digital Ocean, Dropbox and Gremlin. Learn from Tammy's interesting history with skateboarding and how she's learned to apply these lessons to SRE and software development.
JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 14th to 15th - register now! In this episode of Adventure in DevOps, the guests speak about the future of software development and reliable systems. They relate this to Chaos Engineering and why more organizations should be doing it. Panelists Nell Shamrell-Harrington Tyler Bird Guests Tammy Butow Kolton Andrus Matt "Forni" Fornaciari Sponsors UpCloud | Use promo code: "devchat" for $25 off CacheFly _______ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ______________________________________ Links Gremlin.com/slack Picks Nell Shamrell-Harrington: Dell Computing Aphids (Not Cool!) Tyler Bird: VMUG Advantage DeployHappiness Tammy Butow: Target Mobile Kolton Andrus: Koan Matt "Forni" Fornaciari: Deep Work Digital Minimalism
JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 14th to 15th - register now! In this episode of Adventure in DevOps, the guests speak about the future of software development and reliable systems. They relate this to Chaos Engineering and why more organizations should be doing it. Panelists Nell Shamrell-Harrington Tyler Bird Guests Tammy Butow Kolton Andrus Matt "Forni" Fornaciari Sponsors UpCloud | Use promo code: "devchat" for $25 off CacheFly _______ "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! ______________________________________ Links Gremlin.com/slack Picks Nell Shamrell-Harrington: Dell Computing Aphids (Not Cool!) Tyler Bird: VMUG Advantage DeployHappiness Tammy Butow: Target Mobile Kolton Andrus: Koan Matt "Forni" Fornaciari: Deep Work Digital Minimalism
One testing technique I heard quite a bit about over the past year is Chaos Engineering. One of my most popular podcast episodes this year was my interview Tammy Butow, a principal site reliability engineer at Gremlin. She shared how to make your site more reliable by using chaos engineering to discover hard-to-find breakpoints in your software. In this episode, I’ll share my previously-published interview with Tammy to help you prepare to make your websites more performant and reliable in 2020. Listen up!
Databases go offline. Services fail to scale up. Deployment errors can cause an application backend to get DDoS’d. When an event happens that prevents your company from operating as expected, it is known as an incident. Software teams respond to an incident by issuing a fix. Sometimes that fix returns the software to its ideal The post Incident Reproduction with Tammy Butow appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
In our last podcast on chaos engineering with Tammy Butow , we learned about the basic concepts of chaos engineering, failure injection, and "game days." This time, Derrick Harris interviews Karun Chennuri (@karunchennuri) and Ramesh Krishnaram (@RKrishnaram) of T-Mobile about how they are applying this at T-Mobile, where they are running about 3,000 applications and nearly 40,000 containers on Pivotal Cloud Foundry-based platform. What they learned is that chaos engineering tools are not one-sized fits all. Read the full show notes here: https://content.pivotal.io/podcasts/making-chaos-engineering-real-for-pcf-at-t-mobile
In our last podcast on chaos engineering with Tammy Butow , we learned about the basic concepts of chaos engineering, failure injection, and "game days." This time, Derrick Harris interviews Karun Chennuri (@karunchennuri) and Ramesh Krishnaram (@RKrishnaram) of T-Mobile about how they are applying this at T-Mobile, where they are running about 3,000 applications and nearly 40,000 containers on Pivotal Cloud Foundry-based platform. What they learned is that chaos engineering tools are not one-sized fits all. Read the full show notes here: https://content.pivotal.io/podcasts/making-chaos-engineering-real-for-pcf-at-t-mobile
In our last podcast on chaos engineering with Tammy Butow , we learned about the basic concepts of chaos engineering, failure injection, and "game days." This time, Derrick Harris interviews Karun Chennuri (@karunchennuri) and Ramesh Krishnaram (@RKrishnaram) of T-Mobile about how they are applying this at T-Mobile, where they are running about 3,000 applications and nearly 40,000 containers on Pivotal Cloud Foundry-based platform. What they learned is that chaos engineering tools are not one-sized fits all. Read the full show notes here: https://content.pivotal.io/podcasts/making-chaos-engineering-real-for-pcf-at-t-mobile
In our last podcast on chaos engineering with Tammy Butow , we learned about the basic concepts of chaos engineering, failure injection, and "game days." This time, Derrick Harris interviews Karun Chennuri (@karunchennuri) and Ramesh Krishnaram (@RKrishnaram) of T-Mobile about how they are applying this at T-Mobile, where they are running about 3,000 applications and nearly 40,000 containers on Pivotal Cloud Foundry-based platform. What they learned is that chaos engineering tools are not one-sized fits all. Read the full show notes here: https://content.pivotal.io/podcasts/making-chaos-engineering-real-for-pcf-at-t-mobile
In our last podcast on chaos engineering with Tammy Butow , we learned about the basic concepts of chaos engineering, failure injection, and "game days." This time, Derrick Harris interviews Karun Chennuri (@karunchennuri) and Ramesh Krishnaram (@RKrishnaram) of T-Mobile about how they are applying this at T-Mobile, where they are running about 3,000 applications and nearly 40,000 containers on Pivotal Cloud Foundry-based platform. What they learned is that chaos engineering tools are not one-sized fits all. Read the full show notes here: https://content.pivotal.io/podcasts/making-chaos-engineering-real-for-pcf-at-t-mobile
What's life without a little chaos? And why not a little chaos impacting your production systems? Sounds scary, but turns out intentionally introducing random errors into production systems helps identify vulnerabilities so you can do something about them before they result in major disruptions. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, Gremlin's Tammy Butow, one of the leading practitioners of chaos engineering (as the practice is known), talks about the benefits of and shares best practices for introducing chaos to your production systems.
What's life without a little chaos? And why not a little chaos impacting your production systems? Sounds scary, but turns out intentionally introducing random errors into production systems helps identify vulnerabilities so you can do something about them before they result in major disruptions. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, Gremlin's Tammy Butow, one of the leading practitioners of chaos engineering (as the practice is known), talks about the benefits of and shares best practices for introducing chaos to your production systems.
What's life without a little chaos? And why not a little chaos impacting your production systems? Sounds scary, but turns out intentionally introducing random errors into production systems helps identify vulnerabilities so you can do something about them before they result in major disruptions. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, Gremlin's Tammy Butow, one of the leading practitioners of chaos engineering (as the practice is known), talks about the benefits of and shares best practices for introducing chaos to your production systems.
What's life without a little chaos? And why not a little chaos impacting your production systems? Sounds scary, but turns out intentionally introducing random errors into production systems helps identify vulnerabilities so you can do something about them before they result in major disruptions. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, Gremlin's Tammy Butow, one of the leading practitioners of chaos engineering (as the practice is known), talks about the benefits of and shares best practices for introducing chaos to your production systems.
What's life without a little chaos? And why not a little chaos impacting your production systems? Sounds scary, but turns out intentionally introducing random errors into production systems helps identify vulnerabilities so you can do something about them before they result in major disruptions. In this episode of Pivotal Conversations, Gremlin's Tammy Butow, one of the leading practitioners of chaos engineering (as the practice is known), talks about the benefits of and shares best practices for introducing chaos to your production systems.
Links:Tammy’s TwitterAna’s TwitterOur music is by Komiku. For more of Komiku’s music visit loyaltyfreakmusic.com.
Welcome to our first episode of Break Things On Purpose, a podcast about Chaos Engineering. Our guests are Tammy Butow, Principal SRE at Gremlin, and Ana Medina, a Chaos Engineer at Gremlin. Topics include: What is Chaos Engineering? Planning an experiment and Blast Radius. Using Chaos Engineering to improve monitoring and onboarding. Game Days and sharing knowledge. Using Chaos Engineering to learn about your systems. Driving adoption of Chaos Engineering in your company.
TestTalks | Automation Awesomeness | Helping YOU Succeed with Test Automation
Do you want to build more resilient software systems? Do you like to break things on purpose? If so, this episode is for you. We’ll be Test Talking about Chaos Engineering with Tammy Butow, a principal site reliability engineer at Gremlin. Tammy will explain how to test the ways in which your system responds to stress so you can identify and fix failures before they impact your customers—saving you and your company the embarrassment of software downtime, bad publicity and lost revenue. Listen up!
Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers
Edaena Salinas talks with Tammy Butow about Chaos Engineering. Tammy is a Principal Site Reliability Engineer at Gremlin. The discussion covers: how Chaos Engineering emerged, the types of chaos that can be introduced to a system, and how to structure...
Software Engineering Radio - The Podcast for Professional Software Developers
Edaena Salinas talks with Tammy Butow about Chaos Engineering. Topics include: the factors that caused Chaos Engineering to emerge, the different types of chaos that can be introduced to a system, how to structure experiments. Some of the chaos engineering experiments that were discussed are: DNS related attacks, black hole attacks and database attacks. Tammy […]
Tammy Butow has worked at Digital Ocean and Dropbox, where she built out infrastructure and managed engineering teams. At both of these companies, the customer base was at a massive scale. At Dropbox, Tammy worked on the database that holds metadata used by Dropbox users to access their files. To call this metadata system simply The post Database Chaos with Tammy Butow appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.