Continuing our Friday practice of highlighting people to follow in the DevOps space, here are this weeks entries: @jpmorgenthal @lmacvittie @AndiMann @mongodbinc @kevinbehr @devopscloud @amyl_bishop @kristiancarter Already on the list: @patrickdebois , @realgenekim @botchagalupe @jezhumble @garethr @kartar @krisbuytaert @jordansissel @agentdero @allspaw @monkchips @devops_borat @lnxchk @damonedwards @lusis @obfuscurity @shanley @adrianco @scriptrock @jumpcloud @sd_architect @govictorops @softlayer @docker @chef @hullsean @champagnie @planetdevops @krishnan @tarunbhatti @wickett @nathenharvey @andimann @byron_miller You can find all of these people on a Twitter list I have started at: https://twitter.com/devopsdotcom/lists/devops-twitters-to-folow If you think you should be […]
Trust and Computers Make the News
The Heartbleed bug in OpenSSL was major news this week. While you are waiting for sudo apt-get dist-upgrade to run on all your servers, let’s take a minute to reflect on how the SSL trust system works and about the kinds of system relationships that depend on it. Just to recap, SSL-based trust derives from […]
Not all collaboration types are equal
Talking about collaboration in general terms is easy. I’ve done it and so has everyone else. It’s time now to dig deeper into the specifics of collaboration, meaning the different types – asynchronous vs. synchronous, vertical vs. horizontal – and how different companies fit into the magic collaboration quadrant. And yes, the quadrant is indeed […]
Programmability in the Network: Stop a Bleeding Heart…
It is not often the case that a security vulnerability can get the entire Internet talking. And not just the security community on the Internet, but everyone. End-users and IT alike are looking for answers and trying to mitigate Heartbleed. It has its own web site and logo. It’s that big of a deal. Many service providers have […]
Services As A Model For DevOps Communications
DevOps is an interesting movement. As with any effort of this magnitude, there will be many opinions on what is entailed in adoption and implementation. The issue is that businesses are so diverse and varied in culture that no single method for adoption is guaranteed to fit all businesses. In large IT organizations, this issue […]
Continuous integration for better security
One of the big advantages to smaller deploys and continuous integration is that it can make it easier to provide more proactive security. In short, continuous integration (and the associated automated testing it enables) makes it easier to focus your security team on analyzing areas where the security risk is higher. If the notion of […]
Automation versus Orchestration
Yes, Virginia, there is a difference. One of the things devops practitioners are tasked with is the provisioning and configuration of all sorts of infrastructure. Application servers, web servers, load balancers, proxies and database servers are among the lengthy (and no doubt growing) list of “boxes” devops needs to get up and running to support […]
DevOps Needs a Tsunami To Jump The Chasm
All start up business endeavors must go through the phase of crossing the chasm. Most of those business endeavors usually fall prey to the chasm. The chasm is this black hole that everyone claims to understand but no one truly does. We have all seen businesses cross the chasm or fail to cross the chasm […]
Using AWS CloudWatch for Anomaly Detection
Based on my unscientific poll of friends, one of the least used and most overlooked features of AWS is CloudWatch. Not only can CloudWatch be used to monitor the availability of your AWS services, but it can also be used as anomaly an detection tool. Did I mention that these feature are free? Since the […]
A Winning DevOps Approach for Established Enterprises: Pace-layered
Does your bank offer the ability to deposit a check by taking its picture with your smartphone? When that feature debuted a few years back, I remember thinking it was interesting and convenient enough that if my bank didn’t offer it soon, I’d be willing to switch to one that did. I bring this example […]
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