Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
This article was originally published on The Chief I/O: When Not To Use Kubernetes? Kubernetes is the most widely used orchestration system for large-scale containerized software.
“87% of data science projects never make it into production”, VentureBeat AI reported in 2019.
Joel Spolsky was wrong. You *can* rewrite a huge code base if you learn modern tools. Oh no! You have to rewrite that huge legacy app! You've already argued that you can fix the legacy code and you've sent the managers the Joel Spolsky "never rewrite" article.
This tutorial is the latest installment in an explanatory series on Kubeflow, Google’s popular open source machine learning platform for Kubernetes. Check back each Friday for future installments.
Tricentis sponsored this post. Tricentis just released its first How the World’s Top Organizations Test report, which analyzes how industry leaders test the software that their business and the world relies on.
AWS Elastic Beanstalk takes care of undifferentiated heavy lifting for customers by regularly providing new platform versions to update all Linux-based and Windows Server-based platforms.
More and more customers are using Infrastructure-as-Code (IaC) to design and implement their infrastructure on AWS. This is why it is essential to have pipelines with Continuous Integration/Continuous Deployment (CI/CD) for infrastructure deployment.
Many organizations are building data lakes on AWS, which provides the most secure, scalable, comprehensive, and cost-effective portfolio of services.
If you are using Internet Explorer 11 (IE 11) to access the AWS Management Console, web-based services such as Amazon Chime or Amazon Honeycode, or other parts of the AWS web site (AWS Documentation, AWS Marketing, AWS Marketplace, or AWS Support), it is time to upgrade to a more modern & secure bro
A project to bring HTTP/2 to the CloudFoundry application development platform ran into a roadblock when the keepers of the Go Language did not respond to requests, with sufficient swiftness anyway, for supporting the HTTP/2 “upgrade flow” process.
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