Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
For believers of the old adage love of money is the root of all evil, it comes as no surprise that most data breaches are carried out for financial gain.
Linux admins have always relied on the command line to manage their systems. While not as immediately intuitive as a GUI, command line interfaces (CLIs) open up the real power of computing with a slew of versatile commands that can be chained together for nearly any purpose.
With the huge growth in virtualization and cloud computing, there has also been a corresponding increase in the average number of virtual machines (VM) that today’s admin has to manage.
When Purdue student Gene Kim and professor Gene Spafford teamed up to build the initial version of Tripwire back in 1992, little did they know their intrusion detection techniques would become industry standards for a $2.71 billion market in 2014, with growth estimates of $5.04 billion by 2019.
According to the Forbes Insights/BMC second annual IT Security and Operations Survey, 43 percent of enterprises plan on redoubling their patching and remediation efforts in 2017, citing patch automation investments as having the best ROI among security technology purchases in 2016.
As an organization grows, so does its IT footprint.
The white-hot robotic process automation (RPA) sector has been subject to a lot of buzz lately — from IPOs to billion-dollar deals. To some extent, automating workflows with RPA has helped legacy organizations fare the pandemic by advancing their digital transformation initiatives.
A proliferation of ransomware attacks has created ripple effects worldwide. Such criminal attacks have since increased in scale and magnitude, as critical hospital and infrastructure targets were shut down.
Harness sponsored this post. Looking at where major DevOps trends are headed, a common theme across many tools and practices is improving the developer experience. One paradigm of thinking is that if you improve your internal customer experience, then your external customers will benefit too.
For Umasankar Mukkara, CEO of ChaosNative and co-creator and maintainer of LitmusChaos chaos engineering platform, the trend of chaos engineering is being able to willfully engineer faults and identify whether there was an issue in the first place.
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