Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
We are half way between the re:Invent conference and the end-of-year holidays, and I did expect the cadence of releases and news to slow down a bit, but nothing is further away from reality. Our teams continue to listen to your feedback and release new capabilities and incremental improvements.
Blackmailers are using Flutter’s framework in a newly-discovered Android malware campaign. Mobile security platform Zimperium’s zLabs team publicly identified the threat, which it dubbed MoneyMonger, on Thursday.
Last week I presented my top internet technologies of the year. This week I’m going to review the top stories of the year. Believe it or not, there isn’t a lot of overlap. A newsworthy story in the tech industry often isn’t about the best technology.
At this year’s Re:Invent, Amazon Web Services talked directly to its customers, but questions remain as to whether the right messages got through.
Software deployments are moving faster than ever with the proliferation of DevOps practices and the emphasis on approaches centered around continuous delivery (CD). To keep pace, many IT organizations are eager to automate the software development process as much as possible.
The end-of-year holiday season is particularly challenging for software companies — demand is often at its peak, while at the same time your staff members want to be home with their families.
When Google introduced Carbon as an experimental successor to C++ in July it made a big splash in the community. As more developers have given the language a try, the word is that folks like Carbon’s productivity, performance and memory safety.
To quickly build and deliver robust products and benefit from automation and efficient collaboration, the software team relies on continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines.
There seems to be no end to database proliferation — and for good reason. Databases are critical to any modern organization for providing essential business insights and building apps that power the digital economy.
When I started programming, no one would ever put secrets in their code, such as passwords, credentials, keys, and access tokens. It was just asking for trouble. But then along came code-driven automation with secrets. Suddenly we often checked secrets into our code.
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