Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Ambassador Labs sponsored this post. Ambassador Labs is under common control with TNS. I recently wrote about the power of “drinking your own champagne” and the internal and external benefits of building and actively using your own software tools.
As a team working on a project, the desire to develop a community around an idea must have occurred more than once. It allows you to centralize knowledge about your project, your audience, their problems and how to solve them.
In one of my early coding projects, I remember going through requirements meetings, hashing out a data model, drawing up a database design and submitting it to a DBA team for review and approval. There were numerous back-and-forth communications on naming, data types and structure conventions.
How bad? Is a Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) score of 10.0 bad enough for you? These days with security holes appearing fast and furious it takes a truly exceptional security bug to catch my eye. However, cloud native security company Oxeye‘s discovery of a 10.
First, there was Graphite. For those who liked the metrics tool but wanted a better user interface, Grafana built its data-visualization panel to accommodate. Then Prometheus came along before Grafana added support for Prometheus in 2015.
With budgeting season on the horizon, the question of cloud spend takes center stage. According to Gartner, cloud spend is growing 20% year over year, but not all organizations are reaping their return on investment.
This post was co-written by Kris Rivera, Principal Software Engineer at Rapid7. Rapid7 is a Boston-based provider of security analytics and automation solutions enabling organizations to implement an active approach to cybersecurity.
With all the modern-day tools that harangue us during (and, unfortunately, beyond) our work days, chat has always occupied an important role in the way we communicate online.
The Uber data breach began with the purchase of stolen credentials belonging to an Uber employee from a dark web marketplace. The hacker tried to log into Uber’s network with these credentials but was unsuccessful because the account was protected by MFA.
Vice Society, the cybercriminal gang responsible for the attack, is believed to have used internal login credentials leaked on the dark web to access LAUSD’s network and launch the ransomware attack.
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