Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
This post is part of our Week in Review series. Check back each week for a quick roundup of interesting news and announcements from AWS! Wow, May already! Here in the Pacific Northwest, spring is in full bloom and nature has emerged completely from her winter slumbers.
Curity sponsored this post. Financial-grade security refers to a cybersecurity approach that deals with high-security requirements. These requirements are often the result of compliance with data regulations.
Cloud Native Computing Foundation sponsored this post, in anticipation of KubeCon+CloudNativeCon EU 2022 on May 16-20, in Valencia Spain. It’s no secret that the world is going cloud native.
Martin Mao Martin Mao is the co-founder and CEO of Chronosphere. He was previously at Uber, where he led the development and SRE teams that created and operated M3. Prior to that, he was a technical lead on the EC2 team at AWS and has also worked for Microsoft and Google.
In the first article in this series, we discussed what zero-trust security is and why it matters. In this article, we will take a deep dive into zero trust network access, how it works, and its benefits to the modern organization.
Octopus Deploy sponsored this post. At Octopus, we recently embarked on a new initiative to deliver tools that build opinionated GitHub Actions workflows and Jenkins Pipelines to help customers implement their continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) workflows.
ScyllaDB sponsored this post. Since the NoSQL revolution in database management systems kicked off over a decade ago, organizations of all sizes have benefitted from a key feature: massive scale using relatively inexpensive commodity hardware.
We’re excited to announce the Developer Preview of Smithy’s server and client generators for TypeScript. This enables developers to write concise, type-safe code in the same model-first manner that AWS has used to develop its services.
While low-code/no-code tools can help startups get off the ground quickly, users too soon reach the limits of those platforms.
Who’d thought it? Microsoft, which has embraced Linux in recent years, is now finding and helping to fix Linux security holes. The biggest example of this is Microsoft’s recent discovery of CVE-2022-29799 and CVE-2022-29800.
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