Bottom Line: Putting DevOps first by simplifying workflow orchestration removes roadblocks that stand in the way of getting more apps and services developed and released to production. Touchless ...
Lately, with the rising automation and autonomy of databases, servers, networks, and everything else, there's been talk of a new mode of software delivery: "NoOps." That is, new code is pipelined -- ...
DevOps teams accelerate the development of applications and services to deploy and update IT products at the speed of the modern marketplace. The digital economy moves at internet speed. Accordingly, ...
I recall continually reinstalling operating systems and software to reproduce and fix EHR software bugs. Then came long virtual machines. All I had to do was spin up a fresh image, and proceed. The ...
Legacy security tools no longer work, as they can’t see inside containers, handle the dynamic nature of Kubernetes, or scale across multi-cloud deployments. Proprietary security tools can’t keep up ...
The earliest mentions of DevOps date back to the 2008 Agile Conference and a talk on Agile Infrastructure by Andrew Clay Shafer and Patrick Debois. At that time, businesses were experiencing problems ...
DevOps is aimed at converting the distinct steps of application development and support into a continuous workflow, which in turn should make the enterprise itself more agile in an increasingly ...
Author's note: Can IT be 99% automated? We've seen the growth of serverless computing and a range of "Ops" approaches to automating software and data pipelines. This is an update to a piece originally ...