Serverless platforms have been getting a lot of attention. AWS announced a ton of things at their annual user conference, Google announced support for Go in private beta and serverless containers in private alpha, and even Gitlab announced some form of serverless support. With all the big players, it’s easy to overlook the smaller ones — but they’re often the most interesting.
There are many challenges facing software development specifically when building and deploying new microservices as we try to do every day. Using Cloud-Native technologies we can navigate some of those risks, but not all of our development practices, especially security and compliance, have kept up with the speed in which the rest of our tech stack has evolved. In this presentation I cover how JFrog Xray helps you safely deploy your artifacts to production with full confidence.
A smart security camera takes in a high volume of video images and processes those images using a set of machine learning models. Those models can identify interesting snippets of movement throughout the day and decide which ones to keep. Some of the video snippets might contain movement of birds — but others might contain footage of intruders.
Two weeks ago, I had the opportunity to be at AirFrance/KLM in KLM’s Digital Studio to talk about Project Flogo and brainstorm on where they could use it to improve and expand their digital footprint. The team was kind enough to share the recorded video on YouTube.
No matter the metric, serverless is definitely gaining interest. It’s the dream of every developer, supplying the ability to deploy services in the cloud in no time, automatically scale them, enjoy automagic management by a cloud provider—and, most important, keep it all cost effective! How does this dream become a reality?
This presentation covered what serverless is all about and the benefits of running your apps in the serverless environment. It covers the monoliths-microservices-functions progression and when, where, and why to use serverless architecture and how Project Flogo fits in to the overall picture
Innovation at the edge is driven by a whole host of people and personalities, but who makes sure those innovations get into production? Developers.
In this TIBCO Tech Talk, I walk through tools and technologies that help developers build better software, faster.
The talk covers:
The latest updates for Project Flogo, an open-source and ultra-lightweight edge computing platform A brief demo of Flogo and API Scout How to get started on your developer journey with these tools
In today’s world everyone is building apps, most times those apps are event-driven and react to what happens around them. How do you take those apps to, let’s say, a Kubernetes cluster, or let them communicate between cloud and on-premises, and how can developers and non-developers work together using the same tools? Let’s break down the title a bit…
In today’s world everyone is building apps, most times those apps are event-driven and react to what happens around them. How do you take those apps to, let’s say, a Kubernetes cluster, or let them communicate between cloud and on-premises, and how can developers and non-developers work together using the same tools?
As a developer advocate, I’m in the amazing position to talk to lots and lots of developers. Throughout those conversations I hear a lot of the same concerns popping up. Two of those being, “where did I deploy that microservice?” 😩 and “what is the API definition of that microservice again?"😟