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Join Our Party: The Cloud Native Adventure Brigade


devopsdays Philadelphia - Join Our Party: The Cloud Native Adventure Brigade
Philadelphia, PA
2019-10-22 to 2019-10-23


Description
“In any team you need a tank, a healer, a damage dealer, someone with crowd control abilities, and another who knows iptables.” – OH by @jpetazzo, 2015

Complexity in our software installations increases over time; this is a law of physics (along with how “working in production” means “this will ideally last until the heat death of the universe”). Let’s talk about open source tools we can use for operable software on Kubernetes. Cloud native tooling fuels this whirlwind overview of how to gather your party of adventurers; you’ll leave with a clear picture of how to operate your software in a Kubernetes ecosystem (and avoid being eaten by a grue).


Slides

Join Our Party: The Cloud Native Adventure Brigade (devopsdays Philly 2019) from bridgetkromhout

Tweets

Up next is @bridgetkromhout on cloud native tools! pic.twitter.com/FfaReJa82g

— Seth Vargo (@sethvargo) October 23, 2019

@bridgetkromhout takes the stage to give her talk “Join our party! The Cloud Native Adventure Brigade” at #devopsdaysphilly pic.twitter.com/9zw9NzKIns

— Tom Leaman (@tleam) October 23, 2019

@bridgetkromhout: we have increasing complexity—blame chaos kittens! (Bonus: Catan sighting!) #DevOpsDaysPhilly pic.twitter.com/PdRMKu5NNc

— Jon Moore (@jon_moore) October 23, 2019

Docker wasn’t the first “container” technology - @bridgetkromhout pic.twitter.com/tVUVOgN11d

— Seth Vargo (@sethvargo) October 23, 2019

Please check to see if an OSS project exists that meets your needs and you can contribute to vs starting something from scratch! - @bridgetkromhout #devopsdaysphilly

— Tom Leaman (@tleam) October 23, 2019

Microservices don’t always make things easier: think debugging and local development. Sometimes it makes things a lot harder. - @bridgetkromhout #devopsdaysphilly

— Tom Leaman (@tleam) October 23, 2019

Existing tools in the space can still be used in this new world - @bridgetkromhout pic.twitter.com/1dkWv5v1L1

— Seth Vargo (@sethvargo) October 23, 2019

https://t.co/FjSf8uk7uC looks interesting (via @bridgetkromhout at #devopsdaysphilly pic.twitter.com/S9s25jxThw

— Jon Moore (@jon_moore) October 23, 2019

Want to turn back time? Cher couldn’t do it and neither can you. Rollbacks are a lie. - @bridgetkromhout #devopsdaysphilly

— Tom Leaman (@tleam) October 23, 2019

You might look at this error message and be sad. I’m sad. But @bridgetkromhout highlights @garethr’s kubeval for better errors :) pic.twitter.com/qepoXQt5JI

— Seth Vargo (@sethvargo) October 23, 2019

I really need to find some time to grok https://t.co/M2p1yFf1nk as well (h/t @bridgetkromhout at #DevOpsDaysPhilly)

— Jon Moore (@jon_moore) October 23, 2019

Word of warning from @bridgetkromhout on cloud native observability: don’t just build on the backs of incident past. Your o11y tools should be flexible enough to help in situations you haven’t even thought of yet. #devopsdaysphilly

Also, @mipsytipsy shoutout pic.twitter.com/xILtjdndAj

— Tom Leaman (@tleam) October 23, 2019

When a big company starts an open source project, consider open sourcing first, engaging the community, and developing in the open, says @bridgetkromhout at #DevOpsDaysPhilly #OpenSource

— Jon Moore (@jon_moore) October 23, 2019

. @bridgetkromhout invites us to join the Cloud Native adventure through #opensource! #devopsdaysphilly pic.twitter.com/JOdT0FD9I7

— Jon Moore (@jon_moore) October 23, 2019

You don’t have to be an OSS developer to contribute to OSS! All it takes is checking out the repo, trying the software and opening an issue if you run into one. @bridgetkromhout #devopsdaysphilly

— Tom Leaman (@tleam) October 23, 2019

© 2020 Bridget Kromhout