Chris
Riley (@hoardinginfo) is obsessed with bringing modern technologies to those who need to solve real-world problems, going from unicorn to reality. Chris speaks and engages with end users regularly in the areas of DevOps, SecOps and App Dev. He works for Splunk as a Tech Advocate and is a regular contributor to industry blogs such as ContainerJournal.com, DevOps.com and Sweetcode.io. He is also the host of the podcast, Developers Eating the World.
Where is DevOps? Searching for it is like querying a rainbow for pots of gold. No single element in a development team’s lifecycle defines them as a DevOps-enabled organization. Were anything the ...
When the morning news starts talking about A/B Testing of course my ears perk up, and I eat my cereal a little slower. But when it becomes a conversation about how ethical ...
DevOps will disrupt management styles, speed the end to ancient IT practices, and flatten away processes that don’t focus on doing more with less. But DevOps is not the only dev-led movement ...
We all think that we understand variables very well. After all, if you are a coder, a variable is something you create and use every day. But when it comes to DevOps ...
How much time do you spend optimizing your delivery pipeline? My guess is none. Many teams have figured out great ways to automate their releases, and some even automate testing and monitoring. ...
Shame on you! Yes you, because there is a good chance you are thinking about DevOps all wrong. If you are a developer you might be thinking DevOps means IT goes away and ...
Recently I did an interview with IBMs Ken Walker. Co-lead on the Eclipse Orion Project, a cloud-based integrated development environment (IDE). My interest in Cloud IDEs peaked at the beginning of the ...
Maybe you have already heard the terms "Programmable Infrastructure" and "Infrastructure as code". But even if you have not, if you are interested in DevOps it's something you need to know. Most ...
Perhaps wrongly, "DevOps" has been associated with "new" and "that thing for the cool kids" and the "hipster developers". This is used both as an excuse and as a source of animosity ...