DAOPS Foundation—a non-profit organization committed to accelerating global digital transformation through technical standardization—is hosting the first ever DAOPS Meetup on May 18. The virtual meetup will bring together DevOps leaders from Sonatype, DevOps Institute, TARS Foundation and DAOPS Foundation to discuss the latest in software engineering and the latest DAOPS developments.
Here are the four sessions scheduled for the DAOPS Meetup.
Software is the core of digital transformation. In the digital era, the way we produce software also needs to be digitized. Forest Jing, chief evangelist at DAOPS Foundation, explains how they plan to help global enterprises build a high-performance, technical organization based on Lean, Agile, CI/CD, SRE, DevSecOps, Cloud Native, etc., by developing the next generation software engineering infrastructure named ASEM.
TARS is a high-performance RPC framework based on name service and Tars protocol, also integrated administration platform, and implemented hosting-service via flexible schedule. During this session, Mark Shan, chair at Tencent Open Source and TARS Foundation, will share the best DevOps practice using TARS.
Upskilling is a human endeavor and a key contributor to personal and career growth. This past year was like no other. As we progress through the “next normal” of this decade, one thing is certain—digital transformation relies on human skills transformation. DevOps has continued to shift left in recent years, becoming more integral to operational processes as manifests in domains such as secure-development-focused DevSecOps, secure-operations-focused SecOPs, artificial intelligence-based AIOps, machine learning-focused ModelOps, and data management-related DataOps. As each of these evolves, its specific required skill set is being fleshed out and internal IT staff have the opportunity to upskill to meet requirements. Join Dheeraj Nayal, global community ambassador at DevOps Institute, to learn all about DevOps upskilling.
Cameron Townshend, Solution Architect from Sonatype
The adoption of open source in software development has grown exponentially over the past decade. Yet, the time required for hackers to exploit a newly disclosed open source vulnerability has shrunk by 93.5%. As development teams deliver new innovations, adversaries are also upping their game; something we’ve seen in recent high profile and devastating cyberattacks, such as Dependency Confusion.
Adversaries have the intent and ability to exploit security vulnerabilities in the software supply chain—and in some cases plant vulnerabilities themselves. They have increased scale through automation and improved breach success through precision targeting. Cameron Townshend, solution architect at Sonatype, urges developers to fight back by doing the same: automating security directly in the DevOps pipeline.
For more information and to register visit the DAOPS Meetup website.
GitLab Duo Chat is a natural language interface which helps generate code, create tests and access code summarizations.
Expect attacks on the open source software supply chain to accelerate, with attackers automating attacks in common open source software…
The emergence of low/no-code platforms is challenging traditional notions of coding expertise. Gone are the days when coding was an…
Datadog today published a State of DevSecOps report that finds 90% of Java services running in a production environment are…
Linux dodged a bullet. If the XZ exploit had gone undiscovered for only a few more weeks, millions of Linux…
We're going to send email messages that say, "Hope this finds you in a well" and see if anybody notices.