Lightning talk given in 10 minutes, getting a container-based Cloud development platform installed in just minutes.
Session link: http://www.openslava.sk/2017/#/sessions/19
Intro to Electron - Creating Desktop Applications with HTML5Felicia O'Garro
Electron is an open-source framework that allows developers to create desktop applications using JavaScript, HTML, and CSS. It allows building cross-platform desktop apps that can be installed and run locally on a computer like regular native apps. Apps built with Electron can access low-level system features and integrate normal web app technologies and libraries. To create an Electron app, developers install Node.js, set up a new project using NPM or Yarn, install Electron, and launch the app using "electron ." in the command line. Electron apps emit events like "ready" and "window-all-closed" and allow creating browser windows, menus, notifications, and using IPC for interprocess communication.
Devops and Immutable infrastructure - Cloud Expo 2015 NYCJohn Willis
You often hear the two titles of "DevOps" and "Immutable Infrastructure" used independently.
In his session at DevOps Summit, John Willis, Technical Evangelist for Docker, will cover the union between the two topics and why this is important. He will cover an overview of Immutable Infrastructure then show how an Immutable Continuous Delivery pipeline can be applied as a best practice for "DevOps." He will end the session with some interesting case study examples.
Infoxchange was facing infrastructure and cultural issues in 2012, with aging servers, fragile application deployments, and a blame culture. By 2014, through initiatives like eliminating technical debt, modernizing infrastructure with Docker and Puppet, integrating development and operations teams, and facilitating frequent production deployments, Infoxchange transformed its platform and culture to better support its mission of delivering technology for social justice. The changes enabled Infoxchange to reduce firefighting, increase deployment frequency from monthly to daily, and have happier and more collaborative Dev and Ops teams.
This document discusses Cloud Foundry, an open platform as a service (PaaS). It begins with introductions of the author Andy Piper and his role as a Cloud Foundry developer advocate. It then discusses why an open cloud platform is important, defining Cloud Foundry and its key characteristics like being open source and deployable on various clouds. It covers Java support on Cloud Foundry including buildpacks and how various Java applications and frameworks are detected and run. It emphasizes the flexibility and portability Cloud Foundry provides for Java applications.
Intro to Spring Boot and Spring Cloud OSS - Twin Cities Cloud Foundry MeetupJosh Ghiloni
This document summarizes an introductory presentation on Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. The presentation covered an introduction to Spring Boot including its accelerated time to market and production-ready features. It then discussed the origins of Spring Cloud and why it is useful for building microservice architectures. Key features of Spring Cloud like external configuration with Config Server, service discovery with Eureka, and failing gracefully with Hystrix were overviewed. The presentation concluded with a demo of including Spring Cloud in applications.
Smart Platform Infrastructure with AWSJames Huston
Learn from some of our insights and create a smart infrastructure that let's your team sleep at night!
Presented @DevOpsDays_CLT Feb 2017 by James Huston @hustonjs
Scaling on Amazon AWS : From the perspective of AWS, and the application stack. Talks about the available options on AWS, and also the architecture of the scalable application.
My read and summarization of the booklet on devops by mike loukides from O Reilly, great read for starters.. a good reference on automation, inreastructure as code
Intro to Electron - Creating Desktop Applications with HTML5Felicia O'Garro
Electron is an open-source framework that allows developers to create desktop applications using JavaScript, HTML, and CSS. It allows building cross-platform desktop apps that can be installed and run locally on a computer like regular native apps. Apps built with Electron can access low-level system features and integrate normal web app technologies and libraries. To create an Electron app, developers install Node.js, set up a new project using NPM or Yarn, install Electron, and launch the app using "electron ." in the command line. Electron apps emit events like "ready" and "window-all-closed" and allow creating browser windows, menus, notifications, and using IPC for interprocess communication.
Devops and Immutable infrastructure - Cloud Expo 2015 NYCJohn Willis
You often hear the two titles of "DevOps" and "Immutable Infrastructure" used independently.
In his session at DevOps Summit, John Willis, Technical Evangelist for Docker, will cover the union between the two topics and why this is important. He will cover an overview of Immutable Infrastructure then show how an Immutable Continuous Delivery pipeline can be applied as a best practice for "DevOps." He will end the session with some interesting case study examples.
Infoxchange was facing infrastructure and cultural issues in 2012, with aging servers, fragile application deployments, and a blame culture. By 2014, through initiatives like eliminating technical debt, modernizing infrastructure with Docker and Puppet, integrating development and operations teams, and facilitating frequent production deployments, Infoxchange transformed its platform and culture to better support its mission of delivering technology for social justice. The changes enabled Infoxchange to reduce firefighting, increase deployment frequency from monthly to daily, and have happier and more collaborative Dev and Ops teams.
This document discusses Cloud Foundry, an open platform as a service (PaaS). It begins with introductions of the author Andy Piper and his role as a Cloud Foundry developer advocate. It then discusses why an open cloud platform is important, defining Cloud Foundry and its key characteristics like being open source and deployable on various clouds. It covers Java support on Cloud Foundry including buildpacks and how various Java applications and frameworks are detected and run. It emphasizes the flexibility and portability Cloud Foundry provides for Java applications.
Intro to Spring Boot and Spring Cloud OSS - Twin Cities Cloud Foundry MeetupJosh Ghiloni
This document summarizes an introductory presentation on Spring Boot and Spring Cloud. The presentation covered an introduction to Spring Boot including its accelerated time to market and production-ready features. It then discussed the origins of Spring Cloud and why it is useful for building microservice architectures. Key features of Spring Cloud like external configuration with Config Server, service discovery with Eureka, and failing gracefully with Hystrix were overviewed. The presentation concluded with a demo of including Spring Cloud in applications.
Smart Platform Infrastructure with AWSJames Huston
Learn from some of our insights and create a smart infrastructure that let's your team sleep at night!
Presented @DevOpsDays_CLT Feb 2017 by James Huston @hustonjs
Scaling on Amazon AWS : From the perspective of AWS, and the application stack. Talks about the available options on AWS, and also the architecture of the scalable application.
My read and summarization of the booklet on devops by mike loukides from O Reilly, great read for starters.. a good reference on automation, inreastructure as code
Ansible is and automation platform that can be used to perform various tasks such as configuration management,provisioning,security orchestration.
It is open source ,agentless, powerfull and simple. This presentation will give an idea how to implement ansible in information security .
Today almost every product has an API, to integrate in other products or to made the data available to the outside world. Most API’s are using traditional patterns and technology. With the rise of Angular, React and other modern frameworks there is a need for non blocking API’s. Meet Reactive streams, like Spring Webflux, to super charge your API.
In this session I will tell about and show you Reactive API’s and more
This document discusses how continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery (CD) can help software teams automatically merge code changes, deploy updates, and reduce errors. It recommends a simple stack using Gitlab for version control and CI, TYPO3 Surf for automated deployments and testing, and Ansible for infrastructure automation. The document argues that the proServer is well-suited for CI/CD with these tools and that the company punkt.de can help organizations set up and improve their CI/CD processes.
This document discusses how Move Networks, which was acquired by Echostar Advanced Technologies, has used Splunk since 2008. It summarizes how Splunk has evolved from being used as a forensics tool for troubleshooting to now being used across multiple teams for real-time monitoring, customer insights, product launches, and more. Splunk has helped improve operations, increase customer satisfaction, and answer questions faster by consolidating and indexing logs from various systems and applications.
Micro Services - Neither Micro Nor ServiceEberhard Wolff
Micro Services are a new approach to software architecture. This presentation discusses how small they should be - and wether they are really service - in the SOA sense.
Gartner Infrastructure and Operations Summit Berlin 2015 - DevOps JourneyKelly Looney
The document discusses the DevOps journey of a large online gaming company with separate sports betting and poker/casino divisions that were merged. It outlines the challenges of integrating different code bases and cultures. Key steps taken include adopting Agile, moving to Git/Jenkins, implementing monitoring with AppDynamics, and moving to containers. Automating testing environments and adopting continuous delivery principles helped improve quality and allow smaller, more frequent changes. Monitoring provided visibility and helped identify issues and refactoring needs. The changes helped bring development and operations teams together.
The document summarizes Mozilla's migration of its Socorro crash analysis system from its original infrastructure to a new architecture. It describes Socorro and its purpose of analyzing crash data. It then discusses the rationale for migrating to improve stability, the planning process, building out the new infrastructure with automation and configuration management, load testing the new system, troubleshooting issues during the migration, and lessons learned from the process.
Authors: Alexey Konoplev and Dzmitry Danchanka, www.eastbanctech.com
This deck provides an overview of the MS build\\2016 Conference:
- keynotes and most noticeable announcements,
- details on selected sessions attended.
It is intended for Tech Leads and Developers who are interested in web, mobile, and cloud technologies.
This document summarizes a meetup about serverless technologies. It introduces the organizer and details that the meetup group was started as an experiment and has grown to 140 members who meet monthly. The key aspects of serverless technologies highlighted are that they are fast evolving and poorly documented. The most important things about the meetup are to join online discussions, present topics, provide contributions and ideas, and help spread awareness of serverless technologies.
The document summarizes updates to the OpenStack Dashboard (Horizon) project for the Essex release. Key points include Horizon becoming an officially supported OpenStack project, growth in contributors and implemented features, and focus on establishing a sustainable development process and user base. Upcoming priorities include improving support for additional OpenStack components and a proposed design process.
Building Elixir App Release with Distillery and DockerMickey Chen
This document provides instructions for deploying an Elixir application using Distillery. It recommends starting with a "Hello World" program and using Distillery as a replacement for exrm to build releases. It cautions that releases built on Mac can only run on Mac hosts and advises building releases within a Docker container to avoid platform dependencies. Steps are provided to build a Docker image containing a release that can then be copied outside the container.
This webinar discusses the gaps that prevent enterprises from fully automating the DevOps lifecycle and how technologies like Containers and Sandboxes can assist with crossing that chasm.
CloudOpen 2014 - Mixing Your Open Source Cloud CocktailMark Hinkle
This document provides an overview of Mark Hinkle's presentation on mixing open source cloud technologies. The presentation covers topics like vetting open source cloud projects, infrastructure as a service platforms like OpenStack, container technologies like Docker, platform as a service options, software defined networking, and various related open source projects. The goal is to help people understand how to evaluate and integrate different open source cloud components.
This document discusses deploying OpenStack with Vagrant and Chef. It describes OpenStack as an open source cloud operating system and explains how Vagrant can be used to build and distribute virtual environments on a laptop. It provides commands to install VirtualBox, Vagrant, Chef and clone an OpenStack cookbook repository to deploy an OpenStack environment with one command. The document also discusses the OpenStack Dashboard project for managing OpenStack compute resources through a web interface.
This document discusses deploying an ASP.NET Core app on Microsoft Azure. It introduces ASP.NET Core as a new open-source and cross-platform framework for developing modern cloud-based web apps using .NET. It demonstrates publishing an ASP.NET Core app directly to Azure from Visual Studio, using WebDeploy, scripts, and Git for continuous deployment. It also covers deploying to Azure with Docker by creating Docker images and deploying to an Azure Container Service.
NCDevCon 2017 - Cross Platform Mobile AppsJohn M. Wargo
Building cross-platform mobile apps using open source tools. A manic paced session where I build the same app across 4 different open source mobile development frameworks.
The challenge of application distribution - Introduction to Docker (2014 dec ...Sébastien Portebois
Live recording with the demos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0XRcmJEiZOM
Contents
- The application distribution challenge
- The current solutions
- Introduction to Docker, Containers, and the Matrix from Hell
- Why people care: Separation of Concerns
- Technical Discussion
- Ecosystem, momentum
- How to build Docker images
- How to make containers talk to each other, how to handle data persistence
- Demo 1: isolation
- Demo 2: real case - installing Go Math! Academy, tail –f containers, unit tests
Ansible is and automation platform that can be used to perform various tasks such as configuration management,provisioning,security orchestration.
It is open source ,agentless, powerfull and simple. This presentation will give an idea how to implement ansible in information security .
Today almost every product has an API, to integrate in other products or to made the data available to the outside world. Most API’s are using traditional patterns and technology. With the rise of Angular, React and other modern frameworks there is a need for non blocking API’s. Meet Reactive streams, like Spring Webflux, to super charge your API.
In this session I will tell about and show you Reactive API’s and more
This document discusses how continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery (CD) can help software teams automatically merge code changes, deploy updates, and reduce errors. It recommends a simple stack using Gitlab for version control and CI, TYPO3 Surf for automated deployments and testing, and Ansible for infrastructure automation. The document argues that the proServer is well-suited for CI/CD with these tools and that the company punkt.de can help organizations set up and improve their CI/CD processes.
This document discusses how Move Networks, which was acquired by Echostar Advanced Technologies, has used Splunk since 2008. It summarizes how Splunk has evolved from being used as a forensics tool for troubleshooting to now being used across multiple teams for real-time monitoring, customer insights, product launches, and more. Splunk has helped improve operations, increase customer satisfaction, and answer questions faster by consolidating and indexing logs from various systems and applications.
Micro Services - Neither Micro Nor ServiceEberhard Wolff
Micro Services are a new approach to software architecture. This presentation discusses how small they should be - and wether they are really service - in the SOA sense.
Gartner Infrastructure and Operations Summit Berlin 2015 - DevOps JourneyKelly Looney
The document discusses the DevOps journey of a large online gaming company with separate sports betting and poker/casino divisions that were merged. It outlines the challenges of integrating different code bases and cultures. Key steps taken include adopting Agile, moving to Git/Jenkins, implementing monitoring with AppDynamics, and moving to containers. Automating testing environments and adopting continuous delivery principles helped improve quality and allow smaller, more frequent changes. Monitoring provided visibility and helped identify issues and refactoring needs. The changes helped bring development and operations teams together.
The document summarizes Mozilla's migration of its Socorro crash analysis system from its original infrastructure to a new architecture. It describes Socorro and its purpose of analyzing crash data. It then discusses the rationale for migrating to improve stability, the planning process, building out the new infrastructure with automation and configuration management, load testing the new system, troubleshooting issues during the migration, and lessons learned from the process.
Authors: Alexey Konoplev and Dzmitry Danchanka, www.eastbanctech.com
This deck provides an overview of the MS build\\2016 Conference:
- keynotes and most noticeable announcements,
- details on selected sessions attended.
It is intended for Tech Leads and Developers who are interested in web, mobile, and cloud technologies.
This document summarizes a meetup about serverless technologies. It introduces the organizer and details that the meetup group was started as an experiment and has grown to 140 members who meet monthly. The key aspects of serverless technologies highlighted are that they are fast evolving and poorly documented. The most important things about the meetup are to join online discussions, present topics, provide contributions and ideas, and help spread awareness of serverless technologies.
The document summarizes updates to the OpenStack Dashboard (Horizon) project for the Essex release. Key points include Horizon becoming an officially supported OpenStack project, growth in contributors and implemented features, and focus on establishing a sustainable development process and user base. Upcoming priorities include improving support for additional OpenStack components and a proposed design process.
Building Elixir App Release with Distillery and DockerMickey Chen
This document provides instructions for deploying an Elixir application using Distillery. It recommends starting with a "Hello World" program and using Distillery as a replacement for exrm to build releases. It cautions that releases built on Mac can only run on Mac hosts and advises building releases within a Docker container to avoid platform dependencies. Steps are provided to build a Docker image containing a release that can then be copied outside the container.
This webinar discusses the gaps that prevent enterprises from fully automating the DevOps lifecycle and how technologies like Containers and Sandboxes can assist with crossing that chasm.
CloudOpen 2014 - Mixing Your Open Source Cloud CocktailMark Hinkle
This document provides an overview of Mark Hinkle's presentation on mixing open source cloud technologies. The presentation covers topics like vetting open source cloud projects, infrastructure as a service platforms like OpenStack, container technologies like Docker, platform as a service options, software defined networking, and various related open source projects. The goal is to help people understand how to evaluate and integrate different open source cloud components.
This document discusses deploying OpenStack with Vagrant and Chef. It describes OpenStack as an open source cloud operating system and explains how Vagrant can be used to build and distribute virtual environments on a laptop. It provides commands to install VirtualBox, Vagrant, Chef and clone an OpenStack cookbook repository to deploy an OpenStack environment with one command. The document also discusses the OpenStack Dashboard project for managing OpenStack compute resources through a web interface.
This document discusses deploying an ASP.NET Core app on Microsoft Azure. It introduces ASP.NET Core as a new open-source and cross-platform framework for developing modern cloud-based web apps using .NET. It demonstrates publishing an ASP.NET Core app directly to Azure from Visual Studio, using WebDeploy, scripts, and Git for continuous deployment. It also covers deploying to Azure with Docker by creating Docker images and deploying to an Azure Container Service.
NCDevCon 2017 - Cross Platform Mobile AppsJohn M. Wargo
Building cross-platform mobile apps using open source tools. A manic paced session where I build the same app across 4 different open source mobile development frameworks.
The challenge of application distribution - Introduction to Docker (2014 dec ...Sébastien Portebois
Live recording with the demos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0XRcmJEiZOM
Contents
- The application distribution challenge
- The current solutions
- Introduction to Docker, Containers, and the Matrix from Hell
- Why people care: Separation of Concerns
- Technical Discussion
- Ecosystem, momentum
- How to build Docker images
- How to make containers talk to each other, how to handle data persistence
- Demo 1: isolation
- Demo 2: real case - installing Go Math! Academy, tail –f containers, unit tests
Dataverse can be deployed using Docker containers to improve maintainability and portability. The document discusses how Docker can isolate applications and their dependencies into portable containers. It provides an example of deploying Dataverse as a set of microservices within Docker containers. Instructions are included on building Docker images, running containers, and managing the containers and images through commands and tools like Docker Desktop, Docker Hub, and Docker Compose.
Write Once and REALLY Run Anywhere | OpenStack Summit HK 2013dotCloud
The document outlines the agenda for the OpenStack Summit in November 2013. The agenda includes sessions on Docker and its ecosystem, using Docker with OpenStack and Rackspace, and a cross-cloud deployment demo. Docker is presented as a solution for developing and deploying applications across multiple environments by encapsulating code and dependencies in portable containers. It can help eliminate inconsistencies between development, testing, and production environments.
The document summarizes Day 2 of DockerCon. It discusses Docker being ready for production use with solutions for building, shipping, and running containers. It highlights Docker Hub growth and improvements to quality. Business Insider's journey with Docker is presented, covering lessons learned around local development and using Puppet and Docker Hub. Future directions discussed include orchestration tools and image security.
This presentation discusses how to achieve continuous delivery, leveraging on docker containers, here used as universal application artifacts. It has been presented at Voxxed '15 Bucharest.
The document outlines the agenda for the OpenStack Summit in November 2013, including presentations on Docker and its ecosystem, how Docker can be used with OpenStack and Rackspace, and a demonstration of cross-cloud application deployment using Docker. Docker is presented as a solution to the "matrix from hell" of running applications across different environments by providing lightweight, portable containers that can run anywhere regardless of the operating system. The summit aims to educate attendees on Docker and showcase its integration with OpenStack for simplified and efficient application deployment and management across multiple clouds.
"Project Tye to Tie .NET Microservices", Oleg KarasikFwdays
In this talk, Oleg will explain and show how you can simplify (and maybe even speed up) the development of modern .NET applications based on micro-service architecture and aimed at deployment in Kubernetes. We will also talk about a young and promising Tye project from Microsoft. We will look at what the Tye project is and how it simplifies the development process, both with examples from several .NET microservices and with more complex examples that involve interaction with external services.
What we talk about when we talk about DevOpsRicard Clau
This document discusses DevOps concepts and tools. It begins by outlining common problems companies face with development and operations, such as deployments being events and environments differing. It then defines DevOps as developers and operations working together to deliver value through automation, continuous integration/delivery, and infrastructure as code. The document recommends starting with CI/CD and configuration management to gradually introduce DevOps. It provides overviews and demonstrations of Packer, Ansible, and Terraform as example tools.
- Cordova allows developers to build mobile apps using HTML, CSS and JavaScript that can be deployed across platforms like iOS, Android, Windows Phone etc.
- It works by wrapping web content in a native container, allowing access to native device capabilities through JavaScript APIs.
- Developers can write code once and deploy it to multiple app stores, avoiding the need to learn different languages for each platform.
Karthik Gaekwad presented on containers and microservices. He discussed the evolution of DevOps and how containers and microservices fit within the DevOps paradigm by allowing for collaboration between development and operations teams. He defined containers, microservices, and common containerization concepts. Gaekwad also provided examples of how organizations are using containers for standardization, continuous integration and delivery pipelines, and hosting legacy applications.
Hey curious friend, let's play a game. How can we bring together two different companies, an established enterprise with traditional dev and ops having cultural differences when working together with a DevOps champion startup. In the middle exists a number of real use cases on how we are bringing DevOps culture with Docker to Atos Worldline. In my talk I will discuss the first use cases for Docker at Atos Worldline, where we are today, learnings and benefits until now, our future technology stack and how Docker is changing our human stack a.k.a. how we communicate and work together.
Presentation about docker from Java User Group in Ostrava CZ (23th of November 2015). Presented by Martin Damovsky (@damovsky).
Demos are available at https://github.com/damovsky/jug-ostrava-docker
.docker : How to deploy Digital Experience in a container, drinking a cup of ...ICON UK EVENTS Limited
Matteo Bisi / Factor-y srl
Andrea Fontana / SOWRE SA
Docker is one of best technologies available on market to install and run and deploy application fastest , securely like never before. In this session you will see how to deploy a complete digital experience inside containers that will enable you to deploy a Portal drinking a cup of coffee. We will start from a deep overview of docker: what is docker, where you can find that, what is a container and why you should use container instead a complete Virtual Machine. After the overview we will enter inside how install IBM software inside a container using docker files that will run the setup using silent setup script. At last part we will talk about possible use of this configuration in real work scenario like staging or development environment or in WebSphere Portal farm setup.
Docker is an open source platform that allows developers and sysadmins to build, ship, and run distributed applications anywhere. It provides portability, standardized environments, and the ability to rapidly scale applications up and down. Many enterprises are using Docker to build continuous delivery pipelines where code commits trigger automated builds and deployment of new Docker containers. This allows applications to be deployed more frequently and consistently across development, testing, and production environments.
OpenStack, Containers, and Docker: The Future of Application Deployment
Twenty years ago, developers built static applications on well-defined stacks that ran on proprietary, monolithic hardware. Developers today want freedom to build applications using their choice of services and stacks and, ideally, want to be able to run those applications on any available hardware. Of course, this raises questions about service interaction, the practicality of migrating applications across environments, and the challenges of managing unlimited combinations of services and hardware environment.
By promoting an opensource approach to flexible and inter-operable infrastructure, OpenStack goes a long way towards achieving this vision of the future. This talk discusses the application and platform side of the equation, and the interplay between OpenStack, Container technology (e.g. LXC), and the opensource Docker.io project. Docker.io enables any application and its dependencies to be deployed as lightweight containers that run consistently virtually anywhere. The same containerized application that runs on a developer's laptop can run consistently on a bare metal server, an OpenStack cluster, a Rackspace cloud, a VM,etc. While providing isolation and compatibility, containers have significant size, performance, and deployment advantages over traditional VMs.
Recently, the community created an integration between Docker and OpenStack Nova, opening up exciting possibilities for web scale application deployment, continuous integration and deployment, private PaaS, and hybrid cloud. This session will give an introduction to Docker and containers in the context of OpenStack, and will then demonstrate cross-environment deployment of applications.
This document discusses using Docker containers with OpenStack for application deployment. It begins with an introduction to Docker, describing its growth in usage and integration with various tools. Docker is presented as a solution to issues around deploying applications across different environments and hardware by providing lightweight, portable containers that package code and dependencies. The document demonstrates how Docker can be used with OpenStack through a new hypervisor that allows OpenStack to deploy and manage Linux containers, enabling control of Docker through the OpenStack dashboard.
Ähnlich wie Openslava 2017 - Real appdev in the cloud on your laptop in minutes (20)
Power Up with Podman - Cloud Native + K8s MeetupEric D. Schabell
Curious about containers beyond Docker? There’s a new generation of containers on the scene, Podman! Supporting secure, rootless containers for Kubernetes microservices, it was designed and built with the cloud in mind. Benefitting from the lessons learned out in the open from Docker, this next generation of containers will quickly become a trusted daily driver in your dev workflow.
Covering what you need to know as an end-user from the UI to the backend, sharing a real world use case leveraging Podman for open source observability workshops https://o11y-workshops.gitlab.io. Paige will share how Podman and the adorable seal mascots Caitlín, Maighréad and Róisín have transformed her local development!
Choose Your Own Adventure - Cloud Native Observability PitfallsEric D. Schabell
Are you looking at your organization's efforts to enter or expand into the cloud native landscape and feeling a bit daunted by the vast expanse of information surrounding cloud native observability? When you're moving so fast with agile practices across your DevOps, SRE's, and platform engineering teams, it's no wonder this can seem a bit confusing. Unfortunately, the choices being made have a great impact on both your business, your budgets, and the ultimate success of your cloud native initiatives. That hasty decision up front leads to big headaches very quickly down the road. In this talk, I'll introduce the problem facing everyone with cloud native observability followed by 3 common mistakes that I'm seeing organizations make and how you can avoid them!
Key takeaways - This session is never the same twice as you the audience / attendees choose from a list of cloud native observability pitfalls that DevOps have to contend with in their daily cloud native lives! Super engaging and fun to tour the challenges that interest you most!
OpenShift Commons Paris - Choose Your Own Observability AdventureEric D. Schabell
Great observability begins with great instrumentation! We know it's hard to decide where to start your observability journey, so we've come up with a perfect introduction to observability workshop collection getting you hands-on with the best open source cloud native observability projects available. Attendees can pick their own cloud native observability learning path (https://o11y-workshops.gitlab.io) in this session from the following workshops:
OpenTelemetry (traces) - Learn how to adopt OpenTelemetry by instrumenting a sample application with spans and metrics. You’ll leave with an understanding of how telemetry travels and be ready to bring OpenTelemetry to your project. The workshop is self-paced and available online, so attendees can continue to explore after the event: https://o11y-workshops.gitlab.io/workshop-opentelemetry
Prometheus (metrics) - During the workshop, you will install Prometheus, collect metrics, and learn how to effectively run it in your observability stack. The workshop is self-paced and available online, so attendees can continue to explore after the event: https://o11y-workshops.gitlab.io/workshop-prometheus
Fluent Bit (pipelines) - This workshop will guide you through the open source project Fluent Bit, what it is, a basic installation, and setting up a first cloud native observability pipeline project. The workshop is self-paced and available online, so attendees can continue to explore after the event: https://o11y-workshops.gitlab.io/workshop-fluentbit
Perses (visualization) - Great observability is impossible without great visualization! Learn how to adopt truly open visualization by installing Perses, exploring the provided tooling, tinkering with its API, and then get your hands dirty building your first dashboard in no time! The workshop is self-paced and available online, so attendees can continue to explore after the event: https://o11y-workshops.gitlab.io/workshop-perses
Checking the pulse of your cloud native architectureEric D. Schabell
The daily choices you make as an engineer when shipping code contributes to the feedback loop. In cloud native environments a surprising amount of data is generated from the application layer down to infrastructure and along the delivery path. Regulatory and compliance pressures force us to store audit and observability data. Understanding the pressures on our engineering teams around the collection, storage, and maintenance of your cloud data can mean the difference between successful teams and burnout. Let us take you on a journey, looking closely at the current state of observability based on a recent research conducted with 500 cloud native engineers and find out what it’s like to be in the trenches.
3 Pitfalls Everyone Should Avoid with Cloud DataEric D. Schabell
The daily hype is all around you. From cloud native, multicloud, to hybrid cloud, this is the path to your digital future. The choices you make as a developer does not preclude the daily work of enhancing your customer's experience and agile delivery of your applications. With all this delivery and infrastructure, there is a lot of data generated when engaging with any cloud experience. Regulatory and compliance pressures force us to store audit and observability data. Understanding the pitfalls around the collection, storage, and maintenance of your cloud data can mean the difference between bankruptcy and success with our cloud native strategy. Let us take you on a journey, looking closely at the decisions you are making as a developer delivering and dealing with monitoring your applications. Join us for an hour of power, where real customer experiences are used to highlight the three top lessons learned as their developers transitioned their data needs into cloud native environments.
Key Takeaways: Attendees to this session will gain insights into the data explosion that is part of the large scale cloud native world. Real customer experiences are used to highlight the three top lessons learned as their developers transitioned their data needs into cloud native environments.
Observability For You and Me with OpenTelemetry (with demo)Eric D. Schabell
Are you interested in dipping your toes in the cloud native observability waters, but as an engineer you are not sure where to get started with tracing problems through your microservices and application landscapes on Kubernetes? Then this is the session for you, where we take you on your first steps in an active open-source project that offers a buffet of languages, challenges, and opportunities for getting started with telemetry data.
The project is called openTelemetry, but before diving into the specifics, we’ll start with de-mystifying key concepts and terms such as observability, telemetry, instrumentation, cardinality, percentile to lay a foundation. After understanding the nuts and bolts of observability and distributed traces, we’ll explore the openTelemetry community; its Special Interest Groups (SIGs), repositories, and how to become not only an end-user, but possibly a contributor.We will wrap up with an overview of the components in this project, such as the Collector, the OpenTelemetry protocol (OTLP), its APIs, and its SDKs.
Attendees will leave with an understanding of key observability concepts, become grounded in distributed tracing terminology, be aware of the components of openTelemetry, and know how to take their first steps to an open-source contribution!
Key Takeaways: Open source, vendor neutral instrumentation is an exciting new reality as the industry standardizes on openTelemetry for observability. OpenTelemetry is on a mission to enable effective observability by making high-quality, portable telemetry ubiquitous. The world of observability and monitoring today has a steep learning curve and in order to achieve ubiquity, the project would benefit from growing our contributor community. (includes demo)
3 Pitfalls Everyone Should Avoid with Cloud Native ObservabilityEric D. Schabell
Are you looking at your organization's efforts to enter or expand into the cloud native landscape and feeling a bit daunted by the vast expanse of information surrounding cloud native observability? When you're moving so fast with agile practices across your DevOps, SRE's, and platform engineering teams, it's no wonder this can seem a bit confusing. Unfortunately, the choices being made have a great impact on both your business, your budgets, and the ultimate success of your cloud native initiatives. That hasty decision up front leads to big headaches very quickly down the road. In this talk, I'll introduce the problem facing everyone with cloud native observability followed by 3 common mistakes that I'm seeing organizations make and how you can avoid them!
Are you interested in dipping your toes in the cloud native observability waters, but as an engineer you are not sure where to get started with tracing your microservices and applications on Kubernetes? Then this is the session for you, where we take you on your first steps in an active open-source project that offers a buffet of opportunities for getting started with telemetry data. The project, openTelemetry (OTEL), is where we start with de-mystifying key concepts and terms such as observability, telemetry, instrumentation to lay a foundation. Then we’ll explore the OTEL community and how to become not only an end-user, but possibly a contributor.We will wrap up with an overview of the components in this project, such as the Collector, the OTEL protocol (OTLP), its APIs, and its SDKs. Attendees will leave with an understanding of key observability concepts in distributed tracing!
Key takeaways: Open source, vendor neutral instrumentation is an exciting new reality as the industry standardizes on openTelemetry for observability. OpenTelemetry is on a mission to enable effective observability by making high-quality, portable telemetry ubiquitous. The world of observability and monitoring today has a steep learning curve and in order to achieve ubiquity, the project would benefit from growing our contributor community.
The CNCF Ambassador program is designed for individuals who are passionate about cloud native technologies and want to contribute to the community. Becoming an ambassador is a great opportunity to enhance your knowledge, gain visibility within the industry, and help drive the adoption of cloud-native technologies. The road to becoming an ambassador might seem intimidating, scary, or just impossible, but it does not have to be. We've put together a roadmap that leads you to the title of CNCF Ambassador. In this session a current ambassador and the community manager share the stage to bring you insights into achieving the title of CNCF Ambassador. Whether you are a developer, student, or seasoned professional, this talk provides attendees with 5 actionable insights needed to take your cloud-native skills to the next level and become a CNCF Ambassador. Join us to learn how you can contribute to the community and advance your career by taking the road to the CNCF Ambassador community.
Cloud Native Bedtime Stories - Terrifying Execs into ActionEric D. Schabell
Anyone embedded in the cloud native teams in any organization can voice their frustrations at not being taken seriously by their executive decision makers. This leads to way too much on-call stress, frustrations, and eventual burnout. With research showing us DevOps spending over 10 hrs a week on issues in their environments, we could all use quick action by our executives when we find ways to fix our cloud native issues. The trick is to tell the tales we accumulate in such a way as to engage, inspire, and effect change in our organizations. This session provides attendees with ample cloud native bedtime stories, tricks that make your tales land within the executive human mind, and actionable insights to head home with immediate results. Join me for a half hour of power where you are empowered to tell better cloud native stories for better executive decision outcomes.
Key takeaways - Attendees to this session will be given a small yet powerful set of examples to help them effectively tell their cloud native observability tales to motivate their executives into action. Humans listen to stories (tales) more than they pay attention to pages of charts, dashboards, and data. Learn how to tell your tales, terrifying and educational, with tips and tricks to engage your executives into believing your need for organization’s observability improvements.
SRECon EU 2023 - Three Phases to Better Observability OutcomesEric D. Schabell
We all want to have better business outcomes for our organizations solutions, such as faster remediation of problems, easier problem detection, greater revenue generation, happier customers, and engineering teams that can remain focused on delivering more business value. The problem with the popular three pillars (metrics, logs, tracing) is that you are talking about technology aspects and not about solutions. It's like talking about the tools in a mechanics toolbox used to make your convertible run again, instead of focusing on the blue smoke coming out of the exhaust, the rising engine temperature, and using that data to quickly remediate the problem by replacing the seals to prevent oil leaking in the engine. Let’s quickly tour the phases that lead to better outcomes and get our focus back on effective observability goals.
Key takeaways - Modern cloud native observability needs three guiding phases to provide better outcomes, not tooling.
Based on article: https://www.schabell.org/2022/09/o11y-guide-cloud-native-observability-needs-phases.html
Are you collecting just about every metric under the sun and the kitchen sink too? Understanding the cost of collecting metrics and the usefulness of those metrics is the only way to scale in a cloud native world. You can’t get away with just collecting everything as you grow. Your observability teams need to make decisions about what to collect, what to drop, what to aggregate, and still be able to alert, triage, remediate, and do their root cause analysis on a daily basis. Gain immediate insights into high cost data (DPPS), when to drop time series data, and how to determine when the value of that data is at its lowest. Session includes a recorded demo video of it in action.
Engaging Your Execs - Telling Great Observability Tales Inspiring ActionEric D. Schabell
Anyone embedded in the cloud native observability teams in any organization can voice their frustrations at not being taken seriously by their executive decision makers. This leads to way too much on-call stress, frustrations, and eventual burnout. With research showing us DevOps spending over 10 hrs a week on issues in their environments, we could all use quick action by our executives when we find ways to fix our cloud native issues. The trick is to tell the tales we accumulate in such a way as to engage, inspire, and effect change in our organizations. This session provides attendees with ample cloud native bedtime stories, tricks that make your tales land within the executive human mind, and actionable insights to head home with immediate results. Join me for a half hour of power where you are empowered to tell better observability stories for better executive decision outcomes.
WTF is SRE - Telling Effective Tales about ProductionEric D. Schabell
Storytelling is as old as time itself…. Since the beginning of humankind, we share our experiences, we teach, we inspire, we relate to stories as told all around us. How can we learn to use this powerful mechanism to tell effective tales about our production environments when dealing with our management teams?
Learn how humans listen to stories (tales) more than they pay attention to pages of charts, dashboards, and data. If you want to learn how to make sure your message lands and how to effectively manage upwards in your organization, this is the session for you. Attendees will depart with a small yet powerful set of actionable examples that almost ensure your stories will capture your management's attention. One thing is certain, stories are being told, but what are your production stories and how can you become adept at telling them?
Are you collecting just about every metric under the sun and the kitchen sink too? Understanding the cost of collecting metrics and the usefulness of those metrics is the only way to scale in a cloud native world. You can’t get away with just collecting everything as you grow. Your observability teams need to make decisions about what to collect, what to drop, what to aggregate, and still be able to alert, triage, remediate, and do their root cause analysis on a daily basis. Gain immediate insights into high cost data (DPPS), when to drop time series data, and how to determine when the value of that data is at its lowest. Session includes a recorded demo video of it in action.
Are you interested in dipping your toes in the cloud native observability waters, but as an engineer you are not sure where to get started with tracing problems through your microservices and application landscapes on Kubernetes? Then this is the session for you, where we take you on your first steps in an active open-source project that offers a buffet of languages, challenges, and opportunities for getting started with telemetry data.
The project is called openTelemetry, but before diving into the specifics, we’ll start with de-mystifying key concepts and terms such as observability, telemetry, instrumentation, cardinality, percentile to lay a foundation. After understanding the nuts and bolts of observability and distributed traces, we’ll explore the openTelemetry community; its Special Interest Groups (SIGs), repositories, and how to become not only an end-user, but possibly a contributor.We will wrap up with an overview of the components in this project, such as the Collector, the OpenTelemetry protocol (OTLP), its APIs, and its SDKs.
Attendees will leave with an understanding of key observability concepts, become grounded in distributed tracing terminology, be aware of the components of openTelemetry, and know how to take their first steps to an open-source contribution!
Key Takeaways: Open source, vendor neutral instrumentation is an exciting new reality as the industry standardizes on openTelemetry for observability. OpenTelemetry is on a mission to enable effective observability by making high-quality, portable telemetry ubiquitous. The world of observability and monitoring today has a steep learning curve and in order to achieve ubiquity, the project would benefit from growing our contributor community.
Open Source 101 - Observability For You and Me with OpenTelemetryEric D. Schabell
Are you interested in dipping your toes in the cloud native observability waters, but as an engineer you are not sure where to get started with tracing problems through your microservices and application landscapes on Kubernetes? Then this is the session for you, where we take you on your first steps in an active open-source project that offers a buffet of languages, challenges, and opportunities for getting started with telemetry data.
The project is called openTelemetry, but before diving into the specifics, we’ll start with de-mystifying key concepts and terms such as observability, telemetry, instrumentation, cardinality, percentile to lay a foundation. After understanding the nuts and bolts of observability and distributed traces, we’ll explore the openTelemetry community; its Special Interest Groups (SIGs), repositories, and how to become not only an end-user, but possibly a contributor.We will wrap up with an overview of the components in this project, such as the Collector, the OpenTelemetry protocol (OTLP), its APIs, and its SDKs.
Attendees will leave with an understanding of key observability concepts, become grounded in distributed tracing terminology, be aware of the components of openTelemetry, and know how to take their first steps to an open-source contribution!
Key Takeaways: Open source, vendor neutral instrumentation is an exciting new reality as the industry standardizes on openTelemetry for observability. OpenTelemetry is on a mission to enable effective observability by making high-quality, portable telemetry ubiquitous. The world of observability and monitoring today has a steep learning curve and in order to achieve ubiquity, the project would benefit from growing our contributor community.
3 Pitfalls Everyone Should Avoid with Cloud DataEric D. Schabell
The daily hype is all around you. From cloud native, multicloud, to hybrid cloud, this is the path to your digital future. The choices you make as a developer does not preclude the daily work of enhancing your customer's experience and agile delivery of your applications. With all this delivery and infrastructure, there is a lot of data generated when engaging with any cloud experience. Regulatory and compliance pressures force us to store audit and observability data. Understanding the pitfalls around the collection, storage, and maintenance of your cloud data can mean the difference between bankruptcy and success with our cloud native strategy. Let us take you on a journey, looking closely at the decisions you are making as a developer delivering and dealing with monitoring your applications. Join us for an hour of power, where real customer experiences are used to highlight the three top lessons learned as their developers transitioned their data needs into cloud native environments.
Key Takeaways: Attendees to this session will gain insights into the data explosion that is part of the large scale cloud native world. Real customer experiences are used to highlight the three top lessons learned as their developers transitioned their data needs into cloud native environments.
3 Pitfalls Everyone Should Avoid with Cloud Native DataEric D. Schabell
The daily hype is all around you. From cloud native, multicloud, to hybrid cloud, this is the path to your digital future. The choices you make as a developer does not preclude the daily work of enhancing your customer's experience and agile delivery of your applications. With all this delivery and infrastructure, there is a lot of data generated when engaging with any cloud experience. Regulatory and compliance pressures force us to store audit and observability data. Understanding the pitfalls around the collection, storage, and maintenance of your cloud data can mean the difference between bankruptcy and success with our cloud native strategy. Let us take you on a journey, looking closely at the decisions you are making as a developer delivering and dealing with monitoring your applications. Join us for an hour of power, where real customer experiences are used to highlight the three top lessons learned as their developers transitioned their data needs into cloud native environments.
Key Takeaways: Attendees to this session will gain insights into the data explosion that is part of the large scale cloud native world. Real customer experiences are used to highlight the three top lessons learned as their developers transitioned their data needs into cloud native environments.
Whether you’re an enterprise migrating to cloud-native or born in the cloud, most of today’s APM and Observability tools don’t support how your engineers and DevOps teams need to develop, deploy, and support their software. Observability needs to shift left and reflect the modern way companies organize their development teams and their vital interdependencies.
Chronosphere is the only vendor addressing the unique requirements for observability in a cloud-native world.
Join this webinar to learn:
• What cloud native observability is and how it is different from the promises made by traditional cloud APM and observability vendors
• How to use cloud-native observability to do more “Dev” and less “Ops” so you can dramatically improve developer and engineer workflows and productivity
• How to make on-call shifts less stressful so that your engineers aren’t getting burned out
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
Salesforce Integration for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions A...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on integration of Salesforce with Bonterra Impact Management.
Interested in deploying an integration with Salesforce for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Webinar: Designing a schema for a Data WarehouseFederico Razzoli
Are you new to data warehouses (DWH)? Do you need to check whether your data warehouse follows the best practices for a good design? In both cases, this webinar is for you.
A data warehouse is a central relational database that contains all measurements about a business or an organisation. This data comes from a variety of heterogeneous data sources, which includes databases of any type that back the applications used by the company, data files exported by some applications, or APIs provided by internal or external services.
But designing a data warehouse correctly is a hard task, which requires gathering information about the business processes that need to be analysed in the first place. These processes must be translated into so-called star schemas, which means, denormalised databases where each table represents a dimension or facts.
We will discuss these topics:
- How to gather information about a business;
- Understanding dictionaries and how to identify business entities;
- Dimensions and facts;
- Setting a table granularity;
- Types of facts;
- Types of dimensions;
- Snowflakes and how to avoid them;
- Expanding existing dimensions and facts.
AI 101: An Introduction to the Basics and Impact of Artificial IntelligenceIndexBug
Imagine a world where machines not only perform tasks but also learn, adapt, and make decisions. This is the promise of Artificial Intelligence (AI), a technology that's not just enhancing our lives but revolutionizing entire industries.
HCL Notes und Domino Lizenzkostenreduzierung in der Welt von DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-und-domino-lizenzkostenreduzierung-in-der-welt-von-dlau/
DLAU und die Lizenzen nach dem CCB- und CCX-Modell sind für viele in der HCL-Community seit letztem Jahr ein heißes Thema. Als Notes- oder Domino-Kunde haben Sie vielleicht mit unerwartet hohen Benutzerzahlen und Lizenzgebühren zu kämpfen. Sie fragen sich vielleicht, wie diese neue Art der Lizenzierung funktioniert und welchen Nutzen sie Ihnen bringt. Vor allem wollen Sie sicherlich Ihr Budget einhalten und Kosten sparen, wo immer möglich. Das verstehen wir und wir möchten Ihnen dabei helfen!
Wir erklären Ihnen, wie Sie häufige Konfigurationsprobleme lösen können, die dazu führen können, dass mehr Benutzer gezählt werden als nötig, und wie Sie überflüssige oder ungenutzte Konten identifizieren und entfernen können, um Geld zu sparen. Es gibt auch einige Ansätze, die zu unnötigen Ausgaben führen können, z. B. wenn ein Personendokument anstelle eines Mail-Ins für geteilte Mailboxen verwendet wird. Wir zeigen Ihnen solche Fälle und deren Lösungen. Und natürlich erklären wir Ihnen das neue Lizenzmodell.
Nehmen Sie an diesem Webinar teil, bei dem HCL-Ambassador Marc Thomas und Gastredner Franz Walder Ihnen diese neue Welt näherbringen. Es vermittelt Ihnen die Tools und das Know-how, um den Überblick zu bewahren. Sie werden in der Lage sein, Ihre Kosten durch eine optimierte Domino-Konfiguration zu reduzieren und auch in Zukunft gering zu halten.
Diese Themen werden behandelt
- Reduzierung der Lizenzkosten durch Auffinden und Beheben von Fehlkonfigurationen und überflüssigen Konten
- Wie funktionieren CCB- und CCX-Lizenzen wirklich?
- Verstehen des DLAU-Tools und wie man es am besten nutzt
- Tipps für häufige Problembereiche, wie z. B. Team-Postfächer, Funktions-/Testbenutzer usw.
- Praxisbeispiele und Best Practices zum sofortigen Umsetzen
TrustArc Webinar - 2024 Global Privacy SurveyTrustArc
How does your privacy program stack up against your peers? What challenges are privacy teams tackling and prioritizing in 2024?
In the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey, we asked over 1,800 global privacy professionals and business executives to share their perspectives on the current state of privacy inside and outside of their organizations. This year’s report focused on emerging areas of importance for privacy and compliance professionals, including considerations and implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, building brand trust, and different approaches for achieving higher privacy competence scores.
See how organizational priorities and strategic approaches to data security and privacy are evolving around the globe.
This webinar will review:
- The top 10 privacy insights from the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey
- The top challenges for privacy leaders, practitioners, and organizations in 2024
- Key themes to consider in developing and maintaining your privacy program
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/building-and-scaling-ai-applications-with-the-nx-ai-manager-a-presentation-from-network-optix/
Robin van Emden, Senior Director of Data Science at Network Optix, presents the “Building and Scaling AI Applications with the Nx AI Manager,” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
In this presentation, van Emden covers the basics of scaling edge AI solutions using the Nx tool kit. He emphasizes the process of developing AI models and deploying them globally. He also showcases the conversion of AI models and the creation of effective edge AI pipelines, with a focus on pre-processing, model conversion, selecting the appropriate inference engine for the target hardware and post-processing.
van Emden shows how Nx can simplify the developer’s life and facilitate a rapid transition from concept to production-ready applications.He provides valuable insights into developing scalable and efficient edge AI solutions, with a strong focus on practical implementation.
OpenID AuthZEN Interop Read Out - AuthorizationDavid Brossard
During Identiverse 2024 and EIC 2024, members of the OpenID AuthZEN WG got together and demoed their authorization endpoints conforming to the AuthZEN API
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
Let's Integrate MuleSoft RPA, COMPOSER, APM with AWS IDP along with Slackshyamraj55
Discover the seamless integration of RPA (Robotic Process Automation), COMPOSER, and APM with AWS IDP enhanced with Slack notifications. Explore how these technologies converge to streamline workflows, optimize performance, and ensure secure access, all while leveraging the power of AWS IDP and real-time communication via Slack notifications.
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
National Security Agency - NSA mobile device best practices
Openslava 2017 - Real appdev in the cloud on your laptop in minutes
1. 1
Real AppDev in the Cloud on
Your Laptop in Minutes
Eric D. Schabell
Global Technology Evangelist Director, Red Hat
@ericschabell
2.
3. What you need?
Container development...
In the Cloud...
Available on local machine...
Easy peasy installation...
4. Wasting time on Cloud installs?
They ain’t easy:
• Documentation
• Downloads
• Step after step of commands to enter
• User interfaces to learn
• Keeping up with community changes
Need low impact, easier way for AppDev in the Cloud….
5. What you need to do
Bring this with you:
• Laptop
Beg, borrow or steal this:
• Connection (wifi)
Really, that’s all you need…. Well, almost….
6. OpenShift Container Platform Install
Stability for your AppDev in the Cloud:
• Maintain latest offering OpenShift
Container Platform
• Local installation
• All platforms (Linux, osX and Windows)
• Includes latest product streams (JBoss,
.Net, S2I, etc)
• Clear and simple instructions
https://github.com/redhatdemocentral/ocp-install-demo
7.
8. AppDev in the Cloud
Once you have OpenShift
Container Platform, now what?
• JBoss middleware in the Cloud
• Employee HR Rewards demo
• Destinasia travel services, .Net,
xPaaS and Ansible playbooks
• CoolStore demo
• And more...
https://github.com/redhatdemocentral
10. • Eric is Red Hat’s Global Technology Evangelist
Director, and is renowned in the development
community as a speaker, lecturer, author and
baseball expert. Follow on http://schabell.org
•erics@redhat.com / @ericschabell
THANK YOU
10