Category: DevOps - Page 11
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Since cloud computing has emerged, businesses have to find strategies to keep up with the rapidly developing technological landscape. DevOps is an approach that has been increasingly popular in recent years.
The goal of DevOps is to unite development and operations teams in order to deliver high-quality software swiftly and consistently. In order to boost productivity, lower risk, and boost customer happiness, it places a focus on cooperation, automation, and continuous improvement.
We should tackle is the difference between an interpreted language vs a compiled language. There are some specific semantics to get under your belt as part of your language selection process.
To succeed in DevOps, teams need to operate at peak performance and avoid risks. Operations teams should be able to react quickly and tackle risks with minimal impact on the product.
Today's digital landscape is increasingly volatile, fast-paced, and complex. As a result, businesses must be agile and adaptive to succeed in this new environment.
When trying to define DevOps, one of the first things that people will read about is consistency in delivery. That is because DevOps prescribes a specific set of processes that development and operations teams should be following when moving code from requirements/stories into production environments with continuous deployment pipelines.
A DevOps readiness checklist is a list of items that organizations can use to assess their readiness to implement DevOps principles and practices.
Below is a readiness assessment to understand your preparedness to take on a DevOps transformation. Answer each question or statement with the select box on the right side of the screen.
Taking the paradigm shift from running applications on servers to running them in containers is quite the mental jump. The technology industry has spent the last 50 years creating technology to accelerate on top of servers whether they are physical or virtual.