Together with BOSCH we invite you to a full day of learning more about the intersection of mobility and code. Get to know more about how modern mobility is defined by an intricate interplay of hardware and software and how cars are not only connected to the road, but also to the cloud.
Coding the Future of Mobility features a variety of talks and a workshop, that give you valuable insights into the world of mobility - wether you join in-person or online.
Together with Bosch we invite you to a full day of learning more about the intersection of mobility and code. Get to know more about how modern mobility is defined by an intricate interplay of hardware and software and how cars are not only connected to the road, but also to the cloud.
Coding the Future of Mobility features a variety of talks and a workshop, that give you valuable insights into the world of mobility - wether you join in-person or online.
Talking about running your application on the cloud a lot of people nowadays directly think about running your application on Kubernetes. While K8S sure is a very good tool for production-grade container orchestration, it is not the only one. There are some great alternatives to it and one of them sure is Cloud Foundry. But what is it, how does it work, and can it be “devops”?
In this talk we want to go on a short journey to explore how continuous deployment to Cloud Foundry can be achieved. Next to a short Cloud Foundry introduction this will lead us to different topics like what orgs and spaces are, the Cloud Foundry Command Line Interface and the magic of buildpacks.
Dominik Kress is the Product Owner of the STACKIT Cloud Foundry, the Platform-as-a-Service offer of the new Cloud from the Schwarz Group, the parent company behind Lidl and Kaufland. Before becoming a Product Owner, Dominik worked as a cross-functional devops developer on „the other side of the cloud“ as well and helped migrate the Lidl Online Shop into cloud infrastructure. He loves cloud technology, all ideas around processes improving developers lives, good discussions, electric guitars (but can’t play them well) and football
We hear a lot about DevOps but how do we turn it from myth into reality?
In this panel with Waleed Arshad, Community Manager at Snyk, Frank Dornberger, Teamlead DevSecOps at movingimage EVP GmbH and Idir Ouhab Meskine, Staff Solutions Engineer at Splunk, we're going to be going over:
Frank Dornberger: Teamlead DevSecOps at movingimage EVP GmbH
Idir Ouhab Meskine: Staff Solutions Engineer at Splunk
Thomas Fuchs: Senior Customer Success Manager at Snyk
Waleed Arshad: Community Manager at Snyk
You have several teams with many developers? Do you have multiple Kubernetes clusters? Running in a hybrid cloud? Or even on bare metal? Do you need to manage access to those clusters? Or delegate control? Do you need self-service for DNS entries and handing out IP addresses? You need to manage which team can use which cluster, having multiple teams on the same cluster isolated by namespaces? You need an audit log that actually shows who changed what and when? And not just dump your logs into a dark hole?
Meet Monoskope, an open-source solution to help you solve these tasks and more.
It gives your developers a front-end to your internal platform for running Kubernetes. It allows developers to request what they need to be productive and run application workloads while avoiding cognitive overload. It is designed to be extendable to allow for integration with your existing components.
Jan Steffen is a Certified Kubernetes Administrator working as part of the finleap cloud team at finleap connect GmbH. His team is constantly improving the compliant and secure Kubernetes platform for financial services they’ve built over the last couple of years. With more than eleven years of experience as a software engineer working in different companies and using various programming languages, he knows the problem’s which developers face in their day-to-day work. At finleap connect GmbH he has fostered his operational knowledge by operating Kubernetes clusters over the last years.
Automating the update of a database structure can be challenging, especially when the target databases are different. In a product setup with roughly 100 database servers (25 productive), a solution for updating database structures was elaborated and implemented by Deloitte.
A dynamic deployment independent of the current version of the software connected to the database can be achieved with a Visual Studio Database solution and its build result, a dacpac. With the Azure DevOps task WinRM these dacpacs can automatically be deployed to Microsoft SQL Server databases. This solution design will be presented, and it will also be illustrated how that works in general. Furthermore, it will be shown what’s possible out of the box and for everything else solutions will be outlined and explained.
Sebastian has been working in software development and IT consulting since 2011. During this time he has come into contact with many industries and technologies. In various roles, he was able to get to know the holistic process, from conception through development and quality assurance to continuous delivery. For this reason, he is a specialist in successfully mapping business processes through software in order to achieve optimizations. In recent years he has specialized in DevOps and leading development teams.
Infrastructure and hosting are critical to providing the public with safe and reliable services. At the Ministry of Justice in the UK, we have been working to build a reliable backbone to host a large variety of applications - from Oracle forms through to serveless functions. We are constantly working to improve our hosting offerings and DevOps plays a big part in that. This talk will cover some of our wins, as well as our challenges and lessons we've learned.
I find the world of software fascinating - from the coding through the team dynamics to the bigger picture. I wear multiple hats. I like giving back and sharing what I learn - I attend and sometimes help organise various events all over the UK and abroad. People are more important than tech.