April 7, 2016
Coté Memo #83, now back to #1, and linky!
Hello there! Let’s be honest, the highly manual-driven newsletter of mine was mostly dead. I stumbled across Revue.co which looks like the exact level of automation needed to make me more successful at sending out newsletters. I’ll try for every few days and first and see what happens. I imported the 107 existing subscribers I had in tinyletter, apologies if you don’t like this shift, feel free to unsubscribe, of course!
So, here we are, blowing out the baffles!
For some reason, it’s forcing me to set back the issue to #1, so welcome to #1!
I have two conference deals for you:
- Interested in seeing how Cloud Foundry is being used and developed? Come to the biggest collection of Cloud Foundry users and developers at CF Summit and talk it up with all of them. There’s one in Santa Clara, May 23rd to 25th. When you register use the code CF16COTE to get 20% off!
- SoftwareDefinedTalk.com is a media sponsor of several DevOpsDays. This means we get banners and can offer you discount codes: Right now you can use the code SDT2016 to get $50 off your registration for DevOpsDays Minneapolis, it’s totally worth it if you’re in the area to attend. We’ll have codes for Seattle and Chicago as well.
I gave up on my blog a little while back and re-arranged my online stuff to be “all in” on spreading my content around. As such, you can see that cote.io is just a sort of “about me,” old school home page, I’ve moved my “long form”/posts/essays to Medium, and I started re-acknowledging how awesome tumblr is for quick blogging (I even DNS'ed it to DrunkAndRetired.com!). With this new newsletter service, I’m hoping I’ll be stuffing all the channels as much as I can stomach and as helpfully as I can.
Some tiny reflection: I need to stop making publishing content so hard. Doing it all my own in things like WordPress.com is hard. I’ll give in to pumping my content into The Machines.
The word “essay” is a bit snoody, like I’m Paul Graham or something, but whatever. Here’s some original blog posts I’ve done recently:
To catch up since the last newsletter (Jan 5th!)
In corporate meetings, oftentimes one person figures out a problem and comes up with a solution. Equally often, multiple people in the…Continue reading on Medium »
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I discuss how you do HR in a cloud native organization with Pivotal’s head of HR, e.g., “[o]ne of the key principles of his approach is to remove complexity—from process to paperwork. Later in the episode, we talk about the leaning up of the annual performance review as an example of removing that complexity: at Pivotal, it’s a totally optional process, which boggles some HR folks’ minds.”
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Is Google serious with this “NoOps” business? On the face of it, we hope not and extensively discuss why. Meanwhile, what’s up with open source and Trotskyites?
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7 things that often go wrong: Products, not projects; You have no idea what you’re doing; Good cooking takes time; You’re doing it wrong…Continue reading on Medium »
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Hey, I’ve not only seen this movie before, I did some script treatments:Continue reading on Medium »
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Figuring out the market for PaaS has always been difficult. At the moment, I tend to estimate it at $20–25bn sometime in the future (5–10…Continue reading on Medium »
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Here’s some links to other content I like.
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“The auto giant will use Mirantis OpenStack cloud technology across all of its brands, including Audi, VW, Porsche, Bentley and Skod”
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Recommended in Medium at April 6, 2016 at 08:53AM
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“The data above show that mobile now represents 65 percent of all digital media time, with mobile apps dominating that usage. The desktop has lost 12 percentage points since 2013 and has receded to 35 percent of digital time spent.”
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Recommended in Medium at April 2, 2016 at 12:37PM
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Could overview of how agile is done in a cloud world, from Al at IDC.
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Hofmann commented that at the same time Volkswagen was establishing new workstyles which are being further developed. “Our IT experts in our labs in Berlin and Munich work the Silicon Valley way, we have brought the Valley to Volkswagen. Pivotal is supporting our experts with over 20 experts from San Francisco and Boulder, Colorado, and is training them in new software development methods. Our aim is to firmly anchor these skills and workstyles in the Group and in Germany. In the medium term, there will be more than 600 programmers, data scientists, design thinking experts and cloud architects working in our labs in Berlin, Munich and San Francisco”, Hofmann said.
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Recommended in Medium at March 29, 2016 at 11:34AM
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Good coverage and commentary on the recent Google Cloud stuff, including this marketshare sum-up:
“Enterprise service, AWS, which has a network of more than 30,000 enterprise end users, was the most cited (56.6% of survey respondents) for multi-tenant IaaS interest in 2015, with Microsoft’s Azure trailing at 42.7%. AWS claims over one million active customers in 190 countries, and reports that it has a roughly $10bn run rate.”
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Wow, this is a hell of a pass at stringent together all the great buzzwords. I think it comes out in favor of allowing teams to directly build and manage containers, but also points out the need for standardized services. Plus, a diagram.
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Hopefully I’ll see you soon. I’ve got a reminder setup! Also, I’ll be at DevOpsDays London later this month, speaking there. Conference season is coming up for me, so perhaps we can catch-up when we’re face-to-face - I’ll (have Pivotal) buy you a drink!