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Pablo Lalloni

About Podio - Podio - 0 views

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    "Podio is an online work platform with a new take on how everyday work gets done. Podio gives people more power than ever before to manage their work in their own way and is trusted by thousands of teams, companies and organizations worldwide. Podio users create workspaces to collaborate with specific groups of people, use an Employee Network for company-wide communication across departments and locations, and get their work done using Podio Apps. Anyone can build their own Podio Apps without any technical skills, and can choose from hundreds of readily available, free apps in Podio's App Market. These apps add structure to any business process or project and are connected to social, collaborative activity streams used for commenting and discussion."
Pablo Lalloni

New Relic, Docker Showcase the Coming Devops Disruption | Trinity Ventures - 0 views

  • In a pre-Docker world, companies with tremendous and evolving application demands looked to virtualization as a way of abstracting their infrastructure, but paid a tax in dollars and performance for doing so. In the future we think of Docker will take the mantle as the VMware of the devops world, with containers as the ultimate devops platform.
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    "In 2010 we led the seed round for Docker (formerly known as dotCloud) for one simple reason: devops means that the way applications are packaged, deployed, and run is fundamentally changing (though Docker's business model has evolved since its early days as a PaaS vendor, the fundamental premise is the same).  Rather than requiring custom configurations and painstaking management, Docker "containerizes" applications components such that every container is lightweight and behaves consistently.  Applications and their underlying components can be programmatically deployed, managed and moved on ever-changing cloud infrastructure without a hint of operating system or hardware configuration.  In a pre-Docker world, companies with tremendous and evolving application demands looked to virtualization as a way of abstracting their infrastructure, but paid a tax in dollars and performance for doing so. In the future we think of Docker will take the mantle as the VMware of the devops world, with containers as the ultimate devops platform."
Pablo Lalloni

mcaserta/sbt-bom-example · GitHub - 0 views

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    SBT Company Wide Settings Example .
Pablo Lalloni

Phabricator - 0 views

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    "Phabricator is a collection of open source web applications that help software companies build better software."
Pablo Lalloni

Microservices Tips and Tricks - 1 views

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    "Microservices based architectures are not new but are suddenly in the spotlight due to their powerful and sophisticated practices enabling streamlined application development and deployment. However, transitioning from a monolithic approach to a microservices-based architecture requires not only technical expertise, but organizational buy-in as well. In a recent ActiveState webinar, John Wetherill and Phil Whelan discussed a number of tips and tricks to help companies transition to and get the most out a microservices-based approach."
Pablo Lalloni

http://resources.idgenterprise.com/original/AST-0124388_FINAL_High-Tech_Companies_Grow_... - 1 views

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    High-Tech Companies Grow Quickly and Efficiently with eSignatures
Pablo Lalloni

Geospatial Applications with Elasticsearch | Elastic - 0 views

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    "Join Elastic developer Nicholas Knize to get an introduction to Elasticsearch's geospatial capabilities. He will give you a whirlwind tour of how to use Elasticsearch to make the most of your geo data and do things like: Indexing considerations for optimizing geo-point and geo-shape based search Geo-aggregations and bucket reducers for spatial visualization and analytics Time-based indexing, aliasing, and percolation for complex space-time querying But how does Elasticsearch compare to traditional solutions for geospatial search? John Boere, CEO of Cliffhanger Solutions Inc., will share his geospatial search story, giving you insight into their setup, lessons learned, and why they chose to use Elasticsearch, Logstash, and Kibana to help utility companies manage electricity flowing through the power grid - keeping the lights on, literally."
carlosmiranda

Typesafe - Company: Team - 1 views

shared by carlosmiranda on 17 Sep 11 - No Cached
    • carlosmiranda
       
      Miren quien es el inversor ????? busquen en la web !!!! GreyLock !!!! Big Brother !!!!
Pablo Lalloni

Docker and Microsoft partner to bring container applications across platforms | News Ce... - 1 views

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    Listo... M$ subido al vagón de Docker... palo y a la bolsa. ¿Quién queda afuera? "Oct. 15, 2014 - Microsoft Corp. and Docker Inc., the company behind the fast-growing Docker open platform for distributed applications, on Wednesday announced a strategic partnership to provide Docker with support for new container technologies that will be delivered in a future release of Windows Server. Developers and organizations that want to create container applications using Docker will be able to use either Windows Server or Linux with the same growing Docker ecosystem of users, applications and tools."
Pablo Lalloni

Flynn - 1 views

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    "Flynn is two things: A "distribution" of components that out-of-the-box gives companies a reasonable starting point for an internal "platform" for running their applications and services. The banner for a collection of independent projects that together make up a toolkit or loose framework for building distributed systems. Flynn is both a whole and many parts, depending on what is most useful for you. The common goal is to democratize years of experience and best practices in building distributed systems. It is the software layer between operators and developers that makes both their lives easier. Unlike most PaaS's, Flynn can run stateful services as well as 12 factor apps. This includes built-in database appliances (just Postgres to start). Flynn is modular so users can easily modify, upgrade, and replace components. "
Pablo Lalloni

CoreOS is Linux for Massive Server Deployments - 2 views

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    "CoreOS is a Linux distribution that has been rearchitected to provide features needed to run modern clustered infrastructure stacks. The strategies and architectures that influence CoreOS allow companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter to run their services at scale with high resilience. We've implemented them correctly so you don't have to endure the slow, learn-as-you-go infrastructure building process. CoreOS can run on your existing hardware or on most cloud providers. Clustering works across platforms, making it easy to migrate parts of your gear over to CoreOS, or to switch cloud providers while running CoreOS."
Pablo Lalloni

How the DevOps revolution informs software architecture - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views

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    "Ford noted the growing relationship between software architecture and DevOps. The interdependence of the two disciplines is evident within Ford's company: "One of the things that we're really adamant about now," he said, "is that someone from DevOps and operations should be a full-time member of a software development team … you cut way down on churn and other sorts of useless engineering activities.""
Sebastián Zaffarano

Docker (Inc.) Is Dead - DZone Cloud - 2 views

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    "2017 was a great year for containers, but the future is grim for the company that made them popular. See what happened to Docker last year and what's in store for 2018."
Pablo Lalloni

Microservices and PaaS - Part I | ActiveState - 0 views

  • Instead of building software that resembles our existing organizations, we should figure out how we want our software to look, then build the organization around that. Or reorganize it if it's already in place.
    • Pablo Lalloni
       
      Las implicancias de esta idea en nuestra organización...
  • When deploying a new feature, enhancing or fixing an existing capability, or deploying an experimental line of code, the previous code remains available and accessible. New code is deployed alongside the old code, with mechanisms in place to instantly route to one or another version.
  • Importantly, the old code is not replaced, but remains part of the system, and is kept running. If, as is often the case, the widespread introduction of the new feature results in unforeseen consequences, the feature flag can be toggled off, and the old version is instantly used instead.
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • In a microservices architecture, an application is comprised of a number of small, independent composable services that interact by way of an external published protocol, such as REST, or a messaging service.
  • Each service is focused on an individual targeted business capability, and thus its scope is minimized. For functionality out of scope, the microservice calls out to other microservices via the published protocol.
  • Small independent microservices can be built using the technology best suited for their requirements. No longer does every application component need to be built on a common company-mandated language and framework such as Java/Spring or Ruby on Rails.
  • Similarly, there's no reason to standardize on a single persistence layer across an entire application. Some microservices might best be served by Redis, others by Oracle.
  • Each microservice can be updated independently, no longer requiring the entire application to be redeployed.
  • Microservices drastically improve the time required to push out a new update, allowing a much more agile development process.
  • Many organizations consist of specialized silo teams (UI, database, API, etc) where costly handoffs and intercommunication are required to coordinate all the pieces of application construction. These handoffs cause overhead, and the need for them should be eliminated.
  • With small teams, each focused on an individual microservice, Netflix enables developers to push code to production, instead of getting mired in a complex deployment process involving several teams.
  • With microservices, the old IT mindset just doesn't work.
  • A centralized IT department cannot possibly cover the wide array of technologies spanning all microservices.
  • Instead a DevOps structure, where each team is responsible for the management of the corresponding microservice, is essential.
  • Enable developers to concoct systems of their choosing with minimal or no interaction from IT, management, VPs, hardware or other groups. "Self Service" is one of the major capabilities offered by the cloud and there's every reason to take advantage of this.
  • Now, IT can be considered as a cloud API available to the developer on-demand 24x7, instead of a complex, process-mired division hidden behind obscure process.
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