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Throughout 2016 we have continued our flagship podcast show InApps Technology Analysts, where we and select industry analysts, discuss all matters of scalable development and deployment, but also put the hammer down on the InApps Technology Makers, a near-daily podcast where we interview some of the new movers and shakers of our industry. This year, we also added InApps Technology Context, helmed by the formidable Scott M. Fulton III, to do deep dives into the state of the ecosystem.
Here, we have highlighted our most popular five episodes of InApps Technology Makers for 2016 along with our top five episodes of InApps Technology Analysts, based on the number of listens each track got throughout the year on our SoundCloud channels.
We hope that you enjoy this look back on some of our best episodes of the year, and look forward to bringing you even more podcasts in 2017.
InApps Technology Makers, 2016
1: How the Serverless Framework is Reshaping AWS Lambda
On this particular podcast, Associate Podcast Producer Kiran Oliver sat down with Serverless, Inc. Founder and creator Austen Collins to explore the design decisions behind the increasingly popular framework, and to highlight its general availability announced earlier in 2016.
How the Serverless Framework is Reshaping AWS Lambda
Also available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Overcast, PlayerFM, Pocket Casts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn
“Serverless v1.0 is definitely a reflection of feedback. It’s phenomenal how much is generated in an open source project, especially this one, because what we’re making is a framework for building serverless applications,” Collins told us.
2: Apcera’s Ken Robertson on Cluster and Container Management
In this podcast with Ken Robertson, then with Apcera, we explored some of the common challenges associated with cluster management at scale, Apcera’s approach to multi-user systems, and valuing the user experience of workload management appropriately. An additional discussion point addressed in this episode is that of managing cluster security with multi-user services, and how to best manage trust and high-level access to hosts and administrative privileges.
Apcera’s Ken Robertson on Cluster and Container Management
Also available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Overcast, PlayerFM, Pocket Casts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn
A policy-driven workflow management system requires not only “policy aspects for defining who can do it and with what, but also mechanisms for defining it: How does the platform know the workload needs this and not that,” Robertson said.
3. Erlang, A Language for the Internet of Things
In this episode, we explored telco beginnings of the Erlang language, its evolution in today’s Internet-of-Things driven landscape, and how it differs when operating at scale, and how it forms the basis for Elixir functional language. InApps Technology Founder Alex Williams spoke with Erlang Solutions founder and technical director Francesco Cesarini and Basho Chief Technology Officer Dave McCrory to get their thoughts.
Erlang, a Language for the Internet of Things
Also available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Overcast, PlayerFM, Pocket Casts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn
“I like the idea of Elixir, because it will also lead some people to want to do things that hit the edge cases of Elixir, and may end up driving them to learn Erlang. So, I think that it benefits the community in multiple ways, and it also shows just how powerful the Beam VM [an Erlang virtual machine] and Erlang as a combination are, and what you can do if you set your mind to it,” McCrory had told Williams.
4: Docker’s Solomon Hykes: If Tools Aren’t Accessible, Our Industry Has Failed
In this podcast, Docker Chief Technology Officer Solomon Hykes to InApps Technology about the need for greater public access to programming skills and tools. Hykes also addressed how the industry has failed to achieve its lofty accessibility goals so far, pointing out that he believes Docker, and the tools it is producing, are a small step in the right direction. Later in the discussion, Hykes addresses criticisms of Docker’s role in infrastructure, its approach when building new tools and services, and about finding the right framework for simplifying component integration.
Docker’s Solomon Hykes: If Tools Aren’t Accessible, Our Industry Has Failed
Also available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Overcast, PlayerFM, Pocket Casts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn
“To program, you need tools. If these tools are not designed to be accessible and useful to programmers of all levels of expertise and specialization, then as an industry, we failed,” he said.
5: Prometheus Gets its Own Day at Kubecon, a Testament to its Rise in the Ecosystem
On this particular episode of InApps Technology Makers, Prometheus creator and infrastructure engineer Julius Volz explored the history of this open source monitoring tool, how the open source community has contributed to the continued progression of the project, and how its adoption as the second project in the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) impacted Prometheus.
Prometheus Gets its Own Day at Kubecon, a Testament to its Rise in the Ecosystem
Also available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Overcast, PlayerFM, Pocket Casts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn
“The nice thing is they’ve pretty much let us do whatever we had planned before. They’re not trying to influence in a very big way. Mainly [they are] just trying to be helpful, otherwise, they’re mainly getting out of way, which is really good for if you have established processes in your open source project,” Volz said.
InApps Technology Analysts, 2016
1. Allstate’s DevOps Journey with Pivotal Cloud Foundry
On this episode, we welcomed Director of Cloud Engineering at Allstate Matt Curry and Pivotal Cloud Foundry Principal Technologist Bridget Kromhout to discuss the eminent insurance company’s journey into continuous integration, continuous deployment and test-driven development using Pivotal Cloud Foundry.
#78: Allstate Speeds into the DevOps Fast Lane with Cloud Foundry Deployment
Listen to all TNS podcasts on Simplecast.
“We have a lot of the traditional hurdles that most companies will have,” said Curry. “The firewall request process is not really built to facilitate agile and accelerated delivery. The database provisioning and approvals and governance process is not really built for that, either. So we’re starting to dig through those things, and figure out how to optimize those things.”
2. SAP Unveils HANA’s Full-Featured Node.js Integration
According to SAP HANA Product Management Director Thomas Jung, a lot of development went into preparing standard Node.js for enterprise customers of SAP’s high-performance application server. Joining Jung and TNS Founder Alex Williams for the discussion was RedMonk principal analyst and co-founder Stephen O’Grady.
#80: SAP Unveils HANA’s Full-Featured Node.js Integration
Listen to all TNS podcasts on Simplecast.
“We want to start looking at how we can take some of the things we’ve built — some of our modules, the wrappers, the frameworks to pull together several popular open source modules — how we can contribute those back to the community so that they don’t remain SAP-specific. There are some that will probably always be SAP-specific, but then there are some that just extend the overall platform, and it would be good to contribute them back,” Jung said.
3. The Rumored Docker Fork and the FUD that Moves the Conversation Forward
This unscheduled, unscripted discussion between the TNS editorial team and Red Hat OpenShift Director of Community Development Diane Mueller, and 451 Research Director Donnie Berkholz took on the rumored Docker fork, news of which surfaced in August.
#113: The Rumored Docker Fork and the FUD that Moves the Conversation Forward
Listen to all TNS podcasts on Simplecast.
“It just feels like a moment of time that is a natural moment in a lot of open source projects, especially ones that have gotten off to a such a good start as Docker has, in that there will always [be] a scuffle over who gets to be the benevolent dictator,” Mueller said.
4. OpenStack Silicon Valley Pancake Breakfast Podcast
At 2016’s OpenStack Silicon Valley conference, InApps Technology hosted a pancake breakfast panel to discuss the ways in which OpenStack and the Kubernetes container orchestration software have evolved throughout the years, the challenges facing the Kubernetes community, and the ways in which foundations such as CNCF are shaping projects such as Kubernetes. Panel guests included then-Google Product Manager Craig McLuckie, CoreOS Vice President of Engineering Mike Saparov, Mirantis co-founder and CEO Alex Freedland, and Iron.io co-founder and CEO Chad Arimura.
#103: OSSV Pancake Breakfast, Kubernetes, OpenStack, and PaaS 2.0
Listen to all TNS podcasts on Simplecast.
“Most importantly, and what I want to reach out to to everyone here, is that we wanted to create a foundation that had legitimate accountability to the end users, that wouldn’t be driven by the vendors,” McLuckie said, speaking about CNCF.
5. Building a Platform for Continuous Innovation with Cloud Foundry
On this episode of TNS Analysts, SAP Senior Director of Industry Standards and Open Source Sanjay Patil joined then-Cloud Foundry Foundation Vice President of Technical Evangelism Stormy Peters and 451 Research Director Donnie Berkholz to discuss the benefits of having a platform that truly supports today’s continuous integration and deployment, the evolution of SAP’s platform services, and how continuous integration has shaped application development.
#76: Building a Platform for Continuous Innovation with Cloud Foundry
Listen to all TNS podcasts on Simplecast.
“You can’t just say, ‘We’re doing waterfall-style development, building big monoliths today — we’re shifting to microservices tomorrow.’ That doesn’t work. You’ve got to build all the human processes, all the technologies,” Patel said, “things like continuous delivery, have all your servers automated before you can even think about doing microservices.”
Be sure to subscribe to our Simplecast and YouTube channels for all of our 2017 podcast coverage.
Apcera, Cloud Native Computing Foundation, CoreOS, Docker, Red Hat are sponsors of InApps Technology.
Feature image via Pixabay.
InApps Technology is a wholly owned subsidiary of Insight Partners, an investor in the following companies mentioned in this article: Mirantis, Docker.
Source: InApps.net
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