From 2706a335a3ec604a86230006c298ee80abcdc7ad Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matt Stratton Date: Fri, 6 May 2016 09:55:34 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Update the Kiel program to fix in-page anchors Former-commit-id: 3f8f01f4464789174b9183175265b9bc5d14dcc0 --- content/events/2016-kiel/program.md | 61 ++++++++++++++--------------- 1 file changed, 30 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-) diff --git a/content/events/2016-kiel/program.md b/content/events/2016-kiel/program.md index 2b04257135f..ad7514cb3c6 100644 --- a/content/events/2016-kiel/program.md +++ b/content/events/2016-kiel/program.md @@ -23,16 +23,16 @@ type = "event"
08:00-09:00
Registration, Breakfast, and Sponsor Booths Open
09:00-9:30

Opening Welcome

Dr. Ulf Kämpfer, Mayor of the City of Kiel
Werner Kässens (KiWi)
Dr. Inge Schröder (Wissenschaftszentrum)
Moderation:
Sabine Bernecker-Bendixen

09:30-10:10
-

Oliver Siebenmarck

From 0 to DevOps - Coping with Continuous Delivery to the Cloud

+

Oliver Siebenmarck

From 0 to DevOps - Coping with Continuous Delivery to the Cloud

10:15-10:55
-

Jan-Joost Bouwman

ITIL and DevOps can be friends

+

Jan-Joost Bouwman

ITIL and DevOps can be friends

10:55-11:20
Coffee Break
11:20-12:00
-

Wayne Ariola

Continous Testing for DevOps: Evolving Beyond Automation

+

Wayne Ariola

Continous Testing for DevOps: Evolving Beyond Automation

12:00-13:00
@@ -40,20 +40,20 @@ type = "event"
13:00-13:40
-

Rafael Ördög

Learning to fall

+

Rafael Ördög

Learning to fall

13:45-14:25
-

Marta Paciorkowska

DevOps and sharing

+

Marta Paciorkowska

DevOps and sharing

14:25-14:35
Sponsor pitches
14:35-15:00
Ignites
-Keep it simple, Stupid
+Keep it simple, Stupid
Moritz Rogalli
-The (Un)Surprising Truth About DevOps Culture
+The (Un)Surprising Truth About DevOps Culture
Manuel Pais

@@ -89,10 +89,10 @@ type = "event"
09:00-9:15
Opening 2nd Day
Moderation:
Sabine Bernecker-Bendixen
09:15-09:55
-

Bianca Heinemann

The Challenges of Adopting DevOps

+

Bianca Heinemann

The Challenges of Adopting DevOps

10:00-10:40
-

Baruch Sadogursky

Docker Container Lifecyle: Problem or Opportunity?

+

Baruch Sadogursky

Docker Container Lifecyle: Problem or Opportunity?

10:40-11:10
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ type = "event"
11:10-11:50
-

Philipp Krenn

Collect all the things with Beats

+

Philipp Krenn

Collect all the things with Beats

11:50-12:00
@@ -112,11 +112,11 @@ type = "event"
13:00-13:40
-

Jorge Salamero Sanz

War Games - flight training for DevOps

+

Jorge Salamero Sanz

War Games - flight training for DevOps

13:45-14:25
-

Felix Willnecker/André van Hoorn

Rethinking Performance Engineering in the DevOps World

+

Felix Willnecker/André van Hoorn

Rethinking Performance Engineering in the DevOps World

14:25-15:00
@@ -124,12 +124,12 @@ type = "event"
15:00-15:40
-

Bernd Erk

Working in and with Open Source Communities

+

Bernd Erk

Working in and with Open Source Communities

-
15:40-16:10
Ignites
Scalable & clean build environments with Jenkins and Docker
+
15:40-16:10
@@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ So, how come that in the end it all worked out? That people like each other, tha

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+

ITIL and DevOps can be friends by Jan-Joost Bouwman

ING is a worldwide financial institution, based in the Netherlands. The IT department of the Netherlands manages a mix of off the shelf applications and in house built software. Traditionally development was governed by CMMi and IT Servicemanagement by ITIL processes. Three years ago the developers started working in Agile/Scrum teams, dropping CMMi. The next step was to involve Operations as well and transform to an DevOps organisation, striving for Continuous Delivery. @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ In his spare time he enjoys travelling the world to watch birds, or cooking, but

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+

Continuous Testing for DevOps: Evolving Beyond Automation by Wayne Ariola

Attend this session to learn why and how Continuous Testing's real-time objective assessment of an application's business risks is a critical component of DevOps: @@ -202,7 +202,7 @@ Continuous measurement vs. key metrics means continuous feedback, which can be s

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+

Learning to fall by Rafael Ördög

When people talk about advantages of microservices, easy scaling and resilience comes up frequently. What they don't usually tell you, is that robustness does not come for free. If you don't put extra effort into gracefully failing when one of your dependencies is down, microservices will only make your system even more brittle. @@ -215,18 +215,18 @@ In my presentation I will recount our journey from an instabile monolith to a ro

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+

War Games - flight training for DevOps by Jorge Salamero Sanz

Here @ Server Density we monitor 100.000+ servers processing 2B metrics a day. Downtime is critical for us, that's why we keep training to react to incidents. We organize our internal War Games were all engineers practice the processes involved in incident handling. We have seen how this improves the associated human factors, our processes and our tools.

Speaker

-Jorge co-founded Zentyal, a successful open source Exchange protocol interoperability company. He now drives Server Density evangelism, showing potential customers and community members best practices adopting DevOps practices and monitoring their infrastructure. When he's not writing monitoring plugins he's enjoying walks with his 2 dogs across the countryside. +Jorge co-founded Zentyal, a successful open source Exchange protocol interoperability company. He now drives Server Density evangelism, showing potential customers and community members best practices adopting DevOps practices and monitoring their infrastructure. When he's not writing monitoring plugins he's enjoying walks with his 2 dogs across the countryside.

-
+

Keep it simple, stupid! (A reminder to myself and a surprisingly accurate analogy to how (not) to build sustainable systems) by Moritz Rogalli

The journey of how the idea of a simple personal blog turned into an unmanageable and expensive system, its similarities to unsustainable systems on a bigger scale and the importance of going back to square one. @@ -237,7 +237,7 @@ The journey of how the idea of a simple personal blog turned into an unmanageabl

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+

The Challenges of Adopting DevOps by Bianca Heinemann

A lot of companies underestimate the amount of change that adopting DevOps brings to the organization. What are the challenges for a company going DevOps? What should be expected in the realms of tools, methods and even culture? This presentation will try to shed some light on what is going to happen after someone says, "Let's do this DevOps thing. @@ -248,7 +248,7 @@ A lot of companies underestimate the amount of change that adopting DevOps bring

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+

Docker Container Lifecycles - Problem or Opportunity? by Baruch Sadogursky

Docker is hot. However, as Docker container use spreads into more mature production pipelines, there can be issues about control of Docker images to ensure they are production-ready. Is a promotion-based model appropriate to control and track the flow of Docker images from development to production? @@ -262,7 +262,7 @@ For a living he hangs out with the JFrog tech leaders, writes some code around A

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+

Rethinking Performance Engineering in the DevOps World by Felix Willnecker/André van Hoorn

Researchers and practitioners know quite well how to handle performance in classical environments involving a strict separation between Dev and Ops. DevOps aims to merge these silos. So far, the community has failed to systematically integrate performance management practices into the DevOps world, even though modern software development paradigms provide great opportunities to do that. Only holistic performance management, integrating Dev and Ops throughout the whole life-cycle, leads to high-quality software. @@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ We have developed a blueprint for performance-aware DevOps processes and infrast

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+

Working in and with Open Source Communities by Bernd Erk

Starting an open source project is very easy, especially in the days of GitHub. Push your code and see if somebody is interested in. If you are able to gain attention and interest for you project you feel motivated and work all night long. But on the other hand, people will start complaining about open bugs, missing features and your evil or non existing website. Believe it or not, but this will pursue you until your last user dies. @@ -292,7 +292,7 @@ In his day job he is CEO at NETWAYS, a German open source service company. As co

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+

Scalable and clean build environments with Jenkins and Docker by Stefan Kahlhöfer

By combining Jenkins CI server and Docker application containers you can provide dynamically created build environments that are free of old build fragments. There is not only one way to realize such scenario and we will show you three of them we have tried. @@ -303,7 +303,7 @@ Stefan supports teams in a variety of activities, with a strong understanding of

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+

The (Un)Surprising Truth About DevOps Culture by Manuel Pais

<irony>Yes, this talk will tell you about all the right practices you need to adopt to become a successful DevOps organization!</>

@@ -322,7 +322,7 @@ Stefan supports teams in a variety of activities, with a strong understanding of

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+

Collect all the things with Beats

The ELK stack is widely used to collect logs with Logstash, analyze and search the data with Elasticsearch, and visualize what is happening in your system. Now there is a new platform for shipping many types of operational data: Beats. It can be used to collect, parse, and ship any type of data.

@@ -333,7 +333,7 @@ This talk provides an overview of the Beats platform and dives into gathering sy

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+

DevOps and sharing

Tools aren't everything in DevOps, DevOps is also - if not mostly - about people. That's a truism... or is it? Even the best tools won't help you when you've got years of valuable knowledge stuck in the heads of long-term employees. Once you start digging, you'll be surprised how much of that knowledge is creating unnecessary bottlenecks. Some of your team mates even end up re-inventing the wheel. Don't be surprised if a lot of your time spent on restructuring an organization focuses on running from desk to desk and taking notes!

@@ -345,7 +345,7 @@ In this talk we will look into the whys and hows of using so-called people skill

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+

Praise the "overwrite" - Why boring approaches are awesome!

A small practical story about building better systems with simple approaches.

@@ -354,4 +354,3 @@ In this talk we will look into the whys and hows of using so-called people skill Florian Sellmayr is a consultant with ThoughtWorks in Hamburg, working in Software Development and Platform Engineering. He focuses on continuous delivery of large scale, critical software projects. He contributes to Open Source projects and is the maintainer of LambdaCD, a toolbox to create build pipelines in Clojure code.

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