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Vendor-Side DevOps Practices Can Still Deliver Better Value While Client-Side Government Processes Catch Up

CTOvision

The new gospel of agile development and continuous delivery is antithetical to the realities on the client side — an environment where waterfall methodologies prevail, and the need to define large-scale releases across year-long timeframes makes it very challenging to operate in an agile manner.

Devops 150
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AIOps and our Robot Kubernetes Kops

Linux Academy

The popularity of agile development, continuous integration, and continuous delivery has brought levels of automation that rival anything preciously known. N-Tier architectures and micro-services applications must be tuned for performance. The post AIOps and our Robot Kubernetes Kops appeared first on Linux Academy Blog.

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IDF 2013: Future of SDN with the Intel ONP Switch Reference Design

Scott Lowe

Recep talks about how the predominant architecture for network virtualization involves the use of overlay networks created and managed at the edge by virtual switches in the hypervisors. Some of these services naturally should run on the top-of-rack (ToR) switch, like load balancing or security services. So how does this work?

Intel 61
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IDF 2014: Architecting for SDI, a Microserver Perspective

Scott Lowe

Once again this comes back to Intel’s rack-scale architecture work.) He starts the discussion by talking about NFV and SDN, and how these efforts enable agile networks on standard high volume (SHV) servers (such as microservers). Workloads are scheduled across these server/linecards using Valiant Load Balancing (VLB).