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Getting ready! Part 2: A taste of what’s to come in the “Release Better Software Faster” track at Perform 2020

Dynatrace

A taste of what’s to come at Perform 2020’s “Release Better Software Faster” track – we highlighted what you can expect to learn about best practices for sessions 1 – 4 at Perform 2020. I hope these two blogs have got you interested and excited to join us for the “Release Better Software Faster” track at this year’s Perform 2020.

DevOps 103
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Redis vs Memcached

Software Architecture

Memcached is very good at handling high traffic websites. Redis can not handle heavy traffic on read/write. Redis vs Memcached was originally published in Software Architecture on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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O’Reilly serverless survey 2019: Concerns, what works, and what to expect

O'Reilly

We suspect this points to a general drift toward software teams taking more responsibility for infrastructure, and increasingly, enabled by serverless options. This scaling takes away the worry from random and unexpected traffic spikes or big seasonal traffic. Industries of survey respondents. 1 reported benefit.

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The ‘Chocolate Sauce’ Design Heuristic

Strategic Tech

A trip to the supermarket can teach you a lot about designing software systems and shaping teams to build them… I was recently in need of some chocolate sauce. The Chocolate Sauce Heuristic for Software Design There are a few lessons about software development we can learn from this story, but I want to focus on design.

Design 40
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A 5G future

O'Reilly

5G enthusiasts frequently say it’s an enabling technology for autonomous vehicles (AV), which will need high bandwidth to download maps and images, and perhaps even to communicate with each other: AV heaven is a world in which all vehicles are autonomous and can therefore collaboratively plan traffic.

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Revisiting “Serverless Architectures”

The Symphonia

I was glad to be able to talk about Amazon’s automated traffic shifting / canary releases. While tooling in general is still a concern, as I mention several times earlier in the article, there have been definite advances. And this also went well with an idea that Nat Pryce described to me a while ago about the idea of ‘mixing desk’ releases.