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untilAbout cdCon + GitOpsCon will foster collaboration, discussion, and knowledge sharing by bringing communities, vendors, and end users to meet, discuss, collaborate and start shaping the future of GitOps and CD together. Details https://events.linuxfoundation.org/cdcon-gitopscon/ Event Schedule https://events.linuxfoundation.org/cdcon-gitopscon/program/schedule/
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On the west coast of Canada, you will find Vancouver, British Columbia, home to the Canucks, breathtaking scenery, and the Granville Walk of Fame. You will also find the Vancouver Convention Center, which hosts some of the best views from any event space in the world. It was in this picturesque setting that the CD Foundation and OpenGitOps communities came together for a co-located event, cdCon + GitOpsCon 2023. These two communities are distinct but have aligned goals and visions for how DevOps needs to evolve. The CD Foundation acts as a host and incubator for open-source projects like Spinnaker and Jenkins, the newly graduated project Tekton, and the completely new cdEvents. They have a mission of defining continuous delivery best practices. OpenGitOps was started as a Cloud Native Computing Foundation working group with the goal of clearly defining a vendor-neutral, principle-led meaning of GitOps. View the full article
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We are sharing a recap of last week’s second quarterly Community All-Hands and the feedback we got from the community. The Community All-Hands deepen our engagement with the Docker community and bring users, contributors and staff together on a quarterly basis. It is an opportunity for the community to get updates on what we’re working on and align on priorities for the year. It also provides a live forum for the community to engage and ask questions directly to Docker’s executive and community leadership. In December, we wrote that we wanted to build on the feedback we got after our first Community All-Hands and that we are committed to providing more content, a longer format and make it more interactive for attendees. To this end, we chose to extend the event by 2 hours and include parallel tracks with more speakers and a mix of live keynotes, workshops, lightning talks and regional content. We also picked the Tulu.la video platform to host the event, leveraging their awesome innovative features (eg. integrated chat, multi-casting, WebRTC). These improvements paid off in an impressive way: we had close to 3,000 unique attendees (including Youtube-live stream viewers), almost tripling the number of attendees who tuned in last time. The turnout was exceptional and the engagement from the community throughout the event was phenomenal. The feedback we got for this second edition was also very positive, with survey results showing that: 92% of (187 respondents) gave 4 stars or more to the event. 93% were likely to recommend the event to a friend. 75% thought the length of the event was just right. 65% saying they’d like for us to use the same video platform next time. Perhaps the two most recurrent suggestions for improvement we’ve received is that next time, in the run-up to the event, we should communicate the final schedule far more in advance and we should also provide a short 1-minute video tutorial to attendees on how to navigate the video platform. Clearly, it took a bit of time for some people to get used to the live multi-streaming of the event. I’ll close by saying a huge THANK YOU to all the speakers, to the Tulula team and to all those who attended the event. Community events are a key pillar of our community-building strategy and this All-Hands was an epic experience. We look forward to continuing to improve this Community-All Hands experiment and we will always push for more participation and engagement from the community. If you missed the event, worry not, we made sure to record everything: Keynotes + Q&A Workshops Lightning Talks Live Panel in Spanish Demo in French Demos in Portuguese The post Docker Community All Hands Recap appeared first on Docker Blog. View the full article
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Happy Friday! Our community continues to deliver interesting content. From PowerApps to VS Code, from secret scanning to cleaner YAML configurations, there’s lots to learn. Using Azure DevOps to Build and Deploy Multiple PCF Controls Tae joins us to share a CI pipeline for PCF Controls for PowerApps! Secret Scanning – Protecting your code in Azure DevOps Mark describes one way to implement secret scanning for your project. Hacktoberfest: How I Bundled & Published A VS Code Extension With Webpack And Azure DevOps Juan walks through his process for building and publishing a VS Code extension with Azure DevOps. Shrink your Azure Devops YAML pipelines Want to simplify your YAML pipelines? Damien has some ideas for you. If you’ve written an article about Azure DevOps or find some great content about DevOps on Azure, please share it with the #AzureDevOps hashtag on Twitter! The post Top Stories from the Microsoft DevOps Community – 2020.10.02 appeared first on Azure DevOps Blog. View the full article
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