Episodes

  • Open Communities With Andrew Zigler
    Feb 1 2024
    Andrew Zigler (Mattermost) delves into the world of open-source development and the unique challenges faced by an "open-first" developer community. Andrew shares his deep insights into fostering collaboration, building trust, and navigating the intricate dynamics of open-source projects.
    Show More Show Less
    35 mins
  • Machine Learning Ops With Chelsea Troy
    Jan 18 2024
    Jessitron is joined by Chelsea Troy, Staff Data Engineer at Mozilla, and one of the all-around most interesting people in software today, to discuss staff engineering, machine learning operations, and maybe also surfing.
    Show More Show Less
    48 mins
  • It's Been Ten Years of ADO, Charlie Brown
    Jan 4 2024
    It's been ten years of Arrested DevOps! Joe, Matty, Bridget, Jess, and Trevor spend some time (quite a lot of time!) reminiscing over stories and history of the podcast.
    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 49 mins
  • So You’re in Charge Now… With Ben Greenberg
    Dec 22 2023
    What happens when you suddenly are In Management? Matty is joined by Ben Greenberg to talk through the challenges of first-time management.
    Show More Show Less
    48 mins
  • DevOps Isn’t a Department With Jeremy Duvall
    Dec 7 2023
    DevOps is not a department. It's a set of concepts and ideas that are human-centric and driven through Agile practices. It's applying Big A Agile to operations: fast feedback loops, deeper collaboration with stakeholders (which is the engineering team), and invoking people over process and tools. A current problem hamstringing organizations is that they treat DevOps like a commoditized department: one that writes shell scripts and deploys Jenkins servers, and not the value engine that those teams could be. They took the tools team, applied a light version of DevOps ideology, and said, "Hey, that's it. That's DevOps. Hashtag winning."
    Show More Show Less
    30 mins
  • Runtime Analysis With Brian Kelly
    Nov 23 2023
    Most developers are familiar with two sources of data about their applications: 1) static code analysis, and 2) observability tools monitoring their system in production. However, a new data source is gaining popularity: Runtime analysis. Runtime analysis is a technique where an application's dynamic behavior is recorded and analyzed during development time, allowing flaws and other insights to be revealed before that code is deployed to production.
    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • Complexity With Michael Stahnke
    Nov 9 2023
    It's a complex world! Matty and Michael Stahnke wax philosophical about whether our systems need to be as complicated as we have made them
    Show More Show Less
    47 mins
  • The Database Calls Are Coming From Inside the House With Grant Fritchey
    42 mins