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    cloud provider

    Explore "cloud provider" with insightful episodes like "Where You Build and Run Your Applications Matters - Futurum Tech Webcast", "Slight Reliability Episode 47 - Cloud Dependency Reliability with Jeff Martens and Ryan Duffield", "Serverless Craic Ep33 How to apply the well architected tool" and "Scaleway avec Gaspard Plantrou" from podcasts like ""Futurum Tech Webcast", "Slight Reliability", "Serverless Craic from The Serverless Edge" and "Electro Monkeys"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    Where You Build and Run Your Applications Matters - Futurum Tech Webcast

    Where You Build and Run Your Applications Matters - Futurum Tech Webcast

    On this episode of the Futurum Tech Webcast – Interview Series, host Daniel Newman welcomes Tom Godden, Director, AWS Enterprise Strategy for a conversation on the notion that cloud infrastructure is a commodity, the key considerations decision makers should have when choosing a cloud provider for their application, and how AWS has differentiated their capabilities and offerings for the unique needs of their customers. 

    Their discussion covers:

    • What is currently top of mind for AWS’s customers regarding the applications that support their businesses

    • Why your cloud infrastructure choices matter and how AWS’s investments in core infrastructure help address customer challenges

    • How AWS’s managed services such as serverless can help customers accelerate time to market, reduce TCO and iterate quickly

    • How AWS helps customers with their generative AI strategy to transform their applications

    • The key considerations for decision makers, including AWS’s services, tools, and resources available for builders

    For more information, watch the keynotes from AWS re:Invent 2023, visit the AWS for Every Application webpage, and explore AWS training and certification programs on the company’s website.

    Slight Reliability Episode 47 - Cloud Dependency Reliability with Jeff Martens and Ryan Duffield

    Slight Reliability Episode 47 - Cloud Dependency Reliability with Jeff Martens and Ryan Duffield

    In this episode Stephen Townshend discusses our increased dependency on third party cloud services and what this means for reliability with Jeff Martens and Ryan Duffield from https://metrist.io/.

    You can find Jeff... 
    On LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jmartens/
    On Twitter: https://twitter.com/Jmartens

    You can find Ryan...
    On StackOverflow: https://stackoverflow.com/users/2696/ryan-duffield
    On GitHub: https://github.com/rduffield

    You can find the official Slight Reliability podcast website at: https://slightreliability.com/

    You can find Stephen at:

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephentownshend/

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/the_kiwi_sre

    Serverless Craic Ep33 How to apply the well architected tool

    Serverless Craic Ep33 How to apply the well architected tool

    Grady Booch is a fantastic software architect who has done a lot of pioneering software engineering. One of his latest messages says that it's a good thing that AWS, Azure and Google are offering guidance on building with well architected. But he also warns that when cloud providers talk to you about well architected, it comes with a bias towards their products.

    There is an inherent bias among providers who are investing in these frameworks. They lean towards their own ecosystem and services. But the interesting thing about the AWS framework is if you squint at it sideways, you can extract the implementation details. And focus on the principles and values behind delivering a well architected solution. 

    It's the collaboration, questions, mindset and thinking that are good. And they are fairly consistent across whatever tech stack or platform you're leveraging. 

    I remember having discussions with people who were asking what architecture is? They weren't quite sure what architecture was and were trying to redefine architecture. With less technical colleagues, you need to give them a definition of what architecture is.

    When you compare all three Cloud Providers, they roughly have the same stuff. But AWS is driven by principles or tenets. A lot of the principles in the framework are applicable elsewhere. Azure is almost like a wizard as it takes you on a path, which is good 90% of the time. And Google sets the bar was quite high with hardcore SRE. The culture of each of the providers comes through. But they are all really good frameworks.

    A cloud provider writes a framework in their own language. And it will have a bias towards their own products. If you ask a cloud provider to do a well architected review on your product, a solution architect from that cloud provider to will come in and do it. And all they know is their products. So if you get an AWS solution architect to review your product, they'll start recommending AWS products.

    The lesson to learn is that it's not the framework that's important. It's the process that you put around it. And the process does not need to involve the cloud provider. We can run that ourselves. And we can apply the framework ourselves.

    It is a big shift, to use well architected as a benchmark to self assess to learn, measure and improve. The great advantage of doing this yourself is that your feedback loop is established. So you're actually seeing what works, what doesn't work and where your gaps are across all the different pillars. And where you should be investing your time and your team's time across the org. 

    When you use Clarity of Purpose, which is Phase 1 of the Value Flywheel, with the well architected framework, you can combat that bias. Your focus will be on solving the problem with the tools you've got at your disposal. And you're able to leverage tools faster and more efficiently.

    It should not be something that your architect does to you. This is something that the team should be embracing themselves through an iterative and incremental process. We've written about this a lot in our SCORPS process, which is in the book as well. It doesn't need to be a big, scary thing that an architect from on high comes down and imposes on you. It can be a very useful learning and enablement tool.

    Grady Booch Search for 'Grady' 'Well' 'Architected' to find that

    Serverless Craic from The Serverless Edge
    Check out our book The Value Flywheel Effect
    Follow us on X @ServerlessEdge
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    Scaleway avec Gaspard Plantrou

    Scaleway avec Gaspard Plantrou

    Les cloud providers ne se limitent pas à AWS, GCP ou Azure, loin s'en faut. L'offre européenne, si elle ne rivalise pas en taille, a souvent d'autres atouts pour tirer son épingle du jeu, notamment en termes de réversibilité ou de souveraineté de la donnée.

    Parmi ces acteurs encore trop souvent méconnus du grand public, il y a Scaleway, un cloud provider a la pointe de l'innovation, surtout quand on pense à Kapsule, Kosmos, ou aux Function as a Service. Mais alors, quelle stratégie adopter lorsqu'on grandit dans l'ombre des géants du secteur ?

    C'est une question à laquelle Gaspard Plantrou n'a pas eu de mal a me répondre. Gaspard est VP PaaS products chez Scaleway, et aujourd'hui il nous partage sa vision sur le présent et l'avenir des produits de Scaleway.

    Notes de l'épisode

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