InfoQ Homepage Presentations Scaling Devops - Breaking Down the Barriers between Development and IT Operations
Scaling Devops - Breaking Down the Barriers between Development and IT Operations
Summary
Jez Humble discusses how to deal with risk management, regulation compliance, ITIL, audit requirements in a large organization that intends to adopt devops.
Bio
Jez Humble is a Principal Consultant with ThoughtWorks, and author of Continuous Delivery, published in Martin Fowler's Signature Series. He has worked as a developer, system administrator, trainer, consultant, manager, and speaker. He has worked with a variety of platforms and technologies, consulting for non-profits, telecoms, financial services, and online retail companies.
About the conference
GOTO Aarhus is the enterprise software development conference designed for team leads, architects, and project management and is organized by developers, for developers. As software developers and architects ourselves, we wanted to craft the ultimate conference. The result is a high quality conference experience where a tremendous amount of attention and investment has gone into having the best content on the most important topics presented by the leaders in our community, staged in an intimate environment needed to support as much learning and networking as possible.http://gotocon.com/
Community comments
cycle time vs resource utilisation
by Martin Kügler,
Re: cycle time vs resource utilisation
by Jez Humble,
cycle time vs resource utilisation
by Martin Kügler,
Your message is awaiting moderation. Thank you for participating in the discussion.
good talk,
I would be interested to know more about one thing mentioned;
that you can't optimize cycle time and resource utilisation at the same time;
where can I read more about it?
Re: cycle time vs resource utilisation
by Jez Humble,
Your message is awaiting moderation. Thank you for participating in the discussion.
Check out Donald Reinertsen's "Principles of Product Development Flow", especially chapter 3 (although the whole book is excellent and worth reading in full)