London 2013 - Proposal

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Writing automatable software and maybe encouraging a devops culture by stealth

Abstract:

Writing automatable software and maybe encouraging a devops culture by stealth

As much as devops isn't about just environment automation, that's where a large amount of the focus has been for the past year or so since the unfortunately extremely catchy term became popular with recruiters.

This tends to mean that to the outside observer the emphasis in "devops" is firmly on "ops"; this puts off a lot of developers, testers, DBAs, architects, from getting involved.

The session is about what I believe to be a half decent approach to software design and development which may help introduce aspects of a devops culture almost by coincidence, hopefully giving developers and architects some cause for realising they need to get fully stuck in, and how they might approach doing so.

It's also a work in progress currently being tested in a large online retailer with an organically grown internal system on which most other systems depend; the anti-CI, if you will..

Speaker:

I'm Robin Osborne, a developer and pragmatic architect through and through (but with a history of being Ops-y QA-y DBA-y enough to get the job done) - who is getting a bit addicted to pitching for conferences recently - and I want to get more developers interested thinking about what they can bring to the devops table.

I've been a developer for the best part of 15 years professionally; nearer 25 including those unpaid years tinkering with a ZX Spectrum/Amiga 600, and using Unix (Sun Solaris) and PC at university, before ending up on a PC for work. And various linuxes. And Mac.

I always did a bit of everything; design, dev, db, deploy, app support, desktop support, BA, PM, Dev Manager (everything except UI - I'm crap with photoshop..); whatever was needed to help get whatever I was working on delivered.

I can't really understand why there are so many developers happy to build something that passes some QA tests and then head to pub, happy that their work is done; if it's not delivered and it's not working, it's not done.

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