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In this episode, we’re excited to bring you a conversation with Watson Health’s Lead Coding Architect, Dixon Whitmire. Dixon is here to give us the details on the open source project Linux For Health, the aim of which is to be the reference implementation for healthcare transactions.
Dixon digs into healthcare transaction technology, how patients and healthcare workers interact with health data, and how an open source project like Linux for Health breaks down the silos of different standards and organizations. Along the way, he describes how changes to the software can have immediate real world benefits for anyone who needs access to health records, a requirement that has only grown in urgency in the shadow of a global pandemic.
If you’re working in — or thinking of using — an open source environment and you have an interest in the way health records are accessed and shared, you won’t want to miss this discussion.
Links related to this episode
Linux for HealthIBM Watson HealthTakeaways:
00:01 - 00:27 Episode Intro01:15 - 01:52 Introduction to Dixon02:08 - 04:12 Dixon's role at IBM, and Linux For Health04:30 - 05:48 Why go all the way down to the OS?06:06 - 07:34 Problems in the industry: Data is siloed12:06 - 14:33 What ASC X12 and HL7 both are17:34 - 19:01 Security in Linux For Health19:33 - 20:50 EDI: What is it and why it's important26:35 - 29:32 For Developers: Where to start if you want to play around and work on projects34:33 - 36:17 Linux for Health in relation to Watson Health49:29 - 50:22 Final Thoughts by Dixon -
Brian Behlendorf is the General Manager of the Open Source Security Foundation. Brian has dedicated his career to connecting and empowering the free software and open source community to both solve difficult technology problems and have a positive impact on society. From startup company founder, to advisor to the U.S. government, to non-profit board member and employee of the World Economic Forum, he's been at the forefront of the open source software revolution.
Join hosts Luke Schantz and Joe Sepi as they get Brian's take on the latest open source software developments. As the recent Log4J vulnerability has shown, open source software is not immune to security breaches and attack. Brian shares his views on the Log4J scramble, his recent White House meetings on software security, the costs of security and threat mitigation, and future challenges and opportunities in open source software.
Join us for a look back at Brian Behlendorf's unique career and see what's next for him and the movement he helped launch, this time on In the Open with Luke & Joe.
Key Takeaways:
[00:04 - 00:24] Intro to the episode[02:00 - 02:49] Intro to Brian Behlendorf[02:59 - 08:04] Brian's role with the Open Source Security Foundation[08:46 - 14:16] The importance and newer focus on security[15:29 - 18:27] How to more folks, importantly the US Government, involved in Node.Js[18:52 - 21:43] SBOM[21:48 - 26:17] The Alpha Omega Project[27:28 - 30:58] Getting money and support for security[31:46 - 35:02] The Best Practices badge[35:12 - 38:44] Project Sigstore[39:29 - 41:04] How to get involved in Open SSFResources:
Brian Behlendorf bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Behlendorf
Open Source @ IBM: https://www.ibm.com/opensource/
Learn in-demand skills. Build with real code. Connect to a global development community: http://ibm.biz/IBMdeveloperYT
Follow IBM Developer on social:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/IBMDeveloper
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IBMDeveloper/
More from IBM Developer:
Community: https://developer.ibm.com/community/
Blog: https://developer.ibm.com/blogs/
Call for Code: https://developer.ibm.com/callforcode/
#opensource
#Developer
#Coding
#IntheOpen
#IBMDeveloper
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In this podcast, Steve Martinelli, Dr. Max, and Emily Mitchell talk about a new Open Source Cloud Guide created to show what open source technology underpins today’s major cloud offerings.They chat about :
⁃ Why the guide was created
⁃ Specific topic areas within the guide
⁃ Ways you can contribute or enhance the guide
An O’Reilly survey that IBM commissioned in late 2020 pointed out that developers who want to build cloud applications should work on honing their open-source skills instead of only focusing on developing skills for a proprietary cloud.The survey highlighted that the most desired of the open-source skills are around Linux (containers), artificial intelligence and machine learning, and data storage.This got us thinking: How do those skills translate exactly to developing for hybrid cloud environments, inclusive of the major cloud providers? What open-source technologies are most used?
The purpose of the Open Source Cloud Guide is to answer those questions.This Open Source Cloud Guide seeks to inform developers about what open source technology is important to contribute to. And, because it’s open sourced itself, you can contribute about the technology that’s included in other clouds. Use and contribute to the Open Source Cloud Guide
Key Takeaways:
[00:00 - 00:30] Intro to the episode[01:11 - 03:27] Intro to guests Emily, Dr. Max, and Steve[03:37 - 05:44] What is the Open Source Cloud Guide?[06:12 - 10:27] What to expect in terms of AI, APIs, big data containers, etc.[18:06 - 19:41] Emily's involvement in the projectResources:
The Open Source Cloud Guide: open-cloud-guide.dev/Read & developer.ibm.com/blogs/contribute-to-a-new-open-source-cloud-guide
IBM Developer
In the era of open hybrid cloud, open source skills matter more than proprietary software skills
O'Reilly survey highlights that open source cloud skills set devs apart for career prospects (40 kB)
https://developer.ibm.com/blogs/oreilly-open-source-skill-survey-blog/
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Please join us for a conversation with Kris Baritt, VP of Technology for Client Engineering at IBM. Our discussion will cover a variety of topics including how he activates teams, develops new leaders and has an affinity for hyper-growth moments.
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:25] Intro to the episode[03:36 - 05:15] What Kris and the team do at IBM[12:30 - 15:10] What hybrid cloud means[15:25 - 17:40] Exciting projects Kris and team have been working on[19:31 - 25:11] Kris's origin story[33:26 - 37:12] How Kris builds and implements teams[45:36 - 47:36] What Kris is excited about these days -
Please join us for a conversation with Robin Bender Ginn the Executive Director of the OpenJS Foundation. We will be discussing a variety of topics including the origins and mission of the OpenJS Foundation, as well as, programs, certifications and upcoming events.
Robin Bender Ginn, Executive Director OpenJS Foundation, @rginn206
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador & Podcaster @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:21] Intro to the episode[02:24 - 05:13] Intro to Robin and her experience with open source[07:55 - 10:28] The role of the OpenJS Foundation[11:16 - 14:26] Different way individuals and organizations are involved[15:16 - 17:00] A cross project called Collaboration Spaces[17:15 - 18:51] Robin's experience as Executive Director of OpenJS Foundation[37:14 - 39:15] How projects come into the OpenJS Foundation[41:36 - 44:04] Trainings and certifications at the foundationResources:
OpenJS Foundation: openjsf.org
OpenJS Collaboration: openjsf.org/collaborate
OpenJS Certification and Training Programs: openjsf.org/certification
OpenJS World 2021: openjsf.org/openjs-world-2021
OpenJS Foundation Individual Supporter Program: openjsf.org/javascriptlandia
Open Source Summit: events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-north-america
Open Source Security Foundation: openssf.org
Nebraska project: xkcd.com/2347
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Please join us for a conversation with Parul Singh, a Senior Software Engineer in Red Hat’s Emerging Technology team. We will be discussing the ChRIS Project, volsync, microshift and OpenShift’s Quantum Operators.
Parul Singh, Sr. Software Engineer, Emerging Tech, Red Hat
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Key Takeaways:
[00:04 - 00:24] Intro to the episode[02:12 - 02:46] Intro to Parul Singh[03:03 - 05:25] Parul's work developing the IBM and OpenShift quantum operators[08:09 - 10:24] Where can quantum be applied?[10:43 - 13:16] The ChRIS Project, and how Parul got involved[16:20 - 21:11] VolSync: Overview of what it is, and what Parul is working on[25:58 - 29:23] What you need to know about MicroShift[31:49 - 34:46] Living as sustainable as possible[35:48 - 37:28] QUESTION: "How can a company earn money from OpenSource software?"[42:16 - 43:50] QUESTION: "Do you get to choose the topics that you[Parul] like to work on, and the tech stacks as well?"Resources:
The ChRIS Project: http://chrisproject.org/
VolSync: https://github.com/backube/volsync
Microshift: https://github.com/openshift/microshift
OpenShift Quantum Operators: https://github.com/qiskit-community/openshift-quantum-operators
CubeSat Space Mission "ENDURANCE": https://www.ibm.com/cloud/blog/cubesat-space-mission-endurance-democratizing-access-to-space
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In this episode, we are pleased to bring you a conversation with Pooja Mistry and Santhosh Ramanathan. Pooja is a developer advocate with IBM and Santos is a Cloud Pak for Integration consultant at TCS, a leading global it services consulting and business solutions firm. We're going to be talking about how they work together as partners on enterprise application integration.
This should be an interesting case study on how enterprise business and independent software vendors work together.
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:33] Intro to the episode[00:36 - 01:54] Pooja and Santhosh work together[02:03 - 03:14] How Santhosh got involved in working with IBM at TCS[03:28 - 06:29] The IBM Champions Program, and the impact it's had on Santhosh's career[07:20 - 10:12] More information on Cloud Paks and Jumpstart Paks[10:43 - 13:17] Interesting client use cases[13:17 - 16:30] Mid-episode recap[17:04 - 19:56] Being an advocate: Fun sessions and advice from SanthoshPooja Mistry: linkedin.com/in/pmmistry
Santhosh Ramanathan: linkedin.com/in/santhosh-ramanathan-6687b582
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In this episode of In the Open, Please join us for a conversation with Ted Tanner and Adam Orentlicher. Ted is the Global CTO and Chief Architect of Watson Health. And Adam is the VP of Development for Watson Health. We will be discussing the open source projects Linux for Health, Project Alvearie and more.
Theodore Tanner, Global CTO & Chief Architect, Watson Health, @tctjr
Adam Orentlicher, VP of Development, Watson Health, @thisisadamo
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Key Takeaways:
[00:00 - 00:22] Intro to the episode[01:47 - 03:05] Intro to Ted and Adam[04:18 - 09:26] Experience with orienting things for the developer[10:24 - 12:49] What a fire server is, and a use case[18:46 - 26:17] The Linux for Health project[35:05 - 36:27] Advice for where a developer should start and get involved in Linux for Health[42:06 - 45:50] Does healthcare care about open source?Linux for Health: github.com/LinuxForHealth
Project Alvearie: alvearie.io
Project Alvearie on GitHub: github.com/Alvearie
Project Alvearie on IBM.com: ibm.com/watson-health/project-alvearie
Project Alvearie Slack: alvearie.slack.com
FHIR Repo: github.com/IBM/FHIR
IBM FHIR server: ibm.com/products/fhir-server
Paul Bastide's FHIR Workshop (Track 5) 9/21/21: developer.ibm.com/conferences/digital-developer-conference-hybrid-cloud
LF Public Health: lfph.io
IBM Watson Health: ibm.com/watson-health
CATB: wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cathedral_and_the_Bazaar
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In this episode we bring you a conversation with James Snell.
We will be discussing and variety of topics including Node.js. LF Public Health, COVID Green, NodeConfRemote as well as exploring James's career journey through IBM, NearForm and now Cloudflare.
James Snell, One who writes code, @jasnell
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:25] Intro to the episode[02:53 - 05:40] Intro to James[06:43 - 09:51] James' experience with Node.Js[10:31 - 14:36] The challenges in creating a community around large open-source projects[15:41 - 17:45] James' work beyond Node[20:15 - 22:08] OpenHive.JS the podcast[22:22 - 26:53] The Linux Foundation Public Heath Initiative - What it is and their future work[30:59 - 33:23] HERALD[33:38 - 34:26] Advice for those who want to get involved in Node.Js[35:03 - 38:09] What should we be working on in Node.JsResources:
James Snell Blog: https://www.jasnell.me
Linux Foundation Public Health: lfph.io/2021/05/25/momentum
Herald, proximity detection, distance estimation & data sharing: heraldprox.io
Node.js Next 10: github.com/nodejs/next-10
Open Hive JS Podcast: nearform.com/openhive-js-the-podcast-for-all-things-javascript/
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By day, Dale Lane is the lead software developer and architect for the Apache Kafka capabilities in IBM's Cloud Pak for Integrations. He is based in the UK and works out of IBM Hursley research and development laboratory. In his spare time Dale developed a platform for teaching machine learning to children. What started as educational project for his own children has grown into a global phenomenon being used by thousands world wide.
Resources:
machinelearningforkids.co.uk
ibm.org/activities/machine-learning-for-kids
ibm.org/initiatives/ibm-volunteers/stories/dale-lane
ibm.com/cloud/cloud-pak-for-integration
Takeaways:
00:06 - 00:44 Machine Learning for Kids
00:56 - 01:25 The inspiration for Machine Learning for Kids
01:33 - 02:59 What it looks like from a UI, UX perspective
07:12 - 08:33 How to find resources for Machine Learning for Kids
08:48 - 10:11 How different age groups interact with these projects
13:04 - 14:10 Staying away from personifying AI
14:30 - 16:48 The power of open source in education
20:21 - 21:59 Dale's tech origin story
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In this Episode, we will explain why we thought we need to have a podcast that explains what trends and directions are implemented in the IBM Z Runtimes and Application Platforms and the Runtimes. In the future Episodes, we will go into a lot of topics and invite interesting Guests to understand what are the important things now and what will come next!
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 01:24] Intro to Z Application Platform Talks[01:40 - 02:19] Meet your hosts of Z Application Platforms Talks[02:31 - 06:57] Why did we want to start making this podcast?[12:06 - 13:36] Where you can find the new podcast, and how you can connect with the hostsResources:
Listen to the new IBM Z Application Platform Talks Podcast!
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Please join us for a conversation with Andy Stanford-Clark. Andy is an IBM Distinguished Engineer and Master Inventor with more than 40 patents. He is based at IBM's Hursley Park laboratories in the UK, and has a long background in the Internet of Things technologies. Notably, he was the inventor of the lightweight publish-subscribe network protocol MQTT.
Key Takeaways:
[00:00 - 01:07] Intro to Andy Stanford-Clark[01:19 - 03:09] MQTT[06:11 - 10:10] The Isle of Wight Ferry[13:23 - 16:08] Hersley: What it is and how it fits into the IBM strategy of innovation[17:34 - 20:34] Andy's thoughts on a hybrid multi-cloud world, and how IBM is approaching it[20:46 - 24:38] The Mayflower 400 Project[24:50 - 26:35] Andy's tech origin story[26:49 - 29:24] What Andy is talking to CTO's about during his travelsResources:
Andy on Twitter: twitter.com/andysc
Andy's website: stanford-clark.com
Mayflower Autonomous ship: ibm.com/industries/federal/autonomous-ship & mas400.com
Hursley Park Laboratories: ibm.com/ibm/history/ibm100/uk/en/stories/hursley_innovations.html
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Please join us for a conversation with Gabriela de Queiroz the Chief Data Scientist, AI Strategy and Innovation at IBM. Gabriela is active in a variety of open source and community organizations.
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:20] Intro to the episode[01:50 - 02:54] Learn about Gabriela De Queiroz[05:42 - 07:33] What Gabriela was doing before IBM[08:05 - 11:20] Gabriela's open-source work: What she has doing and what she's currently doing[26:44 - 28:48] Innovations within IBM[28:49 - 31:54] Advocacy, research, and innovation[32:19 - 34:27] What Gabriela is working on that she is excited about, right now[39:24 - 43:06] AI Inclusive[43:53 - 48:37] How to get involved, and skills to hone in on when getting into AIResources:
Gabriela on Twitter: twitter.com/gdequeiroz
Model asset exchange: developer.ibm.com/exchanges/models
Data asset exchange: developer.ibm.com/exchanges/data
AI Fairness Toolkit360: aif360.mybluemix.net
Florida Hacks with IBM hackathon:
floridahackswithibm.bemyapp.com
RLadies: rladies.org
AI Inclusive: ai-inclusive.org
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Please join us for a conversation with Kevin Roche, an advisory engineer & scientist at IBM Research Almaden. He specializes in materials for magnetoelectronics, spintronics, and is an IBM Quantum Ambassador. Kevin is an expert in ultra-high-vacuum systems, thin-film deposition, data acquisition and laboratory automation. In addition to his career in tech, he enjoys speaking to the public about science and technology, as well as, making interesting projects that combine technology with his love of the arts and costuming. Notable projects include the "Tiki Dalek" and the ThinBot bartending robot.
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:50] Intro to the episode[00:50 - 02:17] Intro to Kevin[04:32 - 07:02] IBM Research Almaden[07:16 - 09:41] A rundown of what goes on in the Almaden Lab[16:07 - 19:01] The community and wide variety of opportunities at IBM[21:58 - 25:27] Kevin's tech origin story[28:29 - 34:15] Kevin's side projects: Robots and Maker FaireResources:
Bartending Robots & Spintronics: ibm.com/blogs/research/2015/04/profile-of-an-ibm-scientist-kevin-roche
I’m a Maker and Costume Designer, Here’s Why I’m Learning Quantum Computing: medium.com/qiskit/im-a-maker-and-costume-designer-here-s-why-i-m-learning-quantum-computing-1972a51b43f7
Your Raspberry Pi running code on the IBM Quantum quantum processors via Python 3: github.com/KPRoche/quantum-raspberry-tie
Wearable light project - animated belt: github.com/KPRoche/BLE-Beetle-Pixels
IBM Quantum Composer: ibm.com/quantum-computing/tools
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In this episode of In the Open we bring you a conversation with Brad Topol, Jake Kitchener & Michael Elder. We will be discussing their new O'Reilly book Hybrid Cloud Apps with OpenShift and Kubernetes. Topics include the fundamental concepts of Kubernetes, as well as more, advanced practices such as continuous delivery and multi-cluster management.
Dr. Brad Topol, Open Tech & Dev Advocacy CTO, @bradtopol
Jake Kitchener, Senior Technical Staff Member @ IBM, @kitch
Michael Elder, Senior Distinguished Engineer @ Red Hat, @mdelder
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Hybrid Cloud Apps with OpenShift and Kubernetes ibm.biz/hybridappbook
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:24] Intro to the episode[05:06 - 14:45] Intro to Michael, Jake, and Brad[14:55 - 19:53] What their first book was about[26:21 - 27:53] What is the most important aspect of the book?[34:06 - 40:03] The concept of roles in continuous integration and delivery[41:40 - 46:10] Problem stories that the authors wanted to cover in the book[48:24 - 50:54] How do I make the choice between running open source Kubernetes myself, Kubernetes service, or do I need OpenShift? -
Join us for a conversation with Customer Success Manager Deveonte Sykes. Topics discussed include; career paths in tech, open-source use in the real world, soft skills, and much more.
Devonte Sykes, Customer Success Manager, @DevonteSykes
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador & Podcaster @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Key Takeaways:
[00:04 - 00:19] Intro to the episode[01:59 - 04:52] Devonte's role at IBM and what led him to this career path[06:20 - 09:07] QUESTION: "What's your favorite, most memorable example of helping someone with technology?"[12:55 - 15:16] Developer advocates: The importance of curiosity, learning, and teaching[15:39 - 18:12] Devonte's final IBM Summit Program project: Build a chatbot[18:21 - 20:23] Where Devonte's love for sharing knowledge came from[21:36 - 23:39] How security relates to Devonte's work[24:38 - 27:31] Devonte's day-to-day with customers, from the open source perspective[28:15 - 29:29] Is there hesitancy about open source from executives? And how to approach the situation[31:33 - 33:35] What excites Devonte about his current work, and what's going on in tech[40:05 - 41:51] Is there hesitancy about open source from executives? And how to approach the situation continued[42:09 - 45:07] QUESTION: "Which customer is your favorite to work with? And any open source project you think that's exciting for the future of space?"Resources:
Start Your Journey with IBM: https://www.ibm.com/careers/us-en/early-career/entry-level/
IBM Cloud Paks: https://www.ibm.com/cloud-paks
Build Conversational AI Solutions: https://developer.ibm.com/components/watson-assistant/
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Thank you for joining us. Today I am pleased to bring you a conversation with Jason Dobies. Jason is the Senior Principal Developer Advocate at Red Hat. We are going to be discussing a variety of topics including Kubernetes, operators, open shift as well as career advice.
Jason Dobies, Senior Principal Developer Advocate at Red Hat, @jdob
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:18] Intro to the episode[15:47 - 21:17] A day in the life of Jason as an OpenShit developer advocate lead [30:54 - 33:50] Summit ConnectResources:
Red Hat Summit | redhat.com/summit
Red Hat Developer Learn Program | learn.openshift.com
Start learning Kubernetes today! | commons.openshift.org
Quay | https://quay.io/
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In this episode, we are pleased to bring you a conversation with the Open Technology CTO and IBM Fellow Chris Ferris.
Chris Ferris, IBM Fellow & CTO Open Source Technology, @christo4ferris
Joe Sepi, Host, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Host, Developer Advocate, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:28] Intro to the episode[04:54 - 07:40] Chris shares his IBM story[07:57 - 11:51] IBM's open source story[13:20 - 16:05] The Value of Open Source in the Cloud Era[17:32 - 19:10] Important skills for those in open source[19:27 - 22:08] How IBM shares open source knowledge internally and with customers[23:44 - 27:19] The Open Source Security Foundation[32:23 - 36:17] Some things Chris is working on and excited about[41:12 - 42:54] The new data license agreementResources:
IBM's open-source story: https://www.ibm.com/opensource/story/
Red Hat State of Enterprise Open Source Report: https://www.redhat.com/en/enterprise-open-source-report/2022
Open Source Security Foundation: https://openssf.org/
IBM’s Project CodeNet -- a large dataset aimed at teaching AI to code: https://research.ibm.com/blog/codenet-ai-for-code
Project Ray -- Fast and Simple Distributed Computing: https://www.ray.io/
New collaborative data license agreement created to make sharing data sets easier -- Linux Foundation AI releases Community Data License Agreement v2 license, 364 words of data-sharing clarity: https://developer.ibm.com/blogs/new-collaborative-data-license-agreement-makes-sharing-data-sets-easier/
LinuxOne (Z/Linux) builds a platform for OSS projects: https://developer.ibm.com/blogs/utilize-linuxone-as-a-platform-to-build-open-source-technology/
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In this episode, we are pleased to bring you a conversation with the Distinguished Engineer, Andrea Crawford. Andrea serves on the IBM Garage Cloud DE leadership team and is a DevOps expert.
Key Takeaways:
[02:53 - 04:13] How real AI and DevOps are related with cloud native[04:28 - 10:02] Why Andrea considers DevOps as the umbrella that everything falls under[14:44 - 19:11] How Andrea begins the approach to moving towards a more modern DevOps approach[19:37 - 22:22] What is the Garage?[22:47 - 26:31] The AI aspect of the modern Devops Manifesto[26:47 - 29:00] QUESTION: "Does your[Andrea] idea of static analysis here go beyond continuous integration?"[29:37 - 33:43] How to digest AI in DevOps predictive techniques[38:59 - 41:18] The evolution of breaking silosConnect with those in this episode:
Andrea Crawford, Distinguished Engineer (DevOps), IBM Garage @acmThinks
Joe Sepi, Open Source Engineer & Advocate, @joe_sepi
Luke Schantz, Quantum Ambassador, @IBMDeveloper, @lukeschantz
Resources:
The Modern DevOps Manifesto: https://medium.com/@acmThinks/the-modern-devops-manifesto-f06c82964722
IBM Garage: https://www.ibm.com/garage
IBM Garage Methodology: https://www.ibm.com/garage/method
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Holly Cummins is a Senior Technical Staff Member and Innovation Leader at IBM. Holly has used technology to enable innovation, for clients across a range of industries, from banking to catering to retail to NGOs. During her time as a lead developer in the IBM Garage, she has led projects to count fish, help a blind athlete run ultra-marathons in the desert solo, improve health care for the elderly, and change how city parking works. Holly is also an Oracle Java Champion, IBM Q Ambassador, and JavaOne Rock Star. Before joining the IBM Garage, she was Delivery Lead for the WebSphere Liberty Profile (now Open Liberty). Holly co-authored Manning’s Enterprise OSGi in Action and is a regular keynote speaker. She is an active speaker and has spoken at KubeCon (keynote), GOTO, JavaOne, Devoxx, Sonar+D, JavaZone, JFokus, The ServerSide Java Symposium, GOTO, JAX London, QCon, GeeCon, and the Great Indian Developer Summit, as well as a number of user groups.
Key Takeaways:
[00:05 - 00:23] Intro to the episode[02:51 - 03:57] Intro to Holly[04:29 - 05:56] Holly's PhD in Quantum Information Studies[09:10 - 13:24] Is quantum on the horizon for innovative work[13:38 - 17:36] Sustainability: Do your part for the climate[21:54 - 25:36] What cloud native means to Holly[30:43 - 33:59] The Garage and what Holly does there[35:51 - 37:55] QUESTION: "How do you deal with/anticipate things out of the developer's control? For example, server OS kernel updates that affect the developer?"[40:35 - 43:01] The work at Open LibertyResources:
Holly's website: https://hollycummins.com
Holly's blog post: https://blog.container-solutions.com/wtf-does-tech-have-to-do-with-the-planet
IBM Garage: https://ibm.com/garage
IBM Garage Method: https://ibm.com/garage/method
IBM Quantum Computing: https://ibm.com/quantum-computing
Quantum Computing Tools: ibm.com/quantum-computing/tools
Quantum Development Roadmap: ibm.com/blogs/research/2021/02/quantum-development-roadmap
Qiskit: qiskit.org
Code Engine: ibm.com/cloud/code-engine
Open Liberty: openliberty.io
MicroProfile: microprofile.io
Holly's book on OSGI: manning.com/books/enterprise-osgi-in-action
Application Modernization Podcast Series: developer.ibm.com/podcasts/the-application-modernization-series
IBM Expert TV: Dr. Holly Cummins, How - and Why - to Modernize Scruffy Old Java Apps: ibm.biz/experttv
Employment at IBM: ibm.com/employment
Linux Foundation's new Agriculture project: agstack.org
- Visa fler