Coté

Coté

How platform engineering is different than DevOps

How platform engineering is different than DevOps, plus, narwhal teeth and spider digestion, with Viktor Farcic

Software Defined Interviews #89

This is a good one, Viktor is great, almost an iconoclast on DevOps and platform engineering:

In this episode, Whitney and Coté talk with Viktor Farcic, Developer Advocate at Upbound, about platform engineering, the evolution of DevOps, project managing a content creation engine of one, and the virtues of imperfection. Also, the strategic avoidance of asking for directions, or, really, talking with people in general.

Listen to it, and make sure to subscribe. Our interviews show is turning out awesome.

Escaping the Legacy Trap: Now for Ops

I've updated my application modernization talk to talk a lot more about operations modernization, not just those pesky developers and their apps. Here's the latest version.

Wasebook

  • “tinfoil toupee” Warren Ellis.

  • “excessively negative cultural generalizations” Tyler.

  • “speeding across a half-finished bridge” if you want to get anywhere in life, that’s SOP.

  • “Among stupid-rich-people-things, I would class this among the forgivable.” maya.land

  • quantity precedes quality.” And/or.

  • ”Unintentional multicloud environments” re:Invent.

  • Or “What if Pat Gelsinger has bought a leather jacket in 2021…..would the world be different today?” SDT Slack.

  • “Some people want to stay on the carousel until it stops moving completely.” Noah.

  • “What’s so horrible about it, you may ask? Well, there’s the fact that, after the 1937 Snow White movie and the 1961 Snow White movie and the 1969 sex comedy The New Adventures of Snow White and the 1987 Snow White and 1997’s Snow White: A Tale of Terror and 2005’s The Brothers Grimm and 2012’s Mirror Mirror and 2012’s Snow White and the Huntsman and 2016’s The Huntsman: Winter’s War – plus all the assorted books, plays, operas, TV shows and video games based on Snow White – there isn’t really all that much meat left on the bone.” // They don’t like the remake.

Relative to your interests

Logoff

End of year coming up. I’ll be in Austin for most of the rest of the year. Very much looking forward to it. Am writing in that old chopped style. Is fun.

//

I signed up for Midjourney again, it’s been about a year since I’ve used it. I of course use it for my D&D solo roleplaying. It’s gotten much better at sticking to the same character, and the web-based editor it has is very helpful. The web interface is overall great. Here’s some recent images

What’s interesting about each of these is the fidelity to the original. I have many, many pictures of that guy and that tiefling (the one with the horns), and their faces are consistent across them. What you do is you fiddle around until you find one you like, then you feed it back and tell it do to a character study from multiple angles.

The Conan pages are interesting. I fed it some pages from The Savage Sword of Conan volume one and asked it to make more. I’m interested in this kind of thing because the default Midjourney style is really not what I like.

Getting it to make realistic looking images of people is difficult. I’m finding that you have to tell it to make people in middle-aged or their 50’s and then say they’re plump or chubby. And those people come out normal.

@cote@hachyderm.io, @cote@cote.io, @cote, https://proven.lol/a60da7, @cote@social.lol