“Even with the formidable power we wield on day-to-day lives as engineers, designers, product managers, data scientists, etc., there is very little education and oversight on ethics in our industry.”
Original source: Technologist’s Hippocratic Oath
Link: Millennials: A tale of two generations
‘The oldest Millennials are now in their mid 30s and finally “settling down,” which leads to heightened concerns about finances, kids and home buying, while the youngest Millennials are still pursuing their education.’
Chock full of survey info and demographic stuff.
Original source: Millennials: A tale of two generations
Link: Millennials: A tale of two generations
‘The oldest Millennials are now in their mid 30s and finally “settling down,” which leads to heightened concerns about finances, kids and home buying, while the youngest Millennials are still pursuing their education.’
Chock full of survey info and demographic stuff.
Original source: Millennials: A tale of two generations
Link: Millennials: A tale of two generations
‘The oldest Millennials are now in their mid 30s and finally “settling down,” which leads to heightened concerns about finances, kids and home buying, while the youngest Millennials are still pursuing their education.’
Chock full of survey info and demographic stuff.
Original source: Millennials: A tale of two generations
Link: How to build a business case for DevOps transformation
“Here are a few signs that your company should consider transitioning to DevOps:
Does it take a long time to deliver features? Are features underutilized? Do you not know the utilization of features? Do you have downtime during maintenance or deployment windows? Do your customers tell you your site is down before you know it? Do outages occur repeatedly for the same reason? Are customer feature requests implemented in a way that doesn’t actually fulfill the customer’s needs?
Link: How to build a business case for DevOps transformation
“Here are a few signs that your company should consider transitioning to DevOps:
Does it take a long time to deliver features? Are features underutilized? Do you not know the utilization of features? Do you have downtime during maintenance or deployment windows? Do your customers tell you your site is down before you know it? Do outages occur repeatedly for the same reason? Are customer feature requests implemented in a way that doesn’t actually fulfill the customer’s needs?
Link: How to build a business case for DevOps transformation
“Here are a few signs that your company should consider transitioning to DevOps:
Does it take a long time to deliver features? Are features underutilized? Do you not know the utilization of features? Do you have downtime during maintenance or deployment windows? Do your customers tell you your site is down before you know it? Do outages occur repeatedly for the same reason? Are customer feature requests implemented in a way that doesn’t actually fulfill the customer’s needs?
Link: Ethics? Yeah, that's great, but do they scale?
“We’re not hand-crafting dovetail joints here. To be ethical engineers in a hyperscale world we need to reason critically about what we build, on a feature-by-feature basis, and stand by our reasoning if it is sound.”
Original source: Ethics? Yeah, that’s great, but do they scale?
Link: Ethics? Yeah, that's great, but do they scale?
“We’re not hand-crafting dovetail joints here. To be ethical engineers in a hyperscale world we need to reason critically about what we build, on a feature-by-feature basis, and stand by our reasoning if it is sound.”
Original source: Ethics? Yeah, that’s great, but do they scale?
Link: Ethics? Yeah, that's great, but do they scale?
“We’re not hand-crafting dovetail joints here. To be ethical engineers in a hyperscale world we need to reason critically about what we build, on a feature-by-feature basis, and stand by our reasoning if it is sound.”
Original source: Ethics? Yeah, that’s great, but do they scale?