Agile Principles —5 min read
Why Your Business Should Care About Small Batches

5 ways smaller software releases can impact your business

Software Delivery —41 min listen
Adventures in DevOps 104: CI/CD Tools for Dummies

The gang discusses the dos and don’ts of choosing CI/CD tools.

Agile Principles —2 min read
Things that blew my mind

The best, game-changing ideas always feel like utter blasphemy the first time I hear them.

Agile Principles —3 min read
Science is never settled

The odds are in your favor if you follow the science, even though it's not yet settled.

Software Delivery —2 min read
We can't afford automation right now

Avoid a big up-front investment in automation by building it piece by piece, as needed.

Software Delivery —2 min read
How quickly could you respond to a Log4j-style vulnerability?

What's preventing you from releasing on demand, in 20 minutes or less?

Software Delivery —34 min episode
Tiny DevOps episode #21 Bryan Finster — Minimum Viable Continuous Delivery

Bryan Finster is a co-creator of Minimum Viable Continuous Delivery, and in this episode we talk about how this concept was born, what problems it aims to address, and how you can use it on your team to improve your continuous delivery.

Software Delivery —65 min listen
Adventures In DevOps 093: Deconstructing the Minimum Viable Continuous Deployment

The panel jumps in and discusses the Minimum Viable Continuous Deployment from the manifesto on the web and discuss where they agree and disagree with the requirements listed there and clarify some of the ideas in the document.

Software Delivery —3 min read
A brief history of CI/CD

CD takes the concept of a CI pipeline to its logical conclusion. But that doesn't mean you have to implement a complete CI pipeline first.

Software Delivery —1 min read
Do less rework

By working in smaller iterations, we don't just re-organize our work, we actually reduce the amount of work we do.

Quality Engineering —1 min read
Is Continuous Deployment incompatible with manual QA?

CD leaves room for manual approvals, but once approved, all changes should be applied automatically.