March 15th, 2017
2:00pm ET
It’s the same everywhere you turn. Companies are trying to transform their digital experiences and increase customer engagement all while improving customer experience. This is giving rise to a whole new generation of modern applications that are built fast, scale out, are mobile-first and go global on public cloud infrastructure.Developers building modern applications depend on:
- An evolving set of DevOps needs
- Modern architectural principles
- Pervasive use of open source frameworks and tools
Join Forrester Analyst, Jeffrey Hammond, and CloudBees DevOps Evangelist, Brian Dawson, for an update on how developers are meeting the demand for speed without blowing budgets. They will share the best practices they have seen companies use to take full advantage of open source tools and frameworks.
Jeffrey Hammond
Forrester - Analyst
Jeffrey is a software development veteran, with more than twenty years of experience in various development, product management, strategy, and marketing roles. He is a leading expert on mobile development, modern application architecture, application life-cycle management, and open source policies and projects. He helps Application Development & Delivery teams improve their productivity while building creative, high-performance cultures.
Brian Dawson
CloudBees - DevOps Evangelist
Brian is currently a DevOps evangelist and practitioner at CloudBees, where he helps the community and customers in implementation of Agile, CI, CD and DevOps practices. Prior to CloudBees Brian spent 22-plus years as a software professional in multiple domains including QA, Engineering and Management. Most recently he led an Agile Transformation Consulting practice helping organizations small and large implement CI, CD and DevOps. Prior to CloudBees, Brian worked at CollabNet, VA Software, Sony Computer Entertainment, Sega, Namco and Apple. His roots are as a C/C++ developer, but his primary job has always been gathering and distributing knowledge and using shared solutions to solve unique problems.