Remove Continuous Delivery Remove Culture Remove Engineering Culture Remove Study
article thumbnail

Nurturing Design in Your Software Engineering Culture

Strategic Tech

In my experience, the culture is better and the results are better in orgs where engineers and architects obsess over the design of code and architecture. In orgs where it’s all about delivering tickets as quickly as possible or obsessing over technology, the culture and results are poorer.

article thumbnail

Improve your Functional Monitoring with the Functional Monitoring Quadrants

Xebia

Functional monitoring is a crucial part of any successful Continuous Delivery implementation. Case study: A checkout flow. To give you an idea how these Quadrants can be used, I am going to use a generic case study that a lot of you can relate to: a checkout process. Together they paint a complete picture.

Metrics 130
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Is the Paved Road right for you?

Xebia

First do a small feasibility study to determine this. This is down to your company’s culture. For instance, it is in the CISO’s best interests to help set up the compliance and security tests to ensure the software being rolled out is as secure as possible, especially if you want continuous delivery. Conclusion.

article thumbnail

Grown-Up Lean

LeanEssays

The implications were clear: Perhaps in the end the open-source culture will triumph not because cooperation is morally right…. They have a culture of respect for engineers, and of long-term thinking. The combined team is called a DevOps team, and the term DevOps has become almost synonymous with continuous delivery. [23]