Building a service delivery infrastructure (sponsored by ThoughtWorks)
Even if you're not ready to adopt a microservices architecture, you still want the benefits of rapidly deployable, highly automated infrastructure that enables rapid delivery of new features and services. Paula Paul and Rosemary Wang offer a deeper look at the necessary set of products and capabilities for a delivery infrastructure to support a distributed service or microservice architecture.
Talk Title | Building a service delivery infrastructure (sponsored by ThoughtWorks) |
Speakers | Paula Paul (Slalom Build), Rosemary Wang (ThoughtWorks) |
Conference | O’Reilly Software Architecture Conference |
Conf Tag | Engineering the Future of Software |
Location | New York, New York |
Date | February 4-6, 2019 |
URL | Talk Page |
Slides | Talk Slides |
Video | |
Teams considering adoption of service-based or microservice architectures have a wealth of information to consult on the organization and design of application software, the benefits of these architectural approaches, and general considerations for the prerequisites. Even if you’re not ready to adopt a microservices architecture, you still want the benefits of rapidly deployable, highly automated infrastructure that enables rapid delivery of new features and services. What can you do to build an infrastructure that supports such mythical delivery? Delivery infrastructure refers to a set of products and capabilities that serve the needs of product developers and operations teams. Paula Paul and Rosemary Wang offer a deeper look at an approach to building the necessary delivery infrastructure to support a distributed service or microservice architecture. You’ll explore delivery infrastructure products and their capabilities as well as related aspects of change friction for core compute, observability, delivery pipelines, security, persistence, and more. This session is sponsored by ThoughtWorks.