Agile + DevOps East 2019

PRESENTATIONS

Selenium Tests at the Speed of Headless

Testing is shifting left. Developers want instant feedback on the quality of their code, and testers want to incorporate tests earlier in the pipeline without slowing down development efforts.

Alissa Lydon

Shifting Security Left: The Innovation of DevSecOps

DevSecOps uses application security practices that have existed for a while. The innovation of DevSecOps is incorporating security into the daily workflow of the team rather than leaving it to the end, shifting security left by automating aspects of security testing.

Tom Stiehm

Small Batch Sizes Enable Everything—Even in the Government

Lean practices teach us that small batch sizes optimize flow of value to market. 

Kimberly Davis

So You’re Using Docker. Now What?

These days everyone wants to containerize their application, but not everyone understands the best way to go about it.

Ryan Kenney

Stabilizing Continuous Testing in DevOps

Software testing lags behind the pace of features development and digital innovation. Despite recent advancements, testing remains one of the biggest challenges in DevOps.

Eran Kinsbruner

Story Mapping Forward and Backward with DevOps

User story maps capture the journey a customer takes with your product, including activities and tasks needed to make that journey a successful one.

Catherine Louis

Testing Serverless Applications

Serverless cloud applications are rapidly moving into the mainstream. In this model, teams focus on developing and deploying code on a known technology stack and runtime, with fixed interfaces for application, database, and network.

Peter Varhol

The Evolving Role of Manager in an Agile Environment

As teams become agile, are managers still relevant? Companies adopting agile are faced with many challenges, not the least of which is redefining some of the traditional roles.

Bharat Nagpal

The Inner Game of User Stories

When agile teams are working, the all-important stories stay on the wall (or, worse, in a tool). They sometimes get seen, touched, and loved only once a day. Why are the stories not the focus of the work?

Cory Bryan

The MVP Mental Model

Here is a question we should all ask ourselves when building new software: Am I building in small chunks? Thinking and actions around the minimum viable product (MVP) are vital in creating a shift to full team and organizational agility.

Jim Grundner

Pages

StickyMinds is a TechWell community.

Through conferences, training, consulting, and online resources, TechWell helps you develop and deliver great software every day.