

Azure & DevOps Podcast
Jeffrey Palermo
The Azure & DevOps Podcast is a show for developers and devops professionals shipping software using Microsoft technologies. Each show brings you hard-hitting interviews with industry experts innovating better methods and sharing success stories. Listen in to learn how to increase quality, ship quickly, and operate well. Hosted by Jeffrey Palermo and sponsored by Clear Measure, Inc.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 2, 2019 • 40min
Patrick Smacchia on Static Code Analysis - Episode 52
Patrick Smacchia is the founder and CEO of NDepend — a tool for .NET static analysis — and has been in the software world for over 20 years. He’s one of the world’s top tier experts in static code analysis. And today, with more than 8,000 client companies (including many Fortune 500s), NDepend offers deeper insight and understanding about their code bases to a wide range of professional users around the world. In this episode, Jeffrey and Patrick will be discussing static code analysis. Patrick elaborates on exactly what it is, how to think about it, why you should implement it, and gives his recommendations on how to get started as well as further learning. Everyone in the DevOps world needs to know what static code analysis is and how to put it in place, to tune in to learn all about this key concept! Topics of Discussion: [:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:46] Jeffrey gives some announcements and lets you know where to get a hold of his book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:39] About today’s guest, Patrick Smacchia. [1:56] Jeffrey welcomes Patrick on to the show! [2:18] Patrick explains what static code analysis is and how he thinks of it. [7:46] Patrick further elaborates on the concept of treating the code as data with static code analysis. [15:25] How should we think about this realm of static code analysis? What advice would Patrick give someone on how to think about when it comes to static code analysis? [23:03] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [23:30] When it comes to finding problems in the code, how does Patrick determine which code is too complex? [37:10] Resources Patrick recommends to listeners who would like to learn more! [39:34] Jeffrey thanks Patrick for joining him on today’s episode. Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Patrick Smacchia NDepend Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Aug 26, 2019 • 38min
James Avery on Scaling to 3 Billion Requests Per Day - Episode 51
James Avery is the founder and CEO of Adzerk. Adzerk is the next generation of publisher ad serving. It's built to be faster, easier to use, and comprehensive than anything on the market today. Adzerk helps you build the exact server you want; through their ad serving APIs, they allow developers to build and scale innovative, server-side ad platforms without reinventing the wheel. James originally started Adzerk back in 2010, FTPing files up to an IaaS VM, and now he has a whole team and receives 3 billion requests per day! If you want to know how he did it, tune in to hear James as he explains how he started his company from the ground-up, how he scaled it, some of the early problems they ran into and how they resolved them, and his tips for developers looking to scale their systems! Topics of Discussion: [:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:48] Jeffrey gives some announcements and lets you know where to get a hold of his book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:47] Jeffrey welcomes on today’s guest, James Avery! [2:28] James tells his story and speaks about his path toward starting his own company, Adzerk. [11:52] How long did Adzerk’s original three servers last before their next bottleneck? [13:00] James speaks about how receiving financing, finding their market, scaling their business, and finding their focus helped shape Adzerk into what it is today. [15:00] How Adzerk’s ad serving APIs work and how they work with the development teams of other companies to build on top of their APIs. [16:46] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [17:13] How did James go from being the only developer to building an entire software engineering team at Adzerk? [19:12] After getting up to hundreds of millions of requests per day, James speaks about the next problems they ran into and how they resolved them. [23:55] Jeffrey and James speak about the common problem that is managing data and moving data from one place to another. [25:15] James shares some of the mistakes that made early on with SQL Server. [26:27] Why AWS and not Azure? [29:46] Why did it look like when James realized that his manual process was not working and he needed an automated way to get changes out to the various servers in production and have a solid process where it can be done quickly? [31:02] Do they have set times when they deploy or does it happen whenever it needs to? [32:21] What advice would James give to managers on how to ask the right questions to get the information that they need from their employees. [35:11] James leaves listeners who want to scale their own systems with some tips! [37:00] Jeffrey thanks James for joining him on the podcast! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Microsoft Build James Avery (LinkedIn) Adzerk Pluralsight Stack Overflow SQL Server Ninject Node.js XML JSON Redis Apache Hadoop Amazon Web Services (AWS) Dynamo Amazon Redshift Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Aug 19, 2019 • 55min
Richard Lander on .NET Core Runtime - Episode 50
Today's guest, Richard Lander, is a Principal Program Manager on the .NET Core Team at Microsoft. He's been with Microsoft for a total of 19 years, 16 of which have been with the .NET team. Richard is an absolute mover and shaker in pushing the .NET platform forward! Currently, he’s working on runtime features and performance, CLI experience, docker container experience, ARM32 and ARM64 support, IoT/GPIO/PWM support, blogging and customer engagement, and speaking at conferences. He's part of the design team that defines new .NET runtime capabilities and features. And in his spare time, he enjoys British rock and Doctor Who! With a lot going on with .NET right now, Richard fills listeners in on all they need to currently know! He speaks about what his own journey has been like working at Microsoft and on the .NET team, some of the high-points in regards to what he’s been spending most of his time on with .NET, what his vision is for .NET Core 5.0, his thoughts on whether or not developers should be migrating to 3.0 if they’re currently .NET Framework, and his favorite features that he’s been working on in .NET Core 3.0. Richard also shares many of his favorite resources, gives his recommendations on what listeners should follow-up on! Topics of Discussion: [:38] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:45] Jeffrey gives some announcements and lets you know where to get a hold of his book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:38] About today's topic and featured guest! [2:23] Jeffrey welcomes Richard to the podcast. [3:00] Richard tells his origin story and speaks about what his journey has been like at Microsoft for the last 19 years. [7:30] Richards speaks about some of the high-points that he has been spending a lot of his time thinking about these days in regards to .NET. [9:25] Is it true they will be skipping the name .NET Core 4.0? [10:24] With .NET Core 3.0 coming out, is this the time that developers using .NET Framework should be thinking about migrating to 3.0? [11:55] What is Richard thinking about around the vision for .NET Core 5.0? Have they announced their vision for .NET 5.0 yet? [15:53] Which GitHub pages you should check out if you want to keep up to date on all the .NET news as well as a few more resources and blogs to check out. [19:11] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast's sponsor: Clear Measure. [19:36] If you've migrated to Azure DevOps and you're using the latest (which is currently the YAML file for the pipeline), does that mean that if someone hooked up their own Azure DevOps organ and pointed it to the CLR's GitHub Repository, that they could actually "spit up" the pipeline for the CLR for that YAML file and just build it for themselves in their work? [21:27] Richards speaks about the shift to more open-source work and why it is so crucial to the industry. [26:24] Richard speaks about the feature in .NET Core 3.0 that he worked on and is the most excited about. [29:39] Which pathways are 'real' at the moment and which are the easiest to get started with for those who are just getting into docker? [37:25] Richard speaks about what they do with the Raspberry Pi. [44:54] Richard works out a scenario that Jeffrey throws his way about .NET! [53:45] Richard gives his recommendations on where to learn more. [54:40] Jeffrey thanks Richard for joining him this episode! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Richard Lander (LinkedIn) XML Xamarin Unity GitHub .NET Core on GitHub ASP.NET on GitHub NuGet on GitHub MSBuild Microsoft on GitHub YAML CLR GitHub MIT license Docker Container Kubernetes Azure Container Services Azure Service Fabric Azure Container Instances (ACI)Azure Web Apps Kudu Debian Ubuntu Alpine Linux Support for ARM Arm64Port Raspberry Pi libgpiod NuGet.org DevBlogs.Microsoft.com/DOTNET Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Aug 12, 2019 • 42min
Mads Torgersen on the Latest in C# - Episode 49
Today’s guest is Mads Torgerson, the lead designer and program manager of the C# programming language. He has been with Microsoft for 14 years. And prior to that, Mads was a professor and also contributed to a language starting with J. In this week’s episode, Mads and Jeffrey are discussing the latest in C#. Mads shares everything he knows about C#, the progress on C# 8 and when you can expect to get your hands on it, and all of the new features to look forward to. Mads and Jeffrey also speak about some of the main hurdles with the release of C# 8, some of the key problems they will be addressing in future versions of the language, and which frameworks will be supporting the new features of C# 8. He also shares some invaluable online resources to learn more about the upcoming features in C# 8 to follow-up on after listening to this week’s episode! Tune in for this week’s deep dive into the language of C#! Topics of Discussion: [:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:49] Where to get a hold of Jeffrey’s new book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:40] About today’s episode and guest. [1:54] Jeffrey welcomes Mads Torgersen to the show! [2:07] Mads speaks about his career journey leading up to the present day. [4:07] Does Mads have a sense of how many people are typing keywords in C# on a daily basis? [5:25] Mads speaks about what’s left to do to get C# 8 out the door. [6:24] The new main features to look forward to in C# 8. [10:23] Mads recommends online resources to learn more about the upcoming features in C# 8. [11:50] What should developers think about when it comes to backward compatibility in C# 8? [17:06] Mads speaks about the differences in nullable value type, the route they took with C# 8 in regards to it, and how it affects it. [23:37] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [24:01] Mads speaks about one of the hurdles with the release of C# 8. [26:48] When does Mads foresee people being able to have C# 8 in their hands? [27:50] Will .NET framework 4.8 have any of the features? [28:10] Which frameworks will support the new features of C# 8? [29:21] What are some of the key problems Mads and the team will be trying to figure out some solutions in future versions of the language? [34:00] Mads speaks about a few more of the hurdles that make it difficult to select C# for a functional style as opposed to going to another language like F#? [35:57] Mads speaks about type data in C#. [39:20] Mads gives some resource recommendations to follow-up on after listening to this week’s show! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Mads Torgersen C# MVP Summit Anders Hejlsberg “The Future of C#,” with Mads Torgersen and Dustin Campbell at Build 2018 Docs.Microsoft.com Mads Torgersen on GitHub GitHub.com/dotnet/csharplang Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Aug 5, 2019 • 38min
Steve Smith on DevOps Quality - Episode 48
This week’s guest is Steve Smith! Steve is an entrepreneur and software developer with a passion for building quality software as effectively as possible. He is the founder of Ardalis Services and Tech Hub Hudson, as well as a Board Member on the Stir Trek Conference, Inc. Steve Smith has also been recognized by Microsoft as a Most Valuable Professional (MVP) since 2002. He is also a Pluralsight author with several online courses on various topics; mentors motivated developers on DevBetter.com; blogs on his website, Ardalis.com; and shares tips on his weekly podcast, Weekly Dev Tips! Today, Steve and Jeffrey Palermo will be discussing DevOps quality. Steve explains why the quality aspect in DevOps is so important, quality techniques developers should be thinking about, what the SOLID principles are and why they matter, the types of automated testing that people should be doing on their code, and his favorite tools and frameworks. Steve also gives his thoughts on test coverage, his favorite methods for figuring out if a section in his application doesn’t have enough code coverage, what he thinks about static analysis, refactoring, and the pattern “replace conditional with polymorphism.” Tune in for all of Steve’s insights on the topic of DevOps quality, his practical rules of thumb, and invaluable recommendations on books and resources to follow-up on! Topics of Discussion: [:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:46] Where to get a hold of Jeffrey’s new book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:42] About today’s episode and guest. [2:11] Jeffrey welcomes Steve to the show! [3:32] How did Steve discover that he wanted to work as a developer for his career? [4:32] Why is the quality aspect in DevOps so important? [5:49] What are the quality techniques developers should be thinking about? [7:35] What are SOLID principles? And why are they important? [9:30] What are the types of automated testing that people need to be doing on their code? [12:07] What tools and frameworks are Steve’s favorite? [13:55] Steve’s favorite method for figuring out if a section of his application doesn’t have enough code coverage. [14:51] How Steve thinks about test coverage. [17:31] How does Steve cover the instances where a certain section of code may be 100% covered but then another section of code is close to 0? [19:00] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast sponsor: Clear Measure. [19:27] How Steve thinks about the concept of static analysis. [24:03] Do shorter or longer methods have any correlation with better psychosomatic complexity? [24:24] When does Steve recommend to refactor? [25:16] Steve gives his thoughts on when an extract method is warranted and highlights some big “code smells.” [26:30] Steve explains the pattern “replace conditional with polymorphism.” [31:10] What static analysis classes does Steve use regularly? And does he run them with every continuous integration build (or does he have a separate process)? [33:20] Steve gives some practical rules of thumb! [34:28] Steve gives his recommendations on valuable books and resources listeners should follow-up on to learn more. [35:32] What’s next for Steve? Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Steve Smith (LinkedIn) Weekly Dev Tips Podcast, with Steve Smith Ardalis.com (Steve’s Blog) Steve Smith on Pluralsight DevBetter.com xUnit NUnit Selenium Cypress Jasmine Karma Coverlet ReportGenerator ‘SOLID Principles for C# Developers’ Course by Steve Smith on Pluralsight ‘Refactoring Fundamentals’ Course by Steve Smith on Pluralsight Clean Code: A Handbook of Agile Software Craftsmanship, by Robert C. Martin Code Complete: A Practical Handbook of Software Construction, by Steve McConnell Architect Modern Web Applications with ASP.NET Core and Microsoft Azure, by Steve Smith DogFoodCon DEVIntersection Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Jul 29, 2019 • 43min
Daniel Roth on Blazor DevOps - Episode 47
Today’s guest is Daniel Roth, a Program Manager on the ASP.NET team at Microsoft. He works on building frameworks for web developers, including ASP.NET Core and Blazor. He has previously worked on various parts of .NET, including System.Net, WCF, XAML, and ASP.NET. And his passions include building frameworks for modern Web frameworks that are simple and easy to use. In this episode, Jeffrey and Daniel explore the world of Blazor DevOps! They take a look at the future potential of Blazor becoming the next desktop or native programming model, why you should use Blazor, the long-term vision for Blazor beyond what’s being released this year, and what the DevOps environment looks like for a Blazor server-side app (from a developer’s workstation all the way to running it and supporting it in production). Daniel also gives listeners his follow-up recommends on how to get started with Blazor and gives tons of practical tips if you’ve already gotten started. Topics of Discussion: [:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:48] Where to get a hold of Jeffrey’s new book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:45] About today’s episode and guest. [2:00] Jeffrey welcomes Dan to the show! [2:29] What has Dan’s journey been like? And how did he get on the ASP.NET team? [5:22] Dan and Jeffrey discuss the future potential of Blazor becoming the next desktop or native programming model. [8:00] Why do we even need a new framework for web apps? Why use Blazor? [13:22] What’s the long-term vision for Blazor (beyond what’s being released this year)? [20:04] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [20:29] Has the architecture and design process already begun in conjunction with the Xamarin team at Microsoft? Has there been conversations around a collaboration with Xamarin and Blazor? And when will Blazor ship to .NET Core 3.0, WebAssembly, mobile, etc.? [21:56] Why .Net 5.0 is dropping the ‘Core.’ [23:07] What the DevOps environment looks like for a Blazor server-side app — from a developer’s workstation all the way to running it and supporting it in production. And what’s going to be different as developers store their code in source control. [35:45] What are the deployment options with Blazor? [41:57] Resources Dan recommends listeners follow-up on after listening to today’s episode! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Blazor Daniel Roth (LinkedIn) Daniel Roth’s Twitter WebAssembly Angular React Vue AutoCAD “Blazor, a new framework for browser-based .NET apps - Steve Sanderson” (NDC Conferences Video) Xamarin .NET Core 3.0 Visual Studio Preview Visual Studio Code C# Extension GitHub.com/AspNet/AspNetCore Azure SignalR Service Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Jul 22, 2019 • 41min
Kendra Little on Database DevOps - Episode 46
Today’s guest on this week’s Azure DevOps Podcast is Kendra Little, a DevOps Advocate for Redgate Software and a Microsoft Certified Master in SQL Server. She has trained IT leaders, developers, and database administrators around the world on topics including performance tuning, preventing and managing incidents with business-critical databases, and optimizing operations and the software development cycle. Kendra is also the founder of SQLWorkbooks where she creates online training videos and teaches in-person courses on SQL Server. And one last neat fact about Kendra: she has been awarded the ‘Most Valuable Professional’ award by Microsoft seven times! Today Kendra and Jeffrey will be discussing database DevOps — which doesn’t get much play in the sea of noise that is DevOps for web applications or backend services! It’s kind of a hard topic, but it’s also where a lot of the magic happens — and Kendra lives in it day-in and day-out! Tune in to get her insight on what database DevOps is, how you should be thinking about it, her views on branching and where it fits into database DevOps, what automating database deployments looks like, and what tools and resources developers should be looking at in regards to database DevOps. Topics of Discussion: [:36] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:47] Where to get a hold of Jeffrey’s new book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:26] About today’s episode and guest. [1:58] Jeffrey welcomes Kendra to the show! [3:26] Kendra shares her background and journey in the industry of software development. [7:22] What is database DevOps? And how should people be thinking about it? [11:00] Where should the DBA be in the process of planning a change in the database code? [15:05] Kendra gives her view on branching and how it fits into database DevOps. [21:23] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [21:49] Kendra describes what automating database deployments — and, if it fails and you have to rollback — looks like. [26:37] If you do write undo scripts, where does that fit in with all the tooling? [33:09] What tools should developers be looking at in regards to database DevOps? And what tips does Kendra have for those just getting started? [39:02] Kendra gives her recommendations on what listeners should first follow-up on after listening to this week’s episode! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) — Reach out to Jeffrey @JeffreyPalermo on Twitter if you have a user group or conference and would like some free copies of .NET DevOps for Azure! .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject Kendra Little (LinkedIn) SQLWorkbooks Redgate Software Redgate’s SQL in the City Summit DevOps Topologies “The Unnecessary Evil of the Shared Development Database,” by Troy Hunt Redgate’s SQL Change Automation Redgate University Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Jul 15, 2019 • 42min
Richard Campbell on Software Perspectives - Episode 45
Today’s guest is Richard Campbell! Richard’s career has spanned the computing industry — both on the hardware and the software side; development and operations. He was a co-founder of Strangeloop Networks, which was acquired by Radware in 2013 and spent five years on the Board of Directors of Telerik (which was acquired by Progress Software in 2014). He has also founded Humanitarian Toolbox, an organization design to let developers around the world donate their skills to disaster relief organizations by building open source software. Today he is a consultant and advisor for a number of successful technology firms as well as the co-owner and content planner of the DevIntersection group of conferences. On top of all that, you may also recognize Richard as a co-host on two podcasts: .NET Rocks! and RunAs Radio! In this week’s fun episode, Jeffrey and Richard discuss software perspectives and shipping software without all the trendy buzzwords. Richard shares what he has learned over his time shipping software, his thoughts on Dev and Ops and how they can better come together, his recommendations on how to structure logs and what to log, the challenges with an independently running application or service, his predictions on what user interface types and application types will be the next big trend, and his best pick as far as all of the UI and application types available today. He also gives a bit of a sneak preview of the book he is currently working on about .NET! Topics of Discussion: [:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:48] Where to get a hold of Jeffrey’s new book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:35] About today’s episode and guest. [2:50] Jeffrey welcomes Richard to the show! [4:09] Back when Richard wrote his first line of code in 1977, was there a division between Dev and Ops? [5:41] Jeffrey and Richard discuss shipping software, what Richard has learned over his time doing it, about the history of .NET book Richard is working on, and other key lessons from his various positions in the industry. [11:28] Richard gives his recommendations on how to structure logs and what to log. [14:51] The best thing you can do when you’re trying to work across teams. [16:02] There are a lot of developers… but where are the architects? And how does a developer become an architect? [19:40] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [20:05] On the topic of ‘buzzwords…’ How would Richard classify a microservice? [22:41] One of the challenges with an independently running application or service: the state/data. [27:16] Richard gives his predictions on what user interface types and application types are going to be the next trend and his thoughts on what developers should be investing their skills in. [28:21] What would be Richard’s best pick as far as all of the UI and application types available today? [31:50] Is the language less important than the platform? [33:49] What're the best mechanisms for somebody getting into the platform today? [36:52] When is Richard’s .NET book coming out? And what will it be about? Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) — Reach out to Jeffrey @JeffreyPalermo on Twitter if you have a user group or conference and would like some free copies of .NET DevOps for Azure! .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject Humanitarian Toolbox .NET Rocks! Podcast RunAs Radio Podcast DevIntersection Progress Software’s acquisition of Telerik Microsoft Secrets: How the World's Most Powerful Software Company Creates Technology, Shapes Markets and Manages People, by Michael A. Cusumano Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Jul 8, 2019 • 39min
Matthew Renze on Data Science for Developers - Episode 44
Jeffrey’s guest today is Matthew Renze. Matthew is a Data Science Consultant, author, and public speaker. Over the past two decades, Matthew has taught over 200,000 developers and IT professionals how to make better decisions with data science! His clients include small software startups to fortune 100 companies across the globe. He’s also a Microsoft MVP, an ASPInsider, a Pluralsight author, and an open-source software contributor. His focus includes data science, machine learning, and artificial intelligence. In this week’s episode, Jeffrey and Matthew are discussing data science for developers. Matthew explains what data science is, what developers should be aware of, the powerful ways in which data science can be leveraged, real-world examples of how software developers can use data science, the difference between machine learning and data science, and what’s available right now for developers who want to use utilize data science today. Topics of Discussion: [:38] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes! [:53] Where to find Jeffrey’s book, .NET DevOps for Azure. [1:32] About today’s episode and guest. [2:07] Jeffrey welcomes Matthew to the show! [2:25] Matthew speaks about his career journey and how he has ended up where he is today. [6:25] What is data science? And what should developers be aware of? [9:13] The powerful ways in which data science can be used. [11:22] Matthew provides some real-world examples of how software developers can use data science. [14:16] What’s the difference between machine learning and data science? And how do they fit together? [16:43] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [17:10] Matthew explains what software developers can do with what’s available today in data science. [20:26] If developers want to utilize data science, would they need to design their own data repository? [21:21] What are the common choices for storing the data you gather? [22:49] Is data science just a further progression beyond Kimball methods of star schemas and data warehousing? Or is it something completely different? [23:46] Matthew explains some of the common terms associated with data science. [28:26] What does a DevOps pipeline look like for data science? What does it look like to deploy a database? [30:06] Where does A.I. fit into all of this? [34:03] Does Matthew see this use of data science as a whole different paradigm shift to thinking? [36:36] Resources Matthew recommends listeners follow-up on after this week’s episode. [37:40] Where to learn more about Matthew and his resources online! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) — Reach out to Jeffrey @JeffreyPalermo on Twitter if you have a user group or conference and would like some free copies of .NET DevOps for Azure! .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject Microsoft Build Conference Matthew Renze ASPInsiders Pluralsight.com/Authors/Matthew-Renze Matthew Renze’s Microsoft MVP Profile Azure Application Insights Python R (Programming Language) Star schema “Getting Started with Data Science,” by Matthew Renze Matthew Renze’s Twitter: @MatthewRenze Matthew Renze’s LinkedIn Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

Jul 1, 2019 • 28min
DevOps News Update for July 2019 - Episode 43
Today your host, Jeffrey Palermo, will be going solo to bring you a DevOps news update for the first week of July in 2019! He covers some of the latest advances in GitHub, big changes for Azure Pipelines, and .NET Framework news that will change the landscape. In the second half of the episode he also shares some news on what’s coming this fall for .NET Core 3.0: an update to .NET DevOps for Azure! He gives a sneak preview into the additional chapters that will be added and topics that will be covered to align with the release of .NET Core 3.0. Be sure to tune into to get the update you need for DevOps this month! Topics of Discussion: [:52] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for tons of past episodes! [2:40] If there are any particular topics you’d like to hear covered or guests you’d like to see featured, you can reach Jeffrey on Twitter @JeffreyPalermo to tweet him your suggestions! [2:55] Jeffrey covers some of the latest advances in GitHub. [4:54] Jeffery explains what Azure App Configuration is and its capabilities. [8:14] The big changes for Azure Pipelines. [12:04] Server-side Blazor and .NET Core 3.0: NET Framework news that will change the landscape. [13:27] A word from Azure DevOps sponsor: Clear Measure. [13:51] What’s coming this fall for .NET Core 3.0: an update to .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo! [23:15] Do you think video training to accompany .NET DevOps for Azure would be helpful? Reach out to Jeffrey to let him know your thoughts! [24:00] Let Jeffrey know if you think he should offer a public course! [25:24] Jeffrey speaks about an interesting new product feature with Octopus Deploy. [26:31] How and where to see what is up and coming with Azure DevOps itself. [27:24] If there is some additional news Jeffrey has missed and you’d like to hear covered on a future episode, tweet him on twitter! Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) — Reach out to Jeffrey @JeffreyPalermo on Twitter if you have a user group or conference and would like some free copies of .NET DevOps for Azure! .NET DevOps for Azure, by Jeffrey Palermo bit.ly/dotnetdevopsproject — Visit for an example of .Net DevOps for Azure The Azure DevOps Podcast Episode 01: “Buck Hodges on the introduction to Azure DevOps Services” Jeffrey’s Twitter: @JeffreyPalermo CODE Magazine GitHub Azure ReposAzure App Configuration LaunchDarkly The Azure DevOps Podcast Episode 17: “Gopinath Chigakkagari on Key Optimizations for Azure Pipelines” Microsoft Build Conference “What’s New with Azure Pipelines,” Blog Post by Gopinath Chigakkagari YAML“Server-Side Blazor in .NET Core 3.0,” Video on Channel 9 by Cecil Phillip, Shayne Boyer, and Daniel Roth Angular React Vue.jsWebAssembly Octopus Deploy Octopus.com/Workers docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/devops/release-notes Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.