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🎉✨ Celebrating nine years of Cuemby's journey! Happy 9th to us, the Cuemby crew! 🎉 Last year, we had the opportunity to be a sponsor, attendee or speaker at 16 global events, which helped us to foster knowledge sharing and collaboration within our community. Looking forward to the future, we are excited to announce: 📅 Our participation in 10 stellar events on the horizon. Ready to solidify our role in driving digital transformation. 📈 The consolidation of our Cloud Platform (CCP), underscoring the transformative power and efficiency of Cuemby's solutions. 🎯 The continue of our mission to empower startups' technical infrastructures, developer teams, and the evolution of technological businesses across LATAM and the US region. Here's to the countless innovations, collaborations, and transformations yet to come. The symphony of Cuemby is far from over; in fact, the most exciting movements are just beginning to play. Join us as we continue to shape the future of technology, making cloud computing accessible, secure, and efficient for all. 🥂 As we raise a toast to Cuemby's 9th anniversary, a huge shoutout to our incredible team, visionary founders Angel Ramirez, Cristher Castro, and Hitomi Mizugaki, and everyone who has walked this path with us. Together, we've transformed challenges into milestones and aspirations into realities. Thank you for being an indispensable part of our story. ✨ Explore more about our journey at: https://lnkd.in/eMbE-SK2 #CuembyAnniversary #kubernetes #k8s #devops #docker #aws #cloud #linux #azure
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The Gorilla Coach | Sustainable Value Coach teaching the Scrumdementals | Certified Scrum Trainer and Consultant | Passionate Scrum Expert
Still not profitable... I'm baffled. I recently heard a new story about Reddit considering another run at an IPO in 2024 (It tried before in 2021). The thing that struck me as odd was that the main reason given was Reddit was still not profitable. Still not profitable... The company is nearly 20 years old and still not profitable. Even Amazon, famous for not turning a profit for the first six years and making small profits for more than another decade, hasn't had a dry spell that long. And Amazon's primary reason for low profits was and is that it constantly invests in new businesses and technology. It started out selling books online; it is now incredibly diverse. Reddit appears to be all in on the social media bandwagon, with all its new features focused on supporting the existing platform. In Software Profit Streams, Luke Hohmann and Jason Tanner assert that for a business to be sustainable, it has to be profitable. Amazon met this; it just chose to invest all its profits back into the company. How is Reddit going public going to change that? The product space is the next frontier of good Agile practices. We can have the best teams in the world, building high-quality work and if it's work no one wants, we still fail. #agile #scrum #effectiveness #value #sustainability #continuousimprovement #ProfitStreams
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Senior Cloud & Devops Engineer | AWS Community Builder | 5x AWS Certified | Terraform Associate Certified
The future is here. AWS takes no code on app development to the next milestone. Amazon Web Services (AWS) launched its new tool https://partyrock.aws today Now start creating apps like partying :) as easy as that with no code prompt-based approach. Check out the walkthrough guide here https://lnkd.in/gvMqMhuC Cheers. #partyrockplayground #aws #partyrock #nocode #appdevelopment #generativeai
PartyRock
partyrock.aws
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Companies like Uber, Stripe and Dropbox employ a little-known strategy to kick ass. Category design. For the uninitiated, category design is a business strategy used to define and win new market categories. Uber —> Ride-sharing Stripe —> Internet payments infrastructure Dropbox —> Cloud storage Problem is, there’s no single resource for learning about category design. So I spent the last month collecting / curating everything I have on the subject. Introducing the 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗹𝗱’𝘀 𝗚𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝗖𝗮𝘁𝗲𝗴𝗼𝗿𝘆 𝗗𝗲𝘀𝗶𝗴𝗻 𝗟𝗶𝗯𝗿𝗮𝗿𝘆. https://lnkd.in/gXq4dPTP Sections include: - Category 101 - Tools & Frameworks - Strategic Narrative Examples - Strategic Narrative How-to’s - People to Follow - Books, Podcasts & Newsletters - Courses - Agencies I’ll update as we go. What have I left out?? Let me know.
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Working on the OSCP | ECC-Certified Ethical Hacker | CompTIA Sec+ | CASP+ | VMware Certified Technical Associate | Microsoft Certified: Windows Server Hybrid Administrator Associate
Embarking on this app development journey has been more challenging than I first expected, but I’m incredibly thankful for the foresight I had to train in AWS management a few months back. It’s proving invaluable now! #appdevelopment #continuouslearning #AWS”
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The Best Launch :: Whimsy Wednesday There are plenty of little wins. Fixing a bug, making an insightful comment in a meeting, getting unblocked. There are little frustrations on the way, too. Rarely there is a big win (or, of course, a big disappointment). This is the biggest win that I remember. Others involved would view it differently. Some may point to another thing I did and say that is bigger. That’s fine! The best thing I remember launching was a vanilla Android client for Amazon Prime Video. We (the team before me, and many teams I was on) had tried to launch on vanilla Android 4-5 times over the course of 4 years. When I’m saying “vanilla”, I mean for Android as the world knows it, to differentiate from the AOSP variant FireOS that Amazon runs on many 1st party hardware devices. Getting to this launch took a long time, and many first starts. One launch was scrubbed while I was in the air flying to Seattle for that event. When we did launch, there was so much repressed demand that we hit 1mm streams faster than any other client launch. That felt pretty good. I was more proud that it was pushed over the line. The number of false starts was discouraging. Many times it was not for technical reasons. A *lot* of good work had gone into those attempts, and many set the stage for succeeding. I had worked with web devs that were working on bridging a web view to native code. I worked to ensure our DI framework could “snap-in” to the combined app we launched with. I wrote a component that was used to enable so many different apps to merge into one. I designed and executed a “sidecar” app that we could use for metrics and to eventually move our playback code into in… a few days? A week? It was fast. I worked out how to initialize our module and fit into the bigger app framework. There were a lot of things, above and beyond the hard work of putting our playback components into its own library, and exposing an API for it (and for pre-caching from detail pages to improve time to first frame). When we launched, we found a hard freeze but on a certain device. It was very odd. I had to get to settings and disable auto launch in about 2 seconds before the app hard froze the phone. I found that there was code that was trying to initialize specific hardware for storing secrets that was found on our 1p devices. On this device when you tried to do that, it would cause the CPU to peg and the device to hang and eventually overheat. The code shouldn’t have run at all, but on all other devices it just failed and proceeded with invoking a software renderer. I couldn’t fix it, but we could generate a working build pretty fast and start moving through rolling out. I was able to aid other teams in their integrations and share best practices. When a mentee was asking about integrating with this app I could give them very specific details. I felt very strong ownership of this product, and seeing it succeed and be “one more” platform we supported was fantastic.
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Built an app using AWS PartyRock that serves as a quick AI-powered command reference guide for Docker. Check it out: https://lnkd.in/gzsr_VD2 Try https://partyrock.aws to create your own AI-powered app for free. #aws #aiapplications #awspartyrock #techcraftinator #dockercontainer
partyrock.aws
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Learn more 👉 https://go.aws/3T5jSnx Accelerate app maintenance, migration and upgrades in minutes.💻 💡 Now in preview, Amazon Q Code Transformation. 🚀
Now in Preview!
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🌐 #Day12 of 274: Mastering the AWS Universe, One Genius Move at a Time Strap in, tech aficionados! Today, we're diving into the heart of AWS AppConfig, and let me tell you, it's like finding the cheat code to your favorite video game. AppConfig? More like AppCool, because it's your backstage pass to managing application configurations like a rockstar. Picture AppConfig as the puppet master of your app settings. It's that secret sauce that lets you tweak and tune your app's behavior without deploying code faster than you can say "live update". Think of it as the wizard behind the curtain, making your apps dance to your tune without missing a beat. Why bother? Because hardcoding configurations is so 2000-late. AppConfig is like having a control panel for your apps that's as easy to use as a toddler's toy but as powerful as a rocket launcher. You can roll out changes with the precision of a ninja, ensuring your apps are always on the cutting edge, without throwing your users into the chaos of constant updates. 🔮 Tomorrow, we'll crack open another AWS mystery box. It's like a magic fabric weaving together your applications, making them stronger, faster, and more resilient. If AppConfig is the wizard, this service is the wand. Stay tuned! #AWSAdventures #TechWizardry #AppConfigUnleashed
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Containers package your app and its dependencies into a single, lightweight unit, ensuring it runs consistently across different environments. Features: Portability, Efficiency, Speed, Scalability #Containers #DevOps #CloudComputing #Microservices #Docker #Kubernetes #TechInnovation #Scalability
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Game Developer & 3D Artist
4wNice to see you interested in the problems those categorie of developers.