diff --git a/mywiki/tiddlers/That guy,.tid b/mywiki/tiddlers/That guy..tid similarity index 79% rename from mywiki/tiddlers/That guy,.tid rename to mywiki/tiddlers/That guy..tid index fb01814..7848c27 100644 --- a/mywiki/tiddlers/That guy,.tid +++ b/mywiki/tiddlers/That guy..tid @@ -1,14 +1,14 @@ created: 20160115191328116 creator: user -modified: 20160115200737029 +modified: 20160115202039654 modifier: user tags: -title: That guy, +title: That guy. type: text/vnd.tiddlywiki -That guy, +That guy. -In my experience every software development team has that guy. That guy that knows how to get code to production. This often begins with a simple rsync on a manually installed production server. However this usually needs to quickly grow into a full fletched OTAP process automated as much a possible. Suddenly that guy is dealing with and setting up githooks, CI, browser and unit testing, container creation and orchestration, hosting, CD, balancing, monitoring, alerting, backups, crash recovery or rollbacks and has very little time for what he was hired to do in the first place, develop software. +In my experience every software development team has that guy. That guy that knows how to get code to production. This often begins with a simple rsync on a manually installed production server. However this usually needs to quickly grow into a full fletched OTAP process automated as much a possible. Suddenly that guy is dealing with and setting up githooks, CI, browser and unit testing, container creation and orchestration, hosting, CD, balancing, monitoring, alerting, backups, crash recovery or rollbacks and has very little time for what he was hired to do in the first place, develop software. In my career I’ve been that guy a couple of times now and I really enjoy doing those kind of things.