Enabling tests that ride the trains
At Mozilla, we have a train schedule for releases. Changes are first landed on a trunk branches, then are upliftedContinue Reading
Wrangling distributed systems with a side order of pancakes
At Mozilla, we have a train schedule for releases. Changes are first landed on a trunk branches, then are upliftedContinue Reading
Traditionally, there haven’t been many courses offered in colleges or universities that cover the fundamentals of release engineering. This meansContinue Reading
University of Waterloo engineering students in 1964 Image ©Kitchener Waterloo Record, http://www.flickr.com/photos/48169267@N08/4967256177/in/photolist-8yWucT-eqaQdV-epd6Lw-c5ywEJ-c5yvwd/under Creative Commons by-nc-sa 2.0 There are quiteContinue Reading
I attended EclipseCon for a couple of days last week. It was great to see friends and colleagues again andContinue Reading
I’m honoured to be giving a talk at EclipseCon next week entitled Built to Scale: The Mozilla Release Engineering Toolbox. Continue Reading
I was on the organizing committee for Releng 2013. This was the first time I’ve been involved in organizing aContinue Reading
There are two exciting keynotes planned for Releng 2013 John O’Duinn, Director of Release Engineering at Mozilla will kick offContinue Reading
Release engineering helps bring many of the products we use every day to market. From entertainment, such as Netflix http://www.flickr.com/photos/myetvmedia/8478881935/sizes/o/in/set-72157632783339196/Continue Reading
Just a friendly reminder that Feb 7 is the deadline to submit talk abstracts and papers to the Releng 2013Continue Reading