113
I Use This!
Activity Not Available

News

Analyzed 12 months ago. based on code collected 12 months ago.
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by [email protected] (Dylan Silva)
Although the majority of the features added to Ansible 2.3 were networking related, that’s not all folks!
Posted over 7 years ago by Mark Phillips
I remember the first AnsibleFest I attended – it was San Francisco 2014. I had been with Ansible for a week and had flown out to meet some of my new colleagues. As a user of Ansible for the past year, I'd discovered how cheery and ... [More] helpful the community was. "Newbies" dropping by the IRC channel on Freenode were always helped out, no matter how simple the question. The community spirit is something many people comment on when first using Ansible.I remember meeting core engineer Brian Coca for the first time at that AnsibleFest too, also a recent joiner to the company. Brian was asked that morning if he'd give a talk, a request he calmly accepted as if he'd been asked to make a cup of tea. Top tip – never miss a talk given by Brian, you will learn something new!Later, during the happy hour, I talked with lots of attendees, many just wanting to tell us how much they'd enjoyed the day. It was great to see the open source community feel extending to our full day conferences.Two and half years later and I still see that community spirit day in, day out. Only now it's a much bigger community! AnsibleFests continue to attract hundreds of attendees and the quality of talk submissions goes up, year after year. [Less]
Posted over 7 years ago by Mark Phillips
I remember the first AnsibleFest I attended – it was San Francisco 2014. I had been with Ansible for a week and had flown out to meet some of my new colleagues. As a user of Ansible for the past year, I'd discovered how cheery and ... [More] helpful the community was. "Newbies" dropping by the IRC channel on Freenode were always helped out, no matter how simple the question. The community spirit is something many people comment on when first using Ansible.I remember meeting core engineer Brian Coca for the first time at that AnsibleFest too, also a recent joiner to the company. Brian was asked that morning if he'd give a talk, a request he calmly accepted as if he'd been asked to make a cup of tea. Top tip – never miss a talk given by Brian, you will learn something new!Later, during the happy hour, I talked with lots of attendees, many just wanting to tell us how much they'd enjoyed the day. It was great to see the open source community feel extending to our full day conferences.Two and half years later and I still see that community spirit day in, day out. Only now it's a much bigger community! AnsibleFests continue to attract hundreds of attendees and the quality of talk submissions goes up, year after year. [Less]