DevOps: Pushed by Circumstance or Pulled by a Dream, with Tracy Bannon

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Tracy Bannon Senior Principal / Software Architect & DevOps Strategic Advisor at MITRE and ambassador for the DevOps Institute talks through the original DevOps timeline. Join as Carolyn and guest host Steve Mazzuca find out what happens when Dev fraternizes with Ops.Episode Table of Contents[00:48] DevOps Strategic Advisor and Ambassador[10:34] Respected DevOps[18:35] The DevOps Pipeline[24:05] DevOps InstituteEpisode Links and ResourcesDevOps InstituteProject To ProductDevOps Strategic Advisor and AmbassadorCarolyn: Today, I have Steve Mazucca or The Mas as I like to call him, co-hosting with me. It's always fun to have a conversation with you Steve. The hard part is going to be getting you to be quiet, so we can get our guest Tracy Bannon. He is Senior Principal, Software Architect and DevOps Strategic Advisor at MITRE, as well as an ambassador for the DevOps Institute. So welcome Tracy.Tracy: I'm thrilled to be here today. It's always fun to have these conversations.Carolyn: You are a striking woman with pink hair and you were in development, which makes you in my mind, kind of a unicorn. I would really love to hear your story.Tracy: I'll start with the pink hair and go backwards from there. I've had little bits of color in my hair for years. My mom was an art teacher. My dad's more on the math and the sciences side of it. I kind of have that left brain, right brain, need to express myself. Over probably the last two or three years, as I've been doing more remote work, I was having more fun with the pink and decided that it's the pandemic. Let's stretch things a little bit more. I'm just loving it. So that's a little bit about that piece of it.But as for me being a woman in technology, I actually like to come at it in reverse. To say that I'm a real technologist and not say I'm a woman technologist. It matters, but it doesn't matter. What's important to me, is I've always been so interested in tech.A Woman DeveloperTracy: Someone asked me, "When was the first time you realized that you liked computers and that you were into computers?" It's a long story, but I'll make it very short. I can remember building a computer out of a box and cutting and putting mag tapes on the outside. Yes, I just told you how old I was. And arguing with my brother on who got to sit inside it and be the brains. So I remember being real and I couldn't read yet. I remember that very vividly. It goes a long way back.Carolyn: Did you end up being the brains?Tracy: Yes I did. I happened to be a little bit bigger than him. Even though he's two years older, I happened to have the weight advantage. As for being a woman developer, I've always been in tech. I never thought anything about the makeup of the team. That’s because I always tagged around with my older brother and his buddies. I considered myself one of the guys. One of the gang would be a better way to put it. I realized about midway through my career that there was a little bit of uniqueness to it. As I would look around the room, I would be the only woman on the team.Now, occasionally there would be fantastic women involved, more on the database side of things, who had grown into that. Very few from a development perspective. We did see some spikes in industry, we saw that. But we're seeing that decline recently. But across my career, I tend to come at it that I'm a technologist. If you need to give me an adjective, make it real, instead of woman. But that's a little bit about me.A Technologist at DevOps Who Happens to Be a WomanCarolyn: I love that you want to take the emphasis off...

DevOps: Pushed by Circumstance or Pulled by a Dream, with Tracy Bannon

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DevOps: Pushed by Circumstance or Pulled by a Dream, with Tracy Bannon
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