Pulumi, with over 3,700 customers, including Snowflake, Nvidia, and the BMW Group, has officially announced the launch of Pulumi Neo, which happens to be industry’s first platform engineering AI agent geared towards managing infrastructure on any cloud, be it public, private, or hybrid, all of it governed by enterprise-grade controls. According to certain reports, Neo […]| Enterprise Viewpoint
It’s funny how technology has a way of sneaking back into your life just when you think you’ve moved on for good. Jenkins and I have quite the history. Think of it as that reliable but slightly temperamental friend from your college days who you haven’t seen in years. A Blast from the Jenkins Past The last time Jenkins and I were on speaking terms was during my tenure at my former workplace, back when the CI/CD landscape looked very different than it does today. We weren’t just casual...| Pulumi Blog
Intro| Techdecline's Blog
Intro| Techdecline's Blog
Learn how to manage Kubernetes secrets securely with Pulumi ESC and the Secrets Store CSI Driver.| pulumi
How we used Pulumi to practice Infrastructure as Code with DigitalOcean| Land of Unknwon
At the PulumiUP virtual event, Pulumi made its security management product, ESC (Environments, Secrets and Configuration) generally available, […]| DEVCLASS
I’ve finally come to the “conclusion” part of my blog series about infrastructure as code. The part I thought was going to be the easiest one to write…| Fear of Oblivion
The 6th entry in my blog series about IaC is dedicated to Pulumi. Pulumi is a very different beast, compared to the previously covered technologies (ARM, Bicep and Terraform), in that it is not based on a Domain Specific Language. Instead, Pulumi allows you to write your IaC in your language of choice. As long as your language of choice is JavaScript/TypeScript, Python, Go or .NET Core (C#, F# and VB). This makes the Pulumi experience a lot different from using a technology that uses a DSL (o...| Fear of Oblivion