
Cloud Native Go: Building Reliable Services in Unreliable Environments
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OReilly Media
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"This book does a great job of bringing the high level concept of "Cloud Native" down to earth and implemented using the modern computing language Go. The marriage of the two concepts works well, and the result is great inspiration." -- Lee Atchison, Owner, Atchison Technology LLC
"This is the first book I've come across that covers such a breadth and depth of modern cloud native practices in such a practical way. The patterns presented here have clear examples to solve real problems that are faced by engineers on a daily basis." -- Alvaro Atienza, Site Reliability Engineer, Flatiron Health
"Matt's expertise in the art and science of building reliable systems in a fundamentally unreliable world are clearly (and humorously) captured in the pages within. Join him as he introduces you to the fundamental building blocks and system designs that enable large scale, reliable systems to be constructed from the ephemeral and unreliable components that comprise the underlying cloud infrastructure of today's modern computing environment." -- David Nicponski, Principal Engineer, Robinhood
"Over the past few years, two infrastructure trends have been happening: Go has been increasingly used for infrastructure, in addition to backend; and the infrastructure is moving to the cloud. This book summarizes the state of the art of the combination of the two." -- Natalie Pistunovich, Lead Developer Advocate, Aerospike
"I came in knowing next to nothing about Go, and left feeling like an expert. I would go so far as to say that simply reading this book made me a better engineer." -- James Quigley, Systems Reliability Engineer, Bloomberg
"This is the first book I've come across that covers such a breadth and depth of modern cloud native practices in such a practical way. The patterns presented here have clear examples to solve real problems that are faced by engineers on a daily basis." -- Alvaro Atienza, Site Reliability Engineer, Flatiron Health
"Matt's expertise in the art and science of building reliable systems in a fundamentally unreliable world are clearly (and humorously) captured in the pages within. Join him as he introduces you to the fundamental building blocks and system designs that enable large scale, reliable systems to be constructed from the ephemeral and unreliable components that comprise the underlying cloud infrastructure of today's modern computing environment." -- David Nicponski, Principal Engineer, Robinhood
"Over the past few years, two infrastructure trends have been happening: Go has been increasingly used for infrastructure, in addition to backend; and the infrastructure is moving to the cloud. This book summarizes the state of the art of the combination of the two." -- Natalie Pistunovich, Lead Developer Advocate, Aerospike
"I came in knowing next to nothing about Go, and left feeling like an expert. I would go so far as to say that simply reading this book made me a better engineer." -- James Quigley, Systems Reliability Engineer, Bloomberg
About the Author
Matthew Titmus is an academic refugee and veteran of the software development industry who can currently be found serving as an SRE technical lead at Flatiron Health in New York. He's an organizer for the DevOpsDays NYC Conference, the founder of NYC CoffeeOps, and the author of Cloud Native Go (O'Reilly Media).
Since teaching himself to build virtual worlds in LPC, he's earned a surprisingly-relevant degree in molecular biology, written tools to analyze terabyte-sized datasets at a high energy physics laboratory, developed an early web development framework from scratch, wielded distributed computing techniques to analyze cancer genomes, and pioneered machine learning techniques for linked data. He was an early adopter and advocate of both cloud-native technologies in general and the Go language in particular.
He lives on Long Island with the world's most patient woman, to whom he is lucky to be married, and the world's most adorable boy, by whom he is lucky to be called dad.
Since teaching himself to build virtual worlds in LPC, he's earned a surprisingly-relevant degree in molecular biology, written tools to analyze terabyte-sized datasets at a high energy physics laboratory, developed an early web development framework from scratch, wielded distributed computing techniques to analyze cancer genomes, and pioneered machine learning techniques for linked data. He was an early adopter and advocate of both cloud-native technologies in general and the Go language in particular.
He lives on Long Island with the world's most patient woman, to whom he is lucky to be married, and the world's most adorable boy, by whom he is lucky to be called dad.
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