Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

How to Spot More Threats in Less Time Using AI

Can AI really help security teams build better threat models? Microsoft's Senior Gaming Security Architect, Audrey Long breaks down the strengths and limits of AI in threat modeling, shows how she uses Azure OpenAI for attack tree automation, and reveals why human review still matters. Includes practical examples and live demos. Git Blog: gitkraken.com/blog.

Signals: Using Jira + Git Activity to Automatically Flag At-Risk Work

Jira issue status is often...wrong. Or at least misleading. If you're a project, product, or engineering manager, you need something more reliable to understand if work is going to land in time (and what needs your attention). Using Signals, available in Git Integration for Jira Advanced Edition, you get an activity-based view of what's actually going on with Jira issues.

GitKraken Desktop 11.3: AI-Powered Commit Cleanup Without the Chaos

TL;DR GitKraken’s new Commit Composer is the smartest way to turn messy commit history into clean, structured stories, no command-line gymnastics required. This AI-powered tool rewrites your commit sequence with intent and clarity, saving you time and reducing review headaches. Oh, and it makes you look like a Git legend Ready to see it in action? Check out the Youtube Tutorial below.

GitKraken Desktop 11.3: This is either a brilliant or terrible idea

AI-powered commits? Rewriting your Git history? We know, it sounds unhinged. But in GitKraken Desktop 11.3, Commit Composer makes it possible to take messy WIP or past commits and turn them into a clean, logical story. In this video, we’ll show you how Commit Composer works, when to use it, and what it means for your workflow. What Commit Composer can do: Plus, we cover other new features in 11.3: Git Blog: gitkraken.com/blog.

You're Writing Code Wrong: Start Telling Better Stories with Git

What if your Git history could read like a great novel? In this talk from GitKon, Jason Gates (Senior Staff at Sandia National Labs) makes the case that software is storytelling...and Git is your medium. With references from The Hobbit to The Stormlight Archive, he shows how commit structure, messaging, and PR flow aren’t just best practices, they’re tools to help your team (and future you) understand what really happened.