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What role does ingenuity play in software development? ft. Bryan Finster of Defense Unicorns

Is it possible that the new tech and clever ideas can get in the way of adding value to our business? Bryan Finster, Distinguished Engineer at Defense Unicorn, sits down with Rob and shares how his perspective on solving business problems with code. Learn valuable insights on how we can keep the end user in mind while using technology to make their lives better.

The Future of CI/CD: Challenge on the Horizon

Over the last 10 years, software development has shifted. Modern teams build applications on top of third-party dependencies, open source libraries, and more, which has dramatically increased complexity. With so much complexity in software development, how can today’s dev teams build with speed and agility while avoiding risk? Join CircleCI CTO, Rob Zuber, in the first of three executive webinars aimed at empowering CircleCI customers to optimize their software delivery practices.

Experimenting our way to success ft. Aniel Sud, CTO of Optimizely

In this episode, Rob is joined by Optimizely CTO, Aniel Sud, to discuss the importance of experimenting for growth. Entrepreneurship and innovation require courage, but having courage can bring on emotions that make it difficult for us to experiment objectively. How do we hold our strong opinions loosely to press forward with new information?

Overcoming data chaos ft. Thomas Hazel, founder of ChaosSearch

In this episode, Rob is joined by Thomas Hazel, founder and CTO of ChaosSearch. Every software company has tons of data to manage. Have we set ourselves up for failure? How do we recover from a data mess? Learn how Thomas embraces chaos to tackle big data problems by taking risks and embracing failure.

Securing software supply chain without panicking ft. Chainguard co-founder Kim Lewandowski

Chainguard co-founder, Kim Lewandowski joins Rob to discuss the ways she presses forward in the fear-driven world of software supply chain security. In any kind of mistake or failure, security breaches have to be something that we can learn from. On the other hand, particularly during investigation, there are often walls of trust and other factors affecting fully transparent communication. Does this impact our ability to learn? Is there something we have to do differently to get better at it?