Here’s a number of presentations in various states of disorder. Some I’ve given, others not, or incomplete.

Log processing w/ Open Source Technologies - 2015/06/02

Introduction to Opensource technologies around logging and event processing.

Fostering Innovation - 2016/09/01

How to handle innovation within a larger organisation.

Structured Logging - 2015/05/20

Structure logging, and tools to do so, and how far you can push it.

How DNS Works? - 2015/06/02

Relatively simple explanation of how DNS works. Or, “Why doesn’t Route53 work?”

AWS From The Clouds Down - Part 1 - CloudFormation - 2017/06/01

An introduction about AWS CloudFormation works, and how it should be used to create most of everything in your accounts.

[Something] doesn’t work. Halp! - 2015/06/02

Sad failures in debugging. And how to get better at it.

OAuth Walkthrough - 2019/06/04

What happens when you click “Login w/ Google” ?

AWS From The Clouds Down - Part 2 - Networking - 2016/11/07

Introduction to AWS VPCs through the CloudFormation primitives.

Attempting to keep AWS costs under control - 2017/02/17

We’re spending (and wasting) a lot of money on AWS. Here’s the basics to keeping it down.

What is DevOps? - 2015/06/02

Trying to define DevOps, yet again.

Pub Quiz Night 2020/05/15 - 2020/05/15

Learning silly things on the internet

Introduction To Beer Brewing - 2016/11/16

Introduction to beer brewing

History of DevOps at $CLIENT - 2017/02/10

How DevOps has evolved in the past 7-8 years at $CLIENT

Introduction to Kubernetes - 2017/02/05

Quick introduction to Kubernetes. The primitives it supports and how to use them.

Simplifying TCP/IP - 2016/04/23

Introduction to TCP/IP networking for developers

A Quick Ops Team Overview - 2015/06/02

How our Devops culture works at $CLIENT

Memeology - 2019/03/31

What memes are, and maybe what they aren’t

Pub Quiz Night 2020/06/25 - 2020/06/26

Learning more silly things on the internet

Automated Development Environments - 2015/04/18

This was for a hands-on workshop about vagrant. Most of the content was spoken.