AWS Just Made DevOps Engineers Obsolete (Or Did They?)
Links from the Episode
- DOP 326: Stop Reinventing The Wheel - Use Dapr Instead
- DOP 327: When AI Tools Go Rogue
- Introducing AWS DevOps Agent (preview), frontier agent for operational excellence
- Top announcements of AWS re:Invent 2025
- Amazon EKS introduces Provisioned Control Plane
- Amazon EKS and Amazon ECS announce fully managed MCP servers in preview
- Announcing Amazon ECS Express Mode
- Amazon ECR now supports managed container image signing
- AWS Security Incident Response now offers metered pricing with free tier
- The Future of AWS CodeCommit
- Amazon to invest up to $50 billion to expand AI and supercomputing infrastructure for US government agencies
- Announcing Amazon EKS Capabilities for workload orchestration and cloud resource management
- Simplify IAM policy creation with IAM Policy Autopilot, a new open source MCP server for builders
- Tech predictions for 2026 and beyond
- Building Distributed Apps? Akamai and Fermyon are Changing the Game
- Removing dependency tangles in the Atlassian Platform for increased reliability and recoverability
- Kubernetes 1.35 - New security features
- One Year of MCP: November 2025 Spec Release
- Anthropic acquires Bun as Claude Code reaches $1B milestone
- Introducing Claude Opus 4.5
- Jetbrains IDE Index MCP Server - Give Claude access to IntelliJ's semantic index and refactoring tools - Now supports GO and GOLand
- IDE Index MCP Server
- gitlogue
- Imagemage
- Why Gemini 3 Feels Like Pair Programming With a Grumpy Coder
- Say Goodbye to Local AI Agents? Testing kagent and kmcp
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Viktor Farcic
Viktor Farcic is a member of the Google Developer Experts and Docker Captains groups, and published author.
His big passions are DevOps, Containers, Kubernetes, Microservices, Continuous Integration, Delivery and Deployment (CI/CD) and Test-Driven Development (TDD).
He often speaks at community gatherings and conferences.
He has published DevOps Paradox and Test-Driven Java Development.
His random thoughts and tutorials can be found in his blog The DevOps Toolkit.