Deployment simplifies continuous code integration and delivery automation for startups and agile engineering teams on the AWS cloud, eliminating the need for DevOps engineering. A developer can deploy static sites, web services, and environments without knowledge of AWS or DevOps. Deployment supports previews on pull requests and automatic deployments on code push without manual setup or scripting. It enables engineering teams to focus on tasks that add customer value instead of worrying about DevOps-related grunt work.
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Deployment.io's answer:
I led engineering teams at early-stage startups and realized that startups waste 70% of valuable engineering time on tedious, non-coding tasks that they can easily automate.
To solve this problem, we've built Deployment.io so engineering teams at startups can focus on writing more code that adds value and helps them achieve PMF faster.
Deployment.io's answer:
ReactJs using Typescript, GatsbyJs using Typescript, GoLang, and AWS
Deployment.io's answer:
Deployment.io is built and designed for startups. Our customers can onboard in 5 minutes and start deploying apps to AWS without any DevOps or AWS knowledge. Other platforms are complex and require scripting or DevOps knowledge. They are built for bigger companies with a lot of resources.
Deployment.io's answer:
Startups and agile engineering teams should choose Deployment.io for the simplicity and ease of use. Our competitors are complex and are designed for bigger companies.
Deployment.io's answer:
For startups, speed and focus are crucial. Our primary audience is engineering teams at startups that want to focus on building code that adds value and not on DevOps related grunt work.
Deploying web apps on AWS has never been this easy and it also takes care of scaling based on usage.
Based on our record, Code NASA should be more popular than Deployment.io. It has been mentiond 6 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
NASA has a good set of open source projects available for public use: https://code.nasa.gov/. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Yes, this is no-cost but not necessarily open source. NASA open source software can be found at: https://code.nasa.gov/. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
As for public telemetry it might be hard to get it for free as satellite owners do it for money. NASA maintains a public software page at code.nasa.gov and software.nasa.gov which includes OpenMCT mission control software that can do simulated data. Source: over 3 years ago
Don't underestimate the strength of personal projects. If you ask a professor about their research, I find very often, they ask about things you have done in the past, which sort of feels like shit if youve done nothing huh? I know people who made cloud chambers or shot ions or massive simulations in HS and I was like, a theatre kid which is so irrelevant. BUT. The reason they ask this is that previous experience... Source: almost 4 years ago
This would be a place to start. Https://code.nasa.gov/. Source: almost 4 years ago
Deployment.io is an AI-powered, self-serve developer platform that simplifies deployment of complex backend services on AWS. - Source: dev.to / 7 months ago
Google Open Source - All of Googles open source projects under a single umbrella
Harness - Automated Tests For Your Web App
Open NASA - NASA data, tools, and resources
Jenkins - Jenkins is an open-source continuous integration server with 300+ plugins to support all kinds of software development
NASA Exoplanet Posters - Imagine visiting worlds outside our solar system
GitHub Actions - Automate your workflow from idea to production