The YOW! 2016 Conference is sold out in Melbourne, but you can still get tickets for Sydney and Brisbane. There are also DepthFirst workshops in Sydney and Melbourne.
Three meetups this week, including another trip to Melbourne!
On Tuesday I flew to Melbourne to host YOW Night in the amazing event space at Zendesk. Our speaker was Lindsay Holmwood of the DTA, the Australian government’s Digital Transformation Agency. More than 70 attendees gathered to hear Lindsay talk about the problems the government faces in digital service delivery, and how the DTA has tackled those.
#yownight about to get started pic.twitter.com/ZU4D5X7fkA
— Michael Milewski (@saramic) November 15, 2016
https://twitter.com/web_goddess/status/798423042233868288
Lindsay stunned us all with the statistic that the government has over 2200 web domains… that they know of. He challenged us to consider the difficulty in creating a consistent customer experience across those sites, keeping them patched and secure, and monitoring them for disruptions. He also told us about the vision for GOV.AU – an “alpha” responsive prototype that shows how “joined-up” government services could look and work for users.
Lindsay also debunked the myth that organisations need to choose between speed and reliability. The 2016 State of Devops Report actually proves that successful companies (as measured by actual stock market performance) actually release more frequently with fewer failures and shorter recovery times.
Debunking the myth that speed & reliability are mutually exclusive at the DTA @auxesis #yownight #loveit pic.twitter.com/ABKTK23GD2
— Sue Hogg (@planetsuzie) November 15, 2016
Lindsay also pointed us to the DTA’s Digital Service Standard, which includes thirteen simple criteria that every government (and private enterprise) can use to assess projects. He also walked us through the Service Design and Delivery Process and explained how you can “create a longer runway by pulling the tech forward.” Rather than thinking of doing more tech and less design, think of it as turning up the volume of tech earlier in the process.
Pay attention large corps. Even the Australian government has figured it out: #yownight @dto pic.twitter.com/OG6zjaDGbT
— Erwin van der Koogh (@evanderkoogh) November 15, 2016
On Wednesday Lindsay headed to the Brisbane YOW Night, hosted by YOW’s Craig Smith.
Brisbane #yownight about to start with @smithcdau introducing @auxesis pic.twitter.com/16xgGSvov0
— YOW! Conferences (@yow_conf) November 16, 2016
Back in Sydney, I attended the Microsoft Developer Event at The Star along with several hundred other developers and tech leaders. The big draw was, of course, the chance to see CEO Satya Nadella onstage, and he did not disappoint. You can watch his 40 minute keynote online here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=li9QAbNzm_s
A full house of Australian developers to see @satyanadella in Sydney right now. #MicrosoftDev pic.twitter.com/cUMm4peHGX
— Anthony Borton 🏡 (@AnthonyBorton) November 15, 2016
Nadella spoke of Microsoft’s mission to “empower every person on the planet to achieve more,” and how creating tools for developers is still at the heart of the company. Every business nowadays, he said, is a digital business.
"Creating tools for developers is at the heart of our company" – @satyanadella #microsoftdev pic.twitter.com/kc6jEsyVLj
— Eamon Barker (@eamonbarker) November 15, 2016
Azure was a big topic for the day, including Cortana cognitive services, Blockchain as a service (there was a nice little spotlight on Australia’s Webjet), the new serverless compute service “Functions,” and a new Azure Bots service.
https://twitter.com/RachMS/status/798667262060134400
Great to see the Blockchain work we’ve been doing with Webjet being called out in the keynote #MicrosoftDev pic.twitter.com/hePQT1YhJW
— Paul Bouwer (@pbouwer) November 15, 2016
Nadella also earned a chuckle from the local crowd when announcing a new partnership with Cricket Australia to analyse player performance. “It’s perhaps not the best day to talk about Australian cricket…” he said.
https://twitter.com/jturner_ibrs/status/798669337942888448
Another highlight of Nadella’s talk was a video showcasing the new Microsoft Surface Studio. The crowd erupted in applause afterwards!
Every time I see the Surface Studio video. Shivers down spine. #MicrosoftDev @MicrosoftAU
— Pip Marlow (@pipms) November 15, 2016
Want one. Now. #MicrosoftDev pic.twitter.com/ZiEEqnP9Wp
— Owen Brandt (@owenbrandt) November 15, 2016
The rest of the event was more hands-on developer focused, and I can’t even begin to go into all the detail. There were sessions on using cognitive services to build chatbots…
Now @DavidBurela is showing how easy it is to create bots! #skyscanner #BotsBotsBots #MicrosoftDev pic.twitter.com/GtxNwrtunM
— Catherine Eibner (@ceibner) November 16, 2016
…Microsoft’s relationship with Open Source (less than a day later it was announced that they’re now a Platinum member of the Linux Foundation!)…
https://twitter.com/orinthomas/status/798696677838159872
…building apps with Xamarin for Visual Studio (which now has a native iOS emulator so Windows users don’t have to switch machines for testing!)…
Gotta hand it to @kphillpotts – he's a brave brave man for live editing during his #MicrosoftDev #xamarin demo! pic.twitter.com/aRb4fEGXqf
— gdayitsjack (@developerjack) November 16, 2016
https://twitter.com/web_goddess/status/798683260922408961
…and a crash course on devops with Azure.
#devops crash course! #microsoftdev with @AnthonyBorton pic.twitter.com/5BiQWNTxa1
— Eamon Barker (@eamonbarker) November 16, 2016
Life is all about the feedback loop. Feedback in dev ops is just as important. #MicrosoftDev pic.twitter.com/J563ZqjJSR
— Roland Leggat (@RolandLeggat) November 16, 2016
I was also really pleased to see local developers Wayne Schwebel and Rossano Gallardo recognised for their great work on the 9News Alerts app (Android | iOS).
https://twitter.com/web_goddess/status/798689713422942209
On Thursday it was time for the third YOW Night of the week, this time in Sydney at Canva‘s offices in Surry Hills. Once again Lindsay Holmwood delivered his excellent talk about the DTA and what they’ve learned about digital service delivery. It was especially interesting (for me) seeing the same talk on different nights. I could tell where Lindsay made changes – in some cases because people who worked on the projects he was discussing were actually in the audience! – and also how he responded to the different energy of the crowds. (Melbourne laughed more than Sydney, I noticed.)
Transforming government digitally with @auxesis #yownights pic.twitter.com/R9CLmqZvJD
— Georgina Robilliard (@GRobilliard) November 17, 2016
Thank you again to Lindsay for kindly spending most of his week travelling Australia and giving this talk. The audience across all three sites absolutely loved it, and everyone came away inspired to apply some of the DTA’s lessons in their own organisations. My favourite tweet of the week was definitely this one from our friend Christopher Biggs:
Final thought from #YowNight #BNE: if the freaking FEDERAL GOVERNMENT can do TDD with Continuous Delivery, WHAT'S YOUR EXCUSE?! #DevOps
— Christopher Biggs (@unixbigot) November 16, 2016
If you haven’t been to a YOW Night before, you should sign up for the YOW mailing list (form in site footer) to hear when the next one is happening!