I’m involved in this space commercially, and one thing that surprised me recently was that for “DevOps” folk, the term “continuous delivery” doesn’t resonate, as it is synonymous with frequent changes and frequent changes break production. This was so apparent we changed our messaging from “continuous delivery” to “release management/automation.”
I hadn’t really been aware at how much hair splitting had happened around all of these terms, as I might normally consider myself both a DevOps and CD person. I’ve still got code to write and a product to support regardless of whether you call it release management or continuous delivery.
I’m involved in this space commercially, and one thing that surprised me recently was that for “DevOps” folk, the term “continuous delivery” doesn’t resonate, as it is synonymous with frequent changes and frequent changes break production. This was so apparent we changed our messaging from “continuous delivery” to “release management/automation.”
I hadn’t really been aware at how much hair splitting had happened around all of these terms, as I might normally consider myself both a DevOps and CD person. I’ve still got code to write and a product to support regardless of whether you call it release management or continuous delivery.