![]() Because part of my responsibilities about developing delivering the technology strategy for major government projects, such as a health transmission programme, which currently is delivering 2.2 million assessments a year. And that's very much where we are going now within the health world. And kind of looking to what the public sector we're doing, and particularly how we are looking to transform our services, and putting the citizen need at the heart of everything we do. Previously to that it was all very much private sector and building online learning platforms for students across the world and sort of really fancied a change. Run across a few different directorates I was the head of Hybrid Cloud Services for a short period of time before that, protected within retirement. But I've been within the Civil Service for about five years now. I'm currently the Deputy Director, Head of Engineering within Health and Disability. So, my name is Stu Cairns, I prefer that rather than Stuart. So, let's jump in Stuart, Karl and Phil, would you like to introduce yourselves? Stu Cairns My name is Stuart and today we're discussing our use of ephemeral environments to help our teams develop and test their solutions in a safe, self-contained ecosystem. Welcome, everybody to another episode of DWP Digital's podcast. Visit our Careers site to find out more about joining us. Make sure you don’t miss an episode by subscribing to the DWP Digital podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts and Spotify and by following #DWPDigitalPodcasts.Īnd if like what you hear, don’t forget to give us a 5-star rating. Over the next few months, we’ll be speaking to more of our in-house digital experts and leaders about some of the exciting projects we’re working on that are helping transform experiences for millions of people. The emergence of ephemeral environments really took off when Cloud came to fruition and this truly enabled us to harness the elasticity of cloud to deliver environments at a rapid pace, on demand, scale to whatever needs the development teams need. They tend to be a collection of infrastructure or services to enable the deployment of components or applications. At the most basic level, they’re simply an environment that only exists for a defined period of time. Often referred to as short lived, dynamic, temporary on demand environments, essentially, they're all the same thing. Stu Cairns, head of engineering for Health and Disability, Carl Hoggins, lead software engineer, and Phil Harle, lead DevOps engineer discuss ephemeral environments. In the latest episode of the DWP Digital podcast, hear all about how we’re using ephemeral environments to help our teams develop and test updates, products and applications in a safe, self-contained environment.
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