CodeSecure and FOSSA announced a strategic partnership and native product integration that enables organizations to eliminate security blindspots associated with both third party and open source code.
For many years I have been touting the legitimacy, and even advantages, of "Virtual Agility" only to be stonewalled by the dogmatic "co-locationists" in the Agile community.
Nothing is as effective as having everyone in the same room. I get it. War rooms, Scrum rooms, and operations centers have become the normal hive of agility for those organizations that prize the value of co-location. Well, that's great for teams who are in the same geography. But, my reality is virtual. The teams I work with are distributed, remote and dispersed throughout the globe. We have had to adapt our Agile practice for a virtual world. In fact, we have found ways to thrive virtually, untethered from the constraints of the physical workspace, and to exploit the opportunities of a timeless and borderless virtual working environment.
For starters, we source talent from anywhere. We don't have to hire from a limited pool of local candidates. For many products and projects, we assembled our ideal mix of talent and skill from the entire pool of qualified workers. And in some cases, we found better talent at cheaper rates.
But, when your team is distributed across several time zones, bringing everyone together for the same workday is challenging. So, don't do it. Let your team members design their own working schedules and find a sliver of time that overlaps on everyone's calendar for stand-ups and other ceremonies.
If you must have specialists and a workflow, design it to flow from East to West, so that your daily iterations progress from the early-risers onto the late-nighters. In the utopian virtual agility world, you could even run several Scrum teams around the clock with overlapping stand-ups in-between shifts, and redline your daily velocity.
Of course when you don't have physical, in-person interactions, you will need to substitute their effectiveness with good tools. Our tool stack is primarily web-based and ubiquitous, so that our teams can work from virtually anywhere, at any time, and from any device. Since we have no war room, no Scrum room, no operation center- everything must be in the cloud. The tools we selected for our production line are cloud-based or hosted on a virtual machine. Our DevOps is more like a "VirtOps", or a virtualized ecosystem of software development and distribution tools.
While we don't see each other's happy faces every day, we do see the laser-focused, high quality, high-throughput work that each other produces every minute. Our communication rallies around tools such as Slack, that aggregate and log pertinent discussions with notifications fed from the integrated telemetry of our VirtOps ecosystem. In real-time, as it happens, we can very clearly see the decisions made and resultant actions of our agile teams. Literally managing teams by watching a channel, and following the posts in our daily iterations as they go from stand-up plans to peer reviews, to check-ins, to build notifications, to test results and ultimately feedback. We place a much greater emphasis on showing us your work online and in channels rather than telling us about it in a meeting.
We have proven time and time again that we can be just as agile, and even more agile, than co-located teams. We have found clever ways to use our virtualization to promote our own agility. In our virtual agile world, we have removed travel and time as impediments to our responsiveness. We have replaced in-person interactions with robust digital communication tools and broad information aggregators. In the end, "we have [uncovered] better ways of developing software by doing it" remotely, and "have come to value" Virtual Agility.
Industry News
Bauplan, a Python-first serverless data platform that transforms complex infrastructure processes into a few lines of code over data lakes, announced its launch with $7.5 million in seed funding.
Perforce Software announced the launch of the Kafka Service Bundle, a new offering that provides enterprises with managed open source Apache Kafka at a fraction of the cost of traditional managed providers.
LambdaTest announced the launch of the HyperExecute MCP Server, an enhancement to its AI-native test orchestration platform, HyperExecute.
Cloudflare announced Workers VPC and Workers VPC Private Link, new solutions that enable developers to build secure, global cross-cloud applications on Cloudflare Workers.
Nutrient announced a significant expansion of its cloud-based services, as well as a series of updates to its SDK products, aimed at enhancing the developer experience by allowing developers to build, scale, and innovate with less friction.
Check Point® Software Technologies Ltd.(link is external) announced that its Infinity Platform has been named the top-ranked AI-powered cyber security platform in the 2025 Miercom Assessment.
Orca Security announced the Orca Bitbucket App, a cloud-native seamless integration for scanning Bitbucket Repositories.
The Live API for Gemini models is now in Preview, enabling developers to start building and testing more robust, scalable applications with significantly higher rate limits.
Backslash Security(link is external) announced significant adoption of the Backslash App Graph, the industry’s first dynamic digital twin for application code.
SmartBear launched API Hub for Test, a new capability within the company’s API Hub, powered by Swagger.
Akamai Technologies introduced App & API Protector Hybrid.
Veracode has been granted a United States patent for its generative artificial intelligence security tool, Veracode Fix.
Zesty announced that its automated Kubernetes optimization platform, Kompass, now includes full pod scaling capabilities, with the addition of Vertical Pod Autoscaler (VPA) alongside the existing Horizontal Pod Autoscaler (HPA).
Check Point® Software Technologies Ltd.(link is external) has emerged as a leading player in Attack Surface Management (ASM) with its acquisition of Cyberint, as highlighted in the recent GigaOm Radar report.