Connecitng Metrics ↔ Traces with Exemplars in OpenTelemetry
A hands-on guide to exemplars, how they connect metric points to the exact trace that caused them, why they matter for faster debugging and cost efficiency, and how to enable them end‑to‑end with OpenTelemetry (apps → collector → backend).
https://oneuptime.com/blog/post/2025-09-22-connecting-metrics-to-traces-with-exemplars/view
https://redd.it/1nofgc8
@r_devops
A hands-on guide to exemplars, how they connect metric points to the exact trace that caused them, why they matter for faster debugging and cost efficiency, and how to enable them end‑to‑end with OpenTelemetry (apps → collector → backend).
https://oneuptime.com/blog/post/2025-09-22-connecting-metrics-to-traces-with-exemplars/view
https://redd.it/1nofgc8
@r_devops
OneUptime | One Complete Observability platform.
Connecitng Metrics ↔ Traces with Exemplars in OpenTelemetry
A hands-on guide to exemplars, how they connect metric points to the exact trace that caused them, why they matter for faster debugging and cost efficiency, and how to enable them end‑to‑end with OpenTelemetry (apps → collector → backend (like oneuptime)).
Cloud costs vs. security hardening
We have been tightening our security posture in the cloud. more monitoring, more logging, stricter configs. The problem is every step adds cost. More logs = higher bills and more controls = slower pipelines.
Management wants both secure by design and lean spend. Reality is, the two goals clash constantly. Im confused how other teams are managing this trade off. Are you cutting scope somewhere else?
https://redd.it/1nogxzx
@r_devops
We have been tightening our security posture in the cloud. more monitoring, more logging, stricter configs. The problem is every step adds cost. More logs = higher bills and more controls = slower pipelines.
Management wants both secure by design and lean spend. Reality is, the two goals clash constantly. Im confused how other teams are managing this trade off. Are you cutting scope somewhere else?
https://redd.it/1nogxzx
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Feeling stuck 2 months into new role — Cloud vs Full Stack vs Staying Put?
Hi everyone,
I’m a bit lost and hoping for advice from people who’ve been through similar situations.
Background:
-Graduated last year.
-Worked 1 year as a Frontend Developer, then resigned.(Bad management)
-Currently 2 months into a Software Developer trainee role. Most of my work is implementing and deploying customized billing solutions acting as a bridge between products, billing systems, payment gateways, and API integrations.
Where I’m struggling:
-I dont have a problem with my current work, but I find myself thinking sometimes if this kind of job would help me leverage my career and have a better salary in the next one or two years.
-I’m interested in Cloud but I’m worried salaries for entry-level cloud roles might be lower, and I really need to save money right now.
-I’ve also thought about Full Stack Development, but job posts usually require CI/CD pipelines, containerization, and other tools I haven’t touched yet — which feels overwhelming for me rn.
What I’ve done so far:
-AWS Cloud Practitioner certified.(Wanna take this to the next lvl and add AWS SAA, but unsure if this is gonna be smart or not)
-Built a few personal websites.
-Revamping my portfolio.
What I’m unsure about:
Should I stick to my current role for now and see how it goes?
Should I start building cloud skills even if it means a possible salary reset later?
Or should I pivot toward full stack and gradually learn DevOps-related tools as I go?
I just don’t want to waste time going down the wrong path or end up struggling financially.
Any advice from you guys would mean a lot.
https://redd.it/1nogf8y
@r_devops
Hi everyone,
I’m a bit lost and hoping for advice from people who’ve been through similar situations.
Background:
-Graduated last year.
-Worked 1 year as a Frontend Developer, then resigned.(Bad management)
-Currently 2 months into a Software Developer trainee role. Most of my work is implementing and deploying customized billing solutions acting as a bridge between products, billing systems, payment gateways, and API integrations.
Where I’m struggling:
-I dont have a problem with my current work, but I find myself thinking sometimes if this kind of job would help me leverage my career and have a better salary in the next one or two years.
-I’m interested in Cloud but I’m worried salaries for entry-level cloud roles might be lower, and I really need to save money right now.
-I’ve also thought about Full Stack Development, but job posts usually require CI/CD pipelines, containerization, and other tools I haven’t touched yet — which feels overwhelming for me rn.
What I’ve done so far:
-AWS Cloud Practitioner certified.(Wanna take this to the next lvl and add AWS SAA, but unsure if this is gonna be smart or not)
-Built a few personal websites.
-Revamping my portfolio.
What I’m unsure about:
Should I stick to my current role for now and see how it goes?
Should I start building cloud skills even if it means a possible salary reset later?
Or should I pivot toward full stack and gradually learn DevOps-related tools as I go?
I just don’t want to waste time going down the wrong path or end up struggling financially.
Any advice from you guys would mean a lot.
https://redd.it/1nogf8y
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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🚀 Introducing: GitHub Workflow Dashboard
Hey everyone! 👋
I'm excited to share my latest project, the GitHub Workflow Dashboard, designed to help you monitor, filter, and visualize your GitHub Actions runs with a clean web interface.
What is it?
A simple, configurable dashboard that connects with your GitHub account using a Personal Access Token.
Instantly see the status of your workflow runs across selected repositories.
Filter, search, and sort workflows by repo, status, and run history.
No complex setup—just drop in your token, select repos, and you’re up and running!
Key Features:
Live run status: View your most recent Actions runs and get instant feedback on failures or successes.
Repo filtering: Focus on the repositories and workflows that matter most to you.
Lightweight & open source: Runs locally; no 3rd-party servers or analytics.
Responsive UI: Perfect for desktops, tablets, and mobile devices.
Why did I build this?
As someone who manages multiple projects and Actions pipelines, I needed a way to quickly check the “health” of all my repos without poking through each repo’s Actions tab. If you find GitHub's default UI a bit tedious for this, this project might help!
How to try it:
1. Visit the repo: github-workflow-dashboard
2. Grab your GitHub Personal Access Token (with
3. Run the app (see the README for install instructions)
4. Configure your dashboard and start tracking your workflows!
Feedback & Contributions
I’d love feedback, issue reports, and PRs from the community. Let me know if there are features or integrations you’d like to see!
https://redd.it/1noee2p
@r_devops
Hey everyone! 👋
I'm excited to share my latest project, the GitHub Workflow Dashboard, designed to help you monitor, filter, and visualize your GitHub Actions runs with a clean web interface.
What is it?
A simple, configurable dashboard that connects with your GitHub account using a Personal Access Token.
Instantly see the status of your workflow runs across selected repositories.
Filter, search, and sort workflows by repo, status, and run history.
No complex setup—just drop in your token, select repos, and you’re up and running!
Key Features:
Live run status: View your most recent Actions runs and get instant feedback on failures or successes.
Repo filtering: Focus on the repositories and workflows that matter most to you.
Lightweight & open source: Runs locally; no 3rd-party servers or analytics.
Responsive UI: Perfect for desktops, tablets, and mobile devices.
Why did I build this?
As someone who manages multiple projects and Actions pipelines, I needed a way to quickly check the “health” of all my repos without poking through each repo’s Actions tab. If you find GitHub's default UI a bit tedious for this, this project might help!
How to try it:
1. Visit the repo: github-workflow-dashboard
2. Grab your GitHub Personal Access Token (with
repo access)3. Run the app (see the README for install instructions)
4. Configure your dashboard and start tracking your workflows!
Feedback & Contributions
I’d love feedback, issue reports, and PRs from the community. Let me know if there are features or integrations you’d like to see!
https://redd.it/1noee2p
@r_devops
GitHub
GitHub - cheney-yan-ifl/github-workflow-dashboard: Simple SPA for github workflow dashboard
Simple SPA for github workflow dashboard. Contribute to cheney-yan-ifl/github-workflow-dashboard development by creating an account on GitHub.
SSL fingerprinting in action
Hi community!
I wrote an article about SSL fingerprinting, specifically the JA3/JA4 hash. I want to provide the full context for the DevOps and security fellows, which is why this explanation is a bit lengthy and includes a lot of details.
https://arxignis.substack.com/p/943582c1-9927-466d-b5ee-e61001b4ede0
If you have any feedback or experience on how you use this technology, please share it here!
https://redd.it/1nok2n8
@r_devops
Hi community!
I wrote an article about SSL fingerprinting, specifically the JA3/JA4 hash. I want to provide the full context for the DevOps and security fellows, which is why this explanation is a bit lengthy and includes a lot of details.
https://arxignis.substack.com/p/943582c1-9927-466d-b5ee-e61001b4ede0
If you have any feedback or experience on how you use this technology, please share it here!
https://redd.it/1nok2n8
@r_devops
Substack
SSL fingerprinting in action
How we can use JA3/JA4+ hashes in real life?
Best ops approach for AI reliability (routing fallbacks etc), cost, and compliance?
Internally deployed AI apps and model reliability (outages, fallbacks), unpredictable usage bills, and compliance questions all seem like headaches. Are folks here mostly tracking and reacting ad hoc, or are you implementing frameworks that can automatically enforce cost and governance rules?
https://redd.it/1nop7mj
@r_devops
Internally deployed AI apps and model reliability (outages, fallbacks), unpredictable usage bills, and compliance questions all seem like headaches. Are folks here mostly tracking and reacting ad hoc, or are you implementing frameworks that can automatically enforce cost and governance rules?
https://redd.it/1nop7mj
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Creating an API test suite
My team has an ASP.NET Core Web API. We are only two developers. The API is mature, and has hundreds of endpoints. We had to update our framework from .5 to .8, and now we have to test the API to make sure that migration doesn't break anything. We don't have any tests at the moment, so I am creating a test suite using Postman. Creating test noscripts for every endpoint is taking forever, and I've only just started. I've resorted to just creating a smoke test of sorts that is just checking valid inputs and successful status code, until I have more time. Any advice on what to test for a very lean team. Thanks
https://redd.it/1nopfpa
@r_devops
My team has an ASP.NET Core Web API. We are only two developers. The API is mature, and has hundreds of endpoints. We had to update our framework from .5 to .8, and now we have to test the API to make sure that migration doesn't break anything. We don't have any tests at the moment, so I am creating a test suite using Postman. Creating test noscripts for every endpoint is taking forever, and I've only just started. I've resorted to just creating a smoke test of sorts that is just checking valid inputs and successful status code, until I have more time. Any advice on what to test for a very lean team. Thanks
https://redd.it/1nopfpa
@r_devops
Microsoft
ASP.NET Core, an open-source web development framework | .NET
Build web apps and services that run on Windows, Linux, and macOS using C#, HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. Get started for free on Windows, Linux, or macOS.
Here's my little gift to the devops community: sshPilot
I've been working on sshPilot, a free, opensource SSH connection manager/client for the past few weeks, and stable versions for Linux and macOS are now available.
This is meant for people who manage multiple servers and need a way to keep track of remote machines in one unified interface.
It uses your existing ~/.ssh/config as its configuration file so it's ready to use out of the box (unless you use sandboxed mode which won't touch .ssh/config)
sshPilot comes with a lot of features aimed at making life easier for a sysadmin/devops engineer including easy key generation and deployment, built-in SFTP file manager and terminal tabs.
Project page:
https://github.com/mfat/sshpilot
Downloads:
https://github.com/mfat/sshpilot/releases/latest
Flathub:
https://flathub.org/en/apps/io.github.mfat.sshpilot
https://redd.it/1notict
@r_devops
I've been working on sshPilot, a free, opensource SSH connection manager/client for the past few weeks, and stable versions for Linux and macOS are now available.
This is meant for people who manage multiple servers and need a way to keep track of remote machines in one unified interface.
It uses your existing ~/.ssh/config as its configuration file so it's ready to use out of the box (unless you use sandboxed mode which won't touch .ssh/config)
sshPilot comes with a lot of features aimed at making life easier for a sysadmin/devops engineer including easy key generation and deployment, built-in SFTP file manager and terminal tabs.
Project page:
https://github.com/mfat/sshpilot
Downloads:
https://github.com/mfat/sshpilot/releases/latest
Flathub:
https://flathub.org/en/apps/io.github.mfat.sshpilot
https://redd.it/1notict
@r_devops
sshpilot.app
SSH Pilot - SSH Connection Manager
User-friendly SSH connection manager with integrated terminal and SFTP client
❤1
I got pulled off a Cybersecurity Management position and put on a DevSecOps position. Outside of managing Azure and using Terraform I am completely lost here because my entire 10 year career was stacked in Windows and Industrial Control Systems not AWS and Linux...need guidance
Certification stacks? Udemy Courses? They're willing to let me train and Terraform and managing IAM has been my saving grace so far. I don't even want to explain how this transition happened but it's a way to keep me employed after how a merger imploded in my companies face.
https://redd.it/1nouefh
@r_devops
Certification stacks? Udemy Courses? They're willing to let me train and Terraform and managing IAM has been my saving grace so far. I don't even want to explain how this transition happened but it's a way to keep me employed after how a merger imploded in my companies face.
https://redd.it/1nouefh
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Why aren't devs using proper branch names?!
A branch name isn’t just a placeholder, it’s a mini communication channel.
When someone sees
We started treating branch names as little status updates for the team, and it made reviews and cross-team handoffs much smoother. Bonus points if you add your Ticket numbers to your branch names, like
Curious if other teams lean into this or just stick to “whatever works.”
https://redd.it/1novyn3
@r_devops
A branch name isn’t just a placeholder, it’s a mini communication channel.
When someone sees
feature/login-retry-limit vs. newbranch123, they instantly know what’s happening without clicking around.We started treating branch names as little status updates for the team, and it made reviews and cross-team handoffs much smoother. Bonus points if you add your Ticket numbers to your branch names, like
GK7485-release-notes. It’s one of those overlooked Git details that doubles as documentation.Curious if other teams lean into this or just stick to “whatever works.”
https://redd.it/1novyn3
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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How's Debian for enterprise workflows in the cloud?
I’ve been curious about how people approach Debian in enterprise or team setups, especially when running it on cloud platforms like AWS, Azure, or GCP.
For those who’ve tried Debian in cloud environments:
Do you find a desktop interface actually useful for productivity or do you prefer going full CLI?
Any must-have tools you pre-install for dev or IT workflows?
How does Debian compare to Ubuntu, AlmaLinux or others in terms of stability and updates for enterprise workloads?
Do you run it as a daily driver in the cloud or more for testing and prototyping?
Would love to hear about real experiences, what worked, what didn’t, and any tips or gotchas for others considering Debian in enterprise cloud ops.
https://redd.it/1nowuvi
@r_devops
I’ve been curious about how people approach Debian in enterprise or team setups, especially when running it on cloud platforms like AWS, Azure, or GCP.
For those who’ve tried Debian in cloud environments:
Do you find a desktop interface actually useful for productivity or do you prefer going full CLI?
Any must-have tools you pre-install for dev or IT workflows?
How does Debian compare to Ubuntu, AlmaLinux or others in terms of stability and updates for enterprise workloads?
Do you run it as a daily driver in the cloud or more for testing and prototyping?
Would love to hear about real experiences, what worked, what didn’t, and any tips or gotchas for others considering Debian in enterprise cloud ops.
https://redd.it/1nowuvi
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Looking for some advice on a deployment as a Jr
Hey folks,
I’m a software dev by trade, not a DevOps engineer, but I’ve landed in the deep end. My company is tiny staff-wise (it’s just me and one other guy), but we run a huge infrastructure — we’re basically our own ISP.
I’ve been tasked with rolling out a network monitoring system (NMS) for everything, and it needs to be highly available. After a lot of research, here’s the plan I came up with:
• Infra: vSphere / VMware, spread across 3 datacenters (no cloud).
• Cluster: Kubernetes with Talos, 5 control planes (2-2-1 across the DCs for quorum).
• CNI: Cilium.
• CSI: Mayastor.
• Monitoring: Zabbix via Helm chart.
I’ve spent hundreds of hours digging into this (Kubernetes, HA design, storage, CNIs, etc.), and I’ve definitely learned a ton. But I’m still not sure if I’m on the right track:
• Will this actually work the way I think it will?
• Is this anywhere close to “best practice”?
• Or… did I just massively overengineer this when there might be a simpler HA setup?
Constraints:
• No cloud — fully self-hosted.
• Storage available: NFS / TrueNAS / ZFS.
• Needs to handle large-scale infra, but the ops team is literally 2 people.
Ask: If you’ve deployed HA Zabbix (or any big NMS) — does this setup make sense? Should I stick with the K8s + Talos route, or would you recommend something more straightforward?
Any advice, feedback, or gotchas would mean a lot.
https://redd.it/1notg9a
@r_devops
Hey folks,
I’m a software dev by trade, not a DevOps engineer, but I’ve landed in the deep end. My company is tiny staff-wise (it’s just me and one other guy), but we run a huge infrastructure — we’re basically our own ISP.
I’ve been tasked with rolling out a network monitoring system (NMS) for everything, and it needs to be highly available. After a lot of research, here’s the plan I came up with:
• Infra: vSphere / VMware, spread across 3 datacenters (no cloud).
• Cluster: Kubernetes with Talos, 5 control planes (2-2-1 across the DCs for quorum).
• CNI: Cilium.
• CSI: Mayastor.
• Monitoring: Zabbix via Helm chart.
I’ve spent hundreds of hours digging into this (Kubernetes, HA design, storage, CNIs, etc.), and I’ve definitely learned a ton. But I’m still not sure if I’m on the right track:
• Will this actually work the way I think it will?
• Is this anywhere close to “best practice”?
• Or… did I just massively overengineer this when there might be a simpler HA setup?
Constraints:
• No cloud — fully self-hosted.
• Storage available: NFS / TrueNAS / ZFS.
• Needs to handle large-scale infra, but the ops team is literally 2 people.
Ask: If you’ve deployed HA Zabbix (or any big NMS) — does this setup make sense? Should I stick with the K8s + Talos route, or would you recommend something more straightforward?
Any advice, feedback, or gotchas would mean a lot.
https://redd.it/1notg9a
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Interview Test Prep suggestions for Oracle SRE-DevOps position?
I have a technical interview scheduled for a DevOps position at Oracle (the new health division) and there will be a noscripting test as part of it. It could either be Python or PowerShell, I'll probably do Python since I've worked with it more than PowerShell recently. I'd rank myself as intermediate with Python... I can get the job done but don't have much memorized. I didn't get to use Python in my last DevOps position because so I'm not even familiar with what people build in it.
Any suggestions on prepping? The phone screen interviewer didn't provide any direction to narrow it down from "Python" and I'm wondering what to expect or what will likely be in the test. She said they use Hackerrank and I got on there and started going through challenges but I can't imagine a lot of what I've done so far is what's going to be expected. I also have 3 or 4 different languages rolling around in my head and I know I'll get tripped up on syntax.
Any help is appreciated!
https://redd.it/1np0hdl
@r_devops
I have a technical interview scheduled for a DevOps position at Oracle (the new health division) and there will be a noscripting test as part of it. It could either be Python or PowerShell, I'll probably do Python since I've worked with it more than PowerShell recently. I'd rank myself as intermediate with Python... I can get the job done but don't have much memorized. I didn't get to use Python in my last DevOps position because so I'm not even familiar with what people build in it.
Any suggestions on prepping? The phone screen interviewer didn't provide any direction to narrow it down from "Python" and I'm wondering what to expect or what will likely be in the test. She said they use Hackerrank and I got on there and started going through challenges but I can't imagine a lot of what I've done so far is what's going to be expected. I also have 3 or 4 different languages rolling around in my head and I know I'll get tripped up on syntax.
Any help is appreciated!
https://redd.it/1np0hdl
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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New hires, what helped you land the job??
4 years DevOps and overall 10 years IT experience. I’ve been looking since January (remove & even Raleigh, NC). Thousands of applications and the only 10 interviews I’ve gotten, I’ve been passed by other candidates and unsure why.
I’ve tried the LinkedIn Ai to tweak my resume, jobhire.ai to mass apply, endless resume ATS checkers, I’m honestly too burnt out to keep applying. Even putting freelance work on my resume
Has anything specific worked for yall? Any new tech I should be specifically looking at like azure, kubernetes, or terraform?
https://redd.it/1np08hp
@r_devops
4 years DevOps and overall 10 years IT experience. I’ve been looking since January (remove & even Raleigh, NC). Thousands of applications and the only 10 interviews I’ve gotten, I’ve been passed by other candidates and unsure why.
I’ve tried the LinkedIn Ai to tweak my resume, jobhire.ai to mass apply, endless resume ATS checkers, I’m honestly too burnt out to keep applying. Even putting freelance work on my resume
Has anything specific worked for yall? Any new tech I should be specifically looking at like azure, kubernetes, or terraform?
https://redd.it/1np08hp
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Need guidance for Platform Engineer interview prep (Istio, K8s, AWS, Terraform, CI/CD)
Hi everyone,
I’ve got a technical interview coming up for a Platform role at a foreign MNC (payment domain). The JD mentions 3–5 years of experience, but I’ve only got about 2 years. Somehow my resume matched and I got the call.
The role mainly requires Istio, Kubernetes, AWS, Terraform, and CI/CD. I’ve worked with these technologies before, but I don’t feel super confident about how deep I should go or what to focus on for interview prep. I worked in startup so I kept hands on all most all the tools they required but I am afraid what if loose this opportunity, I am being preparing since last 2-3 days with some chatgpt mock interview and practicing python noscripting.
The interviewer will be from Brazil (I’m based in India), and I’m not sure what kind of questions to expect.
Can anyone suggest how I should prepare, especially for interviews at this level? Maybe some resources, topics to prioritize, or typical questions asked in such roles?
Thank you in advance
https://redd.it/1np26t4
@r_devops
Hi everyone,
I’ve got a technical interview coming up for a Platform role at a foreign MNC (payment domain). The JD mentions 3–5 years of experience, but I’ve only got about 2 years. Somehow my resume matched and I got the call.
The role mainly requires Istio, Kubernetes, AWS, Terraform, and CI/CD. I’ve worked with these technologies before, but I don’t feel super confident about how deep I should go or what to focus on for interview prep. I worked in startup so I kept hands on all most all the tools they required but I am afraid what if loose this opportunity, I am being preparing since last 2-3 days with some chatgpt mock interview and practicing python noscripting.
The interviewer will be from Brazil (I’m based in India), and I’m not sure what kind of questions to expect.
Can anyone suggest how I should prepare, especially for interviews at this level? Maybe some resources, topics to prioritize, or typical questions asked in such roles?
Thank you in advance
https://redd.it/1np26t4
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Path to AWS devOps for very beginner
Hi everyone, I’m 30 and lately I’ve been thinking about learning AWS to land a job in 2026. Back in my 20s I went to IT school, so I’m somewhat familiar with technologies, but I haven’t really done anything hands-on in a long time since I was focused on other things.
I’d love your honest opinion — is it too late for me to start now?
Also, if anyone can recommend some good beginner-friendly courses, I’d really appreciate it
https://redd.it/1np3ubo
@r_devops
Hi everyone, I’m 30 and lately I’ve been thinking about learning AWS to land a job in 2026. Back in my 20s I went to IT school, so I’m somewhat familiar with technologies, but I haven’t really done anything hands-on in a long time since I was focused on other things.
I’d love your honest opinion — is it too late for me to start now?
Also, if anyone can recommend some good beginner-friendly courses, I’d really appreciate it
https://redd.it/1np3ubo
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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[FREE] AI-Powered Veo 3 Script Writer – Looking for Beta Testers! 🎬🤖
Hey r/devops 👋
I’ve built a free web tool called Veo 3 Script Writer that helps creators turn plain text into production-ready Veo 3 video noscripts.
It’s live now and I’d love some early feedback from the Reddit community.
https://preview.redd.it/fyhb1j8cr1rf1.png?width=1276&format=png&auto=webp&s=b951c7cf4046ef8c35b4ad8432acb1806b2f2b6a
https://preview.redd.it/p71p6dwgr1rf1.png?width=1546&format=png&auto=webp&s=154ad9f2a696036dfcbbbfd1645541979a112655
# ✨ What it Does
* Intelligent dialogue detection – automatically finds every line of spoken text.
* Visual prompt generation – creates scene cards and cinematic prompts ready for Veo 3.
* 95-character dialogue limit – auto-splits long lines so they’re Veo-friendly.
* Character & environment settings – keep characters and scenes visually consistent.
# 🛠 How to Use
1. Paste any noscript with dialogue.
2. Click “Generate Script.”
3. Get a full Veo 3-optimized noscript with scene prompts and dialogues you can copy or download.
# ✅ Why Test It?
I’m looking for real-world feedback from video creators:
* Does the dialogue detection work for your noscripts?
* Are the generated scene prompts clear enough?
* Any features you’d love to see added?
It’s 100% free to try—no signup needed.
👉 Give it a spin here: [https://www.avioncitojuego.com/](https://www.avioncitojuego.com/)
Thanks in advance for any thoughts, bug reports, or feature ideas! Your input will help make this a go-to noscript generator for Veo 3 and other AI video platforms.
— RAOGY
https://redd.it/1np3sto
@r_devops
Hey r/devops 👋
I’ve built a free web tool called Veo 3 Script Writer that helps creators turn plain text into production-ready Veo 3 video noscripts.
It’s live now and I’d love some early feedback from the Reddit community.
https://preview.redd.it/fyhb1j8cr1rf1.png?width=1276&format=png&auto=webp&s=b951c7cf4046ef8c35b4ad8432acb1806b2f2b6a
https://preview.redd.it/p71p6dwgr1rf1.png?width=1546&format=png&auto=webp&s=154ad9f2a696036dfcbbbfd1645541979a112655
# ✨ What it Does
* Intelligent dialogue detection – automatically finds every line of spoken text.
* Visual prompt generation – creates scene cards and cinematic prompts ready for Veo 3.
* 95-character dialogue limit – auto-splits long lines so they’re Veo-friendly.
* Character & environment settings – keep characters and scenes visually consistent.
# 🛠 How to Use
1. Paste any noscript with dialogue.
2. Click “Generate Script.”
3. Get a full Veo 3-optimized noscript with scene prompts and dialogues you can copy or download.
# ✅ Why Test It?
I’m looking for real-world feedback from video creators:
* Does the dialogue detection work for your noscripts?
* Are the generated scene prompts clear enough?
* Any features you’d love to see added?
It’s 100% free to try—no signup needed.
👉 Give it a spin here: [https://www.avioncitojuego.com/](https://www.avioncitojuego.com/)
Thanks in advance for any thoughts, bug reports, or feature ideas! Your input will help make this a go-to noscript generator for Veo 3 and other AI video platforms.
— RAOGY
https://redd.it/1np3sto
@r_devops
Engineering intelligence - worth the hype?
So I keep hearing about these platforms that say they can tell you how your team is performing without asking you to track everything manually.
Cool in theory, but does anyone actually use them day-to-day? Or is it just another dashboard graveyard?
https://redd.it/1np5gbd
@r_devops
So I keep hearing about these platforms that say they can tell you how your team is performing without asking you to track everything manually.
Cool in theory, but does anyone actually use them day-to-day? Or is it just another dashboard graveyard?
https://redd.it/1np5gbd
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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Best Path Forward?
Hey everyone,
I’m trying to figure out the best way to connect with an existing firm or shop that might need extra hands when they’ve got more work than they can handle. My background is pretty deep in Linux, with solid experience in AWS and GCP. I’m US-based and comfortable jumping into contract roles if it helps take some of the load off.
Has anyone here gone this route before? How did you find firms willing to subcontract out work? Any tips on where to start looking or how to approach the conversation would be appreciated.
https://redd.it/1np6lbh
@r_devops
Hey everyone,
I’m trying to figure out the best way to connect with an existing firm or shop that might need extra hands when they’ve got more work than they can handle. My background is pretty deep in Linux, with solid experience in AWS and GCP. I’m US-based and comfortable jumping into contract roles if it helps take some of the load off.
Has anyone here gone this route before? How did you find firms willing to subcontract out work? Any tips on where to start looking or how to approach the conversation would be appreciated.
https://redd.it/1np6lbh
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
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GitHub Actions CPU performance benchmarks
https://runs-on.com/benchmarks/github-actions-cpu-performance/
Comparison of CPU performance across different GitHub Actions runner providers. GitHub's own runners score poorly, almost all providers beat them with a large margin.
https://redd.it/1np86u5
@r_devops
https://runs-on.com/benchmarks/github-actions-cpu-performance/
Comparison of CPU performance across different GitHub Actions runner providers. GitHub's own runners score poorly, almost all providers beat them with a large margin.
https://redd.it/1np86u5
@r_devops
RunsOn
GitHub Actions CPU performance benchmarks
Compare alternatives to GitHub Actions runners across CPU speed, queuing times, and price. Includes self-hosted and third-party options such as RunsOn, AWS CodeBuild, Buildjet, Ubicloud, Namespace, Blacksmith...
Want to stand out in tech? Master the stuff most people ignore....
When I first started in tech, I thought the people who stood out had 10+ years of experience.
But over time, I noticed something different: the people who grow the fastest aren’t the ones who know every new tool they’re the ones who never skipped the fundamentals.
The truth is, most beginners rush past the basics. They chase frameworks, languages, and “hot skills,” but can’t explain how files move, how code is tracked, or how networks actually work. That gap shows up quickly in real projects and interviews.
If you want to level up your career faster, focus here first:
* Command Line Basics → navigating, managing files, running noscripts. It makes you way faster than click-hunting through GUIs.
* Git & Version Control → not optional. Every serious project lives on GitHub. Your repos are proof you can build.
* Networking 101 → IPs, DNS, ports, firewalls. Whether it’s AWS, Python, or DevOps, everything depends on it.
* Databases → CRUD, joins, indexes. Even a little SQL knowledge puts you ahead of “tutorial coders.”
* APIs → apps talk to each other through APIs. Learn how to send/receive data. It unlocks everything from web apps to automation.
* Cloud Essentials → EC2, S3, IAM, VPC. Even beginner-level cloud knowledge gives you an edge.
* Problem-Solving Mindset → syntax is easy. What makes you valuable is breaking down problems and figuring things out.
Frameworks and tools will keep changing. But fundamentals? They compound forever.
Curious which of these you’ve been focusing on lately?
https://redd.it/1np95k2
@r_devops
When I first started in tech, I thought the people who stood out had 10+ years of experience.
But over time, I noticed something different: the people who grow the fastest aren’t the ones who know every new tool they’re the ones who never skipped the fundamentals.
The truth is, most beginners rush past the basics. They chase frameworks, languages, and “hot skills,” but can’t explain how files move, how code is tracked, or how networks actually work. That gap shows up quickly in real projects and interviews.
If you want to level up your career faster, focus here first:
* Command Line Basics → navigating, managing files, running noscripts. It makes you way faster than click-hunting through GUIs.
* Git & Version Control → not optional. Every serious project lives on GitHub. Your repos are proof you can build.
* Networking 101 → IPs, DNS, ports, firewalls. Whether it’s AWS, Python, or DevOps, everything depends on it.
* Databases → CRUD, joins, indexes. Even a little SQL knowledge puts you ahead of “tutorial coders.”
* APIs → apps talk to each other through APIs. Learn how to send/receive data. It unlocks everything from web apps to automation.
* Cloud Essentials → EC2, S3, IAM, VPC. Even beginner-level cloud knowledge gives you an edge.
* Problem-Solving Mindset → syntax is easy. What makes you valuable is breaking down problems and figuring things out.
Frameworks and tools will keep changing. But fundamentals? They compound forever.
Curious which of these you’ve been focusing on lately?
https://redd.it/1np95k2
@r_devops
Reddit
From the devops community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the devops community