Webinar
Artifact management for the cloud native; Universal Kubernetes Registry
Please register for this webinar below.

Webinar Description:
In this age of modern DevOps, managing the artifacts you need can be tough. Attempt to build out your scalable solution while maintaining quality and security without sacrificing innovation which can mean the difference to go to market first or keeping your customers happy can keep the most seasoned SRE sleepless at night. Having the right artifact manager and registry can help your team achieve DevOps nirvana and have them actually enjoy their weekends again.

Who should attend:
Developers and DevOps engineers who are looking to get solutions for the challenges in orchestration and Kubernetes.

Pre-requisites:
None

The Agenda:

- Artifact management best practices

- Building to scale + vulnerability protection

- Orchestration and Kubernetes - overcoming challenges

- Troubleshooting / Demo

- Q&A



Can’t make it? Signup up and we will email you the recording.
For questions, please contact [email protected] 

Register for this Webinar:
Details
Date: Wednesday, July 18th
Time: 10:30 AM PST
Can't make it? register to receive the recording
Duration: 1 Hour
Host(s):
William Manning
Baruch Sadogursky
Visit us:
Presenter Information
Senior Solution Engineer
Developer Advocate
William is a Senior Solutions Engineer with JFrog. He is also a mentor with TechStars (Nike Incubator), Matter, and NestGSV. He has successfully exited 3 companies and took one public in Australia. He also currently helping various startups as an advisor. In his spare time, he likes to travel with his wife and two boys. He also plays guitar, lives for the beach and rides skateboards.

Baruch Sadogursky (a.k.a JBaruch) is the Chief Sticker Officer (also, Head of Developer Relations) at JFrog. His passion is speaking about technology. Well, speaking in general, but doing it about technology makes him look smart, and 17 years of hi-tech experience sure helps. When he’s not on stage (or on a plane to get there), he learns about technology, people and how they work, or more precisely, don’t work together.