Introduction to JFrog Artifactory
Please register for this webinar below.
Webinar Description:
The fastest and easiest explanation of JFrog Artifactory. The how, the what, the where, and the when to use Artifactory. From Developer to Distribution, all your DevOps hopes and dreams explain and more…
Who should attend:
Developers and DevOps engineers who are looking to get an overview of JFrog Artifactory and its common usage scenarios.
Pre-requisites:
None
The Agenda
- What is JFrog Artifactory and why is it needed?
Artifactory usage scenarios:
- Resolve dependencies
- Resolve dependencies
- Manage deployment of artifacts as a system of record for CI/CD
- Bill of Materials
- Artifactory Query Language (AQL)
- Product Demo
Note: This webinar is pre-recorded, and there will be a live Q&A at the end of the session.
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: Monday, October 22nd
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Time: 10:30 AM PST
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Can't make it? register to receive the recording
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Duration: 1 Hour
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Host: Mark Galpin |
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Presenter Information
Mark Galpin
Senior Product Manager
Senior Product Manager
Mark Galpin is a Senior Product Manager at JFrog, the creators of the Artifactory Binary Repository and other binary management tools, as well as the sponsors of the Conan open source project.
His passion is helping the world make better software faster, with efficient tools and processes.
His particular focus is as a product manager of Conan, an MIT licensed-project that is the world’s premiere C/C++ dependency manager, and on architectures and use cases for
liquid software workflows throughout the JFrog tool suite.
Before coming to JFrog in 2015, he spent eight years working on software, interoperability, and data standards as a contractor for the United States Army. He played a major role in a number of efforts that improved communication between army software applications on the battlefield, focused on data interoperability between sensors and analysis systems.
Before coming to JFrog in 2015, he spent eight years working on software, interoperability, and data standards as a contractor for the United States Army. He played a major role in a number of efforts that improved communication between army software applications on the battlefield, focused on data interoperability between sensors and analysis systems.