James Donner
on 13 November 2015

Juju Charmer Summit: A Kickoff


This article is more than 9 year s old.

The first ever Juju Charmer Summit was held this September in the Washington DC area. This event gathered the Juju community into one physical space to share our knowledge, to share success stories and best practices, and to grow our skills together. It also provided everyone the chance to meet Charmers and Juju contributors in person, which was a welcomed change from mailing lists, IRC and online hangouts.

To kick-off the event, the Founder of Ubuntu and Juju, Mark Shuttleworth, joined us via videoconference to share his enthusiasm and vision for Juju, Charms, DevOps and service modeling for the modern computing era.

Watch the full presentation to discover;

  • How charming is fun and easy and becoming even more so,
  • How charming helps independent software vendors (ISVs) and developers,
  • How charming helps DevOps practitioners
  • How to take advantage of best practices for Charm design
  • How to effectively navigate the Charm roadmap and ecosystem

As we count down to the next Juju Charmer Summit in 2016, we’ll be publishing follow-up videos of the conference so that everyone who missed out this time can see what happened.

Exciting and “Charming” times are ahead!


Newsletter
signup

Get the latest Ubuntu news and updates in your inbox.

By submitting this form, I confirm that I have read and agree to Canonical's Privacy Policy.

Related posts


David Beamonte
26 June 2025

Cut data center energy costs with bare metal automation

Article Cloud and server

Data centers don’t have to be power-hungry monsters. With smart automation using tools like MAAS, you can reduce energy waste and operational costs, and make your infrastructure greener, without sacrificing performance or flexibility.

David Beamonte
26 June 2025


Isobel Kate Maxwell
24 April 2025

The hitchhiker’s guide to infrastructure modernization

Article Cloud and server

One of my favourite authors, Douglas Adams, once said that “we are stuck with technology when what we really want is just stuff that works.” Whilst Adams is right about a lot of things, he got this one wrong – at least when it comes to infrastructure. As our Infra Masters 2025 event demonstrated, infrastructure

Isobel Kate Maxwell
24 April 2025


jdkandersson
13 March 2025

Effortless observability for Django applications

Article Ubuntu

Observability is critical for web operations to ensure that the application is working as expected and to identify any potential issues. However, setting up observability has traditionally been challenging because it can take hours to set up all the infrastructure, instrument your code and enable observability in...

jdkandersson
13 March 2025