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ICYMI: Do you need a Cloud Center of Excellence?

In Case You Missed It On this episode of Modern Digital Business, we explore the necessary transition to a digital business model and the challenges that come with it, specifically in the realm of cloud computing. As the lead...

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ICYMI: Do you need a Cloud Center of Excellence?

Recent Episodes

May 25, 2023

ICYMI: Do you need a Cloud Center of Excellence?

In Case You Missed It On this episode of Modern Digital Business, we explore the necessary transition to a digital business model and the challenges that come with it, specifically in the realm of cloud computing. As the lead...

Episode page
May 11, 2023

What You Need to Learn to Become a Cloud-Native Architect

What is a cloud architect? What does a cloud architect do that’s different from what a developer does? What skills does someone need to have to move from a role as a software developer to a role as a cloud …

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April 27, 2023

Modern Pricing Plans with Dor Sasson, CEO Stigg

Most companies aren't in the billing space, yet they need to deal with pricing and billing as a core piece of technology, whether they want to or not. Stigg is an easy to implement, headless pricing and packaging platform tha...

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April 13, 2023

Don’t Depend on Maintenance Windows

What happens when a web application you depend on goes offline? It can be inconvenient, disappointing, and potentially cause serious problems for you. But what if you find out that the web application wasn’t working by design...

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March 30, 2023

Automating your Automation with Tyson Kunovsky, CEO AutoCloud

AutoCloud is an enterprise software platform used by companies to assist in their Infrastructure as Code deployments. Customers using AutoCloud can reduce cloud costs, security risks, complexity, and adoption time for Infrast...

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Jan. 26, 2023

Independent Third Party Observability with Jeff Martens, CEO Metrist

What happens when observability becomes a commodity and is independently brokered via a third party? My guest today is Jeff Martens, who is the co-founder and CEO of Metrist, an independent third-party observability platform....

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About the Host

Lee AtchisonProfile Photo

Lee Atchison

Thought Leader, Cloud Expert, Application Modernization Expert, Author at O'Reilly Media, LinkedIn Learning, and InfoWorld.

Lee Atchison is a recognized industry thought leader in cloud computing. He has committed his career to architecting and building high-scale, cloud-based, service-oriented SaaS applications. He has specific expertise in building highly available systems.

Lee is the author of the best-selling book Architecting For Scale, published by O’Reilly Media. The book, originally released in 2016, recently went through a major upgrade and was released as the second edition in 2020.

He was the Senior Director for Cloud Architecture at New Relic. He was with New Relic for eight years, where, among other things, he designed and led the building of the New Relic Platform and infrastructure products. As architect lead, Lee has helped New Relic build a solid service-based system architecture that scales as they have grown from a simple SaaS startup to a high-traffic public enterprise.

Lee learned cloud-based, scalable systems while working for seven years as a Senior Manager and Principal Program Manager at Amazon.com. At Amazon, he led the creation of the company’s first software download store (app store), created the AWS Elastic Beanstalk offering (Platform as a Service), and led the team that managed the migration of Amazon’s retail platform from a monolith to an SOA-based architecture.

Lee is widely quoted in publications such as InfoWorld, Container Journal, Diginomica, IT Brief, Programmable Web, CIO Review, and DZone. He has been a featured speaker at events across the globe, from London to Sydney, Tokyo to Paris, and all over North America.

Additionally, Lee spent several years in the network management space working for two different startups and twelve years in the Test & Measurement space at Hewlett Packard. At Hewlett Packard, among other things, he led standardization work for key IEEE and industry standards in the T&M sector and wrote a book on building T&M software systems published by Prentice Hall.

Overall, Lee has 33 years of industry experience. He has worked in companies of all sizes, from very small startups to very large corporate enterprises (such as Hewlett Packard) and all sizes in between. He is the holder of multiple patents while working at both Amazon and Hewlett Packard.

You can see some of Lee's articles, publications, speaking sessions, webinars, and podcast episodes by visiting his personal website, leeatchison.com.