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Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) is a discipline in the field of Software Engineering and IT infrastructure support that monitors and improves the availability and performance of deployed software systems and large software services (which are expected to deliver reliable response times across events such as new software deployments, hardware failures, and cybersecurity attacks). [1]
Hack Reactor is a software engineering coding bootcamp [2] education program founded in San Francisco in 2012. [3] The program is remote-only and offered in 12-week beginner full-time and 19-week intermediate full-time formats. The program has been described as, "optimized for people who want to be software engineers as their main, day-to-day work.
Among the topics currently being explored are: [11] scalability, securing data center networks, disaster recovery, government restrictions. [12]Another major area is the cost of downtime regarding customer dissatisfaction & business loss, [13] and also the "astonishing" yet hidden cost and effect regarding personnel & productivity.
Safety engineering; SAPHIRE; Season cracking; Short time duty; Single point of failure; Site reliability engineering; Statistical interference; Stress–strength analysis; Striation (fatigue) Structural reliability; Structured what-if technique; System integrity
In engineering, reliability, availability, maintainability and safety (RAMS) [1] [2] is used to characterize a product or system: Reliability: Ability to perform a specific function and may be given as design reliability or operational reliability; Availability: Ability to keep a functioning state in the given environment
Reliability engineering is a sub-discipline of systems engineering that emphasizes the ability of equipment to function without failure. Reliability is defined as the probability that a product, system, or service will perform its intended function adequately for a specified period of time, OR will operate in a defined environment without failure. [1]
Reliability, availability and serviceability (RAS), also known as reliability, availability, and maintainability (RAM), is a computer hardware engineering term involving reliability engineering, high availability, and serviceability design. The phrase was originally used by IBM as a term to describe the robustness of their mainframe computers.
The International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering' (IEEE ISSRE) is an academic conference with strong industry participation running since 1990 [1] and covering reliability engineering for software. The first meeting was organized at Washington DC.