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In this episode, Jess talks with guest Cat Swetel about her career, writings, and thoughts on DevOps.
Jess: “Cat is known internationally for her Penguin Power Stance and for standing on the edge of now!”
Jess and Cat talk about projects that fit Cat’s definition of the edge of now.
Cat: “I do believe that DevOps is inherently feminist, because it puts the emphasis on that maintenance and reproductive work rather than producing working software.”
Jess brings up Eric Evans’ concept of software as gardening.
The panel discusses reproductive vs productive work. Cat talks about what she sees in healthy DevOps teams.
Jess and Cat talk about the challenges of working with legacy systems.
The panel discusses metacommunication and Gregory Bateson.
Cat: “In that situation, everyone is operating as specified but it’s still not working! So that’s when it becomes necessary to not have so much of that transactional interaction…It has to be something more generative.”
Cat and Jess talk about the ethics of “care vs fair”. Cat dives into how feminist theory has impacted her thinking on DevOps and systems.
Cat: “If we valued caring for the systems and caring for each other, rather than thinking fair or unfair…Let’s check, are we caring for these systems, are we being mindful? Then rad, let’s keep going.”
By Matt Stratton, Trevor Hess, Jessica Kerr, and Bridget Kromhout4.6
6969 ratings
In this episode, Jess talks with guest Cat Swetel about her career, writings, and thoughts on DevOps.
Jess: “Cat is known internationally for her Penguin Power Stance and for standing on the edge of now!”
Jess and Cat talk about projects that fit Cat’s definition of the edge of now.
Cat: “I do believe that DevOps is inherently feminist, because it puts the emphasis on that maintenance and reproductive work rather than producing working software.”
Jess brings up Eric Evans’ concept of software as gardening.
The panel discusses reproductive vs productive work. Cat talks about what she sees in healthy DevOps teams.
Jess and Cat talk about the challenges of working with legacy systems.
The panel discusses metacommunication and Gregory Bateson.
Cat: “In that situation, everyone is operating as specified but it’s still not working! So that’s when it becomes necessary to not have so much of that transactional interaction…It has to be something more generative.”
Cat and Jess talk about the ethics of “care vs fair”. Cat dives into how feminist theory has impacted her thinking on DevOps and systems.
Cat: “If we valued caring for the systems and caring for each other, rather than thinking fair or unfair…Let’s check, are we caring for these systems, are we being mindful? Then rad, let’s keep going.”

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