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From YouTube: GitLab's release year in review: 11.0 to 12.0
Description
GitLab's Manager of Product Marketing (Dev) John Jeremiah provides an overview of what we've released in the last year as we move into DevSecOps with the 12.0 release.
Read more about our product vision: http://bit.ly/2IyXDOX
Learn about FOSS & GitLab: http://bit.ly/2KegFjx
Get in touch with Sales: http://bit.ly/2IygR7z
A
At
gitlab
we're
moving
fast,
embracing
minimum,
viable
change,
monthly
releases
and
even
faster
on
get
lab
comm
where
there
are
updates
every
week.
12
otto
is
a
great
milestone
for
us
to
pause
and
reflect
on
our
journey.
It
seems
like
it
was
just
yesterday
that
we
were
announcing
xi,
dot,
o
and
the
general
availability
of
auto
dev
ops.
Since
then,
we've
grown
as
a
community
we've
witnessed
changes
in
the
market
and
through
our
values
we
focused
on
making
get
lab
awesome
and
lovable.
A
That's
really
helping
to
propel
us
on
our
journey
and
make
it
possible
for
everyone
to
contribute,
and
in
fact,
in
the
past
year
we've
had
over
2000
community
contributions
together,
we're
working
to
make
DevOps
a
reality
for
teams
of
all
sizes
and
looking
back
it
hasn't
been
just
about
building
dev
features
in
a
dev
tool.
Our
journey
from
eleven
dot
a
has
really
been
about
expanding
our
focus
to
support
the
needs
of
developers,
operations
that
security
alike
for
developers.
A
You
know
it's
been
about,
helping
teams
deliver,
it
shift
faster,
reducing
cycle
time
and
meeting
business
demands
it's
faster
because
we
have
an
awesome
web
IDE.
It
makes
it
easy
to
code
and
ship
from
anywhere.
We
have
maven
and
NPM
registries
to
help
manage
your
binaries
parallel
pipelines
to
accelerate
delivery,
and
we
support
servers
and
more
now.
Security
is
an
incredibly
important
part
of
the
team.
A
We
help
to
detect
secrets
in
your
code
to
prevent
you
from
publishing
credentials.
We
create
remediation,
merge,
request
to
address
vulnerabilities
and
we
have
security.
Cic
pipelines
now
bring
security
into
the
development
process,
but
you
know
applications.
They
don't
run
by
themselves.
Application
teams
everywhere
need
to
plan
an
architect
for
stability
and
efficiency.
The
operations
dashboard
gives
visibility
into
pipelines
and
application
performance,
release,
management
and
feature
flights,
help
to
minimize
the
risk
to
production
without
sacrificing
compliance
or
audit
trails
and
merge
request.
Approval
rules
enable
consistent
governance
of
changes
going
to
production.