John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile
John Jackson

@johnjacksonpm

Principal Product Manager #AmazonManagedWorkflows for Apache #Airflow @AWSCloud. Music, tech, and photography. Opinions are my own.

ID: 1314043609839099904

calendar_today08-10-2020 03:24:57

26 Tweet

58 Followers

47 Following

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My AWS On Air session on #AmazonManagedWorkflows for Apache #Airflow with @deekob is now available on YouTube youtu.be/bvd0C1ZBM0Y

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Have you been considering AWS Secrets Manager backend for your Apache #Airflow implementation? If so, this blog post is for you! aws.amazon.com/blogs/opensour…

AWS Blogs (Unofficial) (@awsblogs) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New Open Source post by John Jackson: Move your Apache Airflow connections and variables to AWS Secrets Manager aws.amazon.com/blogs/opensour…

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There is now a local runner for Amazon MWAA available on GitHub, enabling users to test their DAGs, requirements, plugins, and Apache Airflow configurations on a local Docker container before publishing for easy debugging and a faster development cycle. github.com/aws/aws-mwaa-l…

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Happy to announce the availability of Apache #Airflow 2.0.2 on Amazon MWAA! All of the improvements of Airflow 2.0 at your fingertips on Amazon Web Services, with 2 schedulers included as default in every environment. aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what…

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Latest Amazon MWAA documentation update is live! Includes "Using a DAG to create custom metrics in CloudWatch" and "How to use connection templates interchangeably in the Apache Airflow UI". Full details at docs.aws.amazon.com/mwaa/latest/us…

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This week's #AmazonMWAA documentation updates are live! Includes adding Apache Airflow connections via CLI, temporary data storage on workers FAQ, and lots of troubleshooting items. docs.aws.amazon.com/mwaa/latest/us…

Sam Dengler (@samdengler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Automating Amazon CloudWatch dashboards and alarms for Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow aws.amazon.com/blogs/compute/… via Amazon Web Services

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (MWAA) Resources Page is now live, with links to blogs, videos, and more! aws.amazon.com/managed-workfl…

What's New on AWS (Unofficial) (@awswhatsnew) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (MWAA) Available in Canada, London, Paris, Sao Paulo, Seoul, and Mumbai Regions Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (MWAA) is now available in six new AWS Regions: South America (Sao Paulo), Asia ... aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what…

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow is now available in 6 new AWS regions! You can now launch MWAA environments in Central Canada, London, Paris, Sao Paulo, Seoul, and Mumbai. aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what…

John Jackson (@johnjacksonpm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Have you checked out the Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (MWAA) resources page lately? aws.amazon.com/managed-workfl…

What's New on AWS (Unofficial) (@awswhatsnew) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (MWAA) now supports Apache Airflow version 2.2 and Web Server Plugins You can now create Apache Airflow 2.2 environments on Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (MWAA). Apache Airflow 2.2 is the la... aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what…

Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The figurative meanings of the word ‘backlog’ — ‘reserves’ and ‘unfulfilled orders’ — were preceded by a literal one: originally, the word referred to a heavy log put at the back of a fireplace as a protection of the brickwork.

The figurative meanings of the word ‘backlog’ — ‘reserves’ and ‘unfulfilled orders’ — were preceded by a literal one: originally, the word referred to a heavy log put at the back of a fireplace as a protection of the brickwork.