Systems | Development | Analytics | API | Testing

Ensuring Release Confidence in Fast-Moving DevOps Teams

Speed is the heartbeat of DevOps. Teams are delivering faster, integrating continuously, and deploying multiple times a day. But with that velocity comes a question every engineering leader faces: how do you ensure confidence in every release? When change happens this fast, it’s easy to lose track of what’s been tested, what’s passed, and what’s at risk. Without the right visibility, small gaps in testing can turn into production issues that impact users and erode trust.

Beyond Zero-Ops: Architectural Precision for MongoDB Atlas Connectors

Whether you’re streaming change data capture (CDC) events from MongoDB to Apache Kafka or sinking high-velocity data from Kafka into MongoDB for analytics, the following best practices ensure a secure, performant, and resilient architecture. This technical deep dive covers implementing the MongoDB Atlas Source and Sink Connectors on Confluent Cloud.

Exposing Kafka to the Internet: Solving External Access

Your Kafka Doesn't Have to Live Behind a Wall There's a problem that almost every platform team running Kafka at scale eventually hits, and it usually starts with a reasonable ask: "Can you give our partners access to this event stream?" What follows is rarely simple. You start scoping VPC peering. Then someone asks about firewall rules. Then you realize each new external consumer is going to need its own network arrangement.

4 best API testing tools for enterprise teams

Enterprise development teams face mounting pressure to deliver secure, performant APIs while managing complex distributed architectures, strict compliance requirements, and accelerating release cycles. The API testing platform an organization chooses directly affects product quality, team velocity, and regulatory risk. Functional validation, security testing, performance testing, and CI/CD integration must all scale across global teams without introducing governance gaps.

How to Remotely Debug Mobile Apps

Remote debugging is the most reliable way to grasp what’s really happening inside a mobile app once it’s out in the wild. We’re talking crashes that never appear in development, and issues from users that can’t be reproduced locally. If you ship mobile apps, you’ve been vexed by these problems at some point.

Xcode 26.4 Beta: First impressions

Our engineers Ben Boral and Balazs Hajagos have a look at the official release notes to see what's interesting in the latest Xcode beta (already available for use on Bitrise!). Bitrise provides a full-stack, vertically integrated mobile DevOps solution that unites the tools, processes and testing frameworks engineering teams need to build best-in-class mobile experiences. Over 400,000 developers use Bitrise’s products: Bitrise CI, Build Cache, Release Management, and Insights.

On the Frontlines of a Simulated DoD Environment

Qlik’s lessons learned from developing systems in a locked-down military-grade data zone at the 2025 NDIA Hackathon In early September, developers from across the country arrive at George Mason University’s Fuse facility with laptops, notebooks, and one big unknown: how do you build a defense-grade analytics solution in just 72 hours in a simulated air-gap environment.

Building Unshakeable Trust in Web3 with Automation QA Testing

The traditional web can't fulfill the promise of ownership and openness that decentralization promises. But the Web3 space has a big problem: not enough trust. People are afraid to link their wallets or make transactions on new platforms because of so many instances of smart contract attacks, frozen funds, and poor user experiences in the past. For every business that wants to build in this area, quality is more than simply a technological need.

Why observability tools are missing critical debugging data (no matter how you sample)

There's a common belief in the observability space: if you just collect more data, you'll have what you need to debug any issue. The reality is more frustrating: even with 100% unsampled observability, you're still missing critical debugging data. There's a common belief in the observability space: if you just collect more data, you'll have what you need to debug any issue. The reality is more frustrating: even with 100% unsampled observability, you're still missing critical debugging data.