Deployment simplifies continuous code integration and delivery automation for startups and agile engineering teams on the AWS cloud, eliminating the need for DevOps engineering. A developer can deploy static sites, web services, and environments without knowledge of AWS or DevOps. Deployment supports previews on pull requests and automatic deployments on code push without manual setup or scripting. It enables engineering teams to focus on tasks that add customer value instead of worrying about DevOps-related grunt work.
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Deployment.io's answer:
I led engineering teams at early-stage startups and realized that startups waste 70% of valuable engineering time on tedious, non-coding tasks that they can easily automate.
To solve this problem, we've built Deployment.io so engineering teams at startups can focus on writing more code that adds value and helps them achieve PMF faster.
Deployment.io's answer:
ReactJs using Typescript, GatsbyJs using Typescript, GoLang, and AWS
Deployment.io's answer:
Deployment.io is built and designed for startups. Our customers can onboard in 5 minutes and start deploying apps to AWS without any DevOps or AWS knowledge. Other platforms are complex and require scripting or DevOps knowledge. They are built for bigger companies with a lot of resources.
Deployment.io's answer:
Startups and agile engineering teams should choose Deployment.io for the simplicity and ease of use. Our competitors are complex and are designed for bigger companies.
Deployment.io's answer:
For startups, speed and focus are crucial. Our primary audience is engineering teams at startups that want to focus on building code that adds value and not on DevOps related grunt work.
Deploying web apps on AWS has never been this easy and it also takes care of scaling based on usage.
Based on our record, Hangfire seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 5 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Hangfire (https://hangfire.io) includes default exception handling and is very extensible, I think it's a good mid-level choice and a good alternative to other queue mechanism, if you can't afford to host a separated queue service or can't manage a separated service; also scales pretty well (you can have multiple servers handling the same background job queue, or different queues). It runs on Sql Server and MySql... Source: about 2 years ago
I used to just use hangfire.io in .net and worked wonderfully for any long running tasks or schedules. Had a great queuing system, UI to know if they failed , etc. That's how I'd send emails, pdf's, and other things along that nature. Then if it were more just a db related operation, just setup a schedule in mssql job service. Source: about 2 years ago
You can use hangfire for cronjob, to run at a time in future, you can use Hangfire.Schedule(jobid, datetime). Source: about 2 years ago
So another option is to use something like https://hangfire.io to pull the jobs and process them? Source: over 2 years ago
I've got a fairly large process I need to handle in background on my .net core web app so I've exported it to a background task using Hangfire. Source: almost 3 years ago
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