DevOps has always carried a larger purpose than installing tools, automating pipelines, or improving deployment frequency. Those things matter. I have spent much of my career helping organizations make those things work. Yet the deeper purpose of DevOps is to improve the flow of value through a complex socio-technical system. The system includes tools, platforms, pipelines, environments, tests, controls and production operations. It also includes people, leadership behavior, decision rights, accountability, learning, fear, confidence and trust. The technical side is easier to see. A failed build is visible. A broken deployment is visible. A production incident is visible. The human side usually fails more quietly. People stop speaking up. Teams wait for permission. Architects argue in private. Security arrives late. Operations becomes defensive. Leaders ask for more status. Engineers learn which truths are safe to tell and which truths create trouble. The organization continues to r...
Moonshot AI shipped Kimi K2.7-Code on June 12, 2026 — the fifth major release in the Kimi series in under a year, and arguably the most developer-friendly yet. The model is open-source, available on Hugging Face under a Modified MIT license, and accessible via the Kimi API and the company’s Kimi Code CLI. The headline claim: a 21.8% improvement on Moonshot’s own Kimi Code Bench v2 over its predecessor, K2.6. But the story that matters more for DevOps teams is efficiency, not just capability. Fewer Tokens, Less Waste Moonshot says K2.7-Code cuts reasoning token usage by 30% compared to K2.6. In practical terms, that means developers consume fewer compute resources while getting better results. For teams running coding agents at scale, that’s a meaningful cost reduction — not just a benchmark number. The model uses a Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) architecture with 1 trillion total parameters but only 32 billion active per token, paired with a 256K-token context window. Th...