There was a time when compliance meant a quarterly ritual. Someone from security would walk over with a spreadsheet, ask a few questions, tick a few boxes and disappear until the next audit cycle. The infrastructure team would scramble to prove that yes, encryption was enabled, and no, that S3 bucket was not public anymore. Everyone felt relieved, went back to shipping features and quietly hoped nothing would drift before the next review. That model is dead; it just hasn’t been buried yet. The problem is not that teams lack security awareness. Most engineering organizations today understand that vulnerabilities need catching early and that production environments need hardening. The problem is that compliance has historically lived outside the delivery pipeline — treated as a checkpoint rather than a continuous practice. In a world where teams deploy dozens of...
Embedded software development has traditionally followed a different rhythm than mainstream software engineering. Hardware availability drives schedules. Validation cycles are longer. Releases are deliberate. Documentation is extensive. For good reason, embedded systems often operate in safety-critical or highly regulated environments. However, expectations around software delivery have shifted. Connected products, over-the-air updates, security mandates and shorter market windows are creating new pressures for embedded teams. The result? Many organizations are exploring how DevOps principles can be applied — thoughtfully — to embedded environments. Why Embedded Teams are Revisiting Their Delivery Model Across industries such as automotive, medical devices, aerospace and industrial controls, a consistent pattern is emerging: Integration happens later than teams would prefer. Hardware ac...