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Domain > robvanpamel.com
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DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2023-12-11
18.164.96.2
(
ClassC
)
2024-11-06
18.161.6.46
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 403 ForbiddenServer: CloudFrontDate: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 02:38:02 GMTContent-Type: text/htmlContent-Length: 915Connection: keep-aliveX-Cache: Error from cloudfrontVia: 1.1 ba490acb2ea716cd57876286ed686786.cloudfront.net (CloudFront)X-Amz-Cf-Pop: HIO52-P1X-Amz-Cf-Id: _RmSvVCzmcAH__Gr8XMVR3h-NeDIoGwaMpIzv2fimd58cQkTqChqUA !DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd>HTML>HEAD>META HTTP-EQUIVContent-Type CONTENTtext/html; charsetiso-8859-1>TITLE>ERROR: The request could not be satisfied/TITLE>/HEAD>BODY>H1>403 ERROR/H1>H2>The request could not be satisfied./H2>HR noshade size1px>Bad request.We cant connect to the server for this app or website at this time. There might be too much traffic or a configuration error. Try again later, or contact the app or website owner.BR clearall>If you provide content to customers through CloudFront, you can find steps to troubleshoot and help prevent this error by reviewing the CloudFront documentation.BR clearall>HR noshade size1px>PRE>Generated by cloudfront (CloudFront)Request ID: _RmSvVCzmcAH__Gr8XMVR3h-NeDIoGwaMpIzv2fimd58cQkTqChqUA/PRE>ADDRESS>/ADDRESS>/BODY>/HTML>
Port 443
HTTP/1.1 200 OKContent-Type: text/htmlContent-Length: 11858Connection: keep-aliveDate: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 02:38:04 GMTLast-Modified: Wed, 06 Dec 2023 15:08:48 GMTETag: 7206235180dcd301229a45b8c9af26cax-amz-server-side-encryption: AES256Accept-Ranges: bytesServer: AmazonS3X-Cache: Miss from cloudfrontVia: 1.1 02f1a759e4ec9fab6fc17c080dd851dc.cloudfront.net (CloudFront)X-Amz-Cf-Pop: HIO52-P1X-Amz-Cf-Id: pnv_ga0xGoSyxnj7_HRwqSktmgfj9Xu2aar93SBXp9iTsWJDKko2Vg !DOCTYPE html>html langen>head> meta charsetutf-8> meta http-equivX-UA-Compatible contentIEedge> meta nameviewport contentwidthdevice-width, initial-scale1>!-- Begin Jekyll SEO tag v2.8.0 -->title>Rob Van Pamel | Rob Van Pamel AWS Community Builder Certified AWS Solution Architect dotnet Architect/title>meta namegenerator contentJekyll v4.3.2 />meta propertyog:title contentRob Van Pamel />meta nameauthor contentRob Van Pamel />meta propertyog:locale contenten_US />meta namedescription contentRob Van Pamel AWS Community Builder Certified AWS Solution Architect dotnet Architect />meta propertyog:description contentRob Van Pamel AWS Community Builder Certified AWS Solution Architect dotnet Architect />link relcanonical hrefhttp://localhost:4000/ />meta propertyog:url contenthttp://localhost:4000/ />meta propertyog:site_name contentRob Van Pamel />meta propertyog:type contentwebsite />meta nametwitter:card contentsummary />meta propertytwitter:title contentRob Van Pamel />script typeapplication/ld+json>{@context:https://schema.org,@type:WebSite,author:{@type:Person,name:Rob Van Pamel},description:Rob Van Pamel AWS Community Builder Certified AWS Solution Architect dotnet Architect,headline:Rob Van Pamel,name:Rob Van Pamel,url:http://localhost:4000/}/script>!-- End Jekyll SEO tag -->link relstylesheet href/assets/main.css>link typeapplication/atom+xml relalternate hrefhttp://localhost:4000/feed.xml titleRob Van Pamel />/head>body>header classsite-header rolebanner> div classwrapper>a classsite-title relauthor href/>Rob Van Pamel/a>nav classsite-nav> input typecheckbox idnav-trigger classnav-trigger /> label fornav-trigger> span classmenu-icon> svg viewBox0 0 18 15 width18px height15px> path dM18,1.484c0,0.82-0.665,1.484-1.484,1.484H1.484C0.665,2.969,0,2.304,0,1.484l0,0C0,0.665,0.665,0,1.484,0 h15.032C17.335,0,18,0.665,18,1.484L18,1.484z M18,7.516C18,8.335,17.335,9,16.516,9H1.484C0.665,9,0,8.335,0,7.516l0,0 c0-0.82,0.665-1.484,1.484-1.484h15.032C17.335,6.031,18,6.696,18,7.516L18,7.516z M18,13.516C18,14.335,17.335,15,16.516,15H1.484 C0.665,15,0,14.335,0,13.516l0,0c0-0.82,0.665-1.483,1.484-1.483h15.032C17.335,12.031,18,12.695,18,13.516L18,13.516z/> /svg> /span> /label> div classtrigger>a classpage-link href/about/>About/a>a classpage-link href/talks/>Talks/a>/div> /nav>/div>/header>main classpage-content aria-labelContent> div classwrapper> div classhome>h2 classpost-list-heading>Posts/h2> ul classpost-list>li>span classpost-meta>Nov 30, 2023/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2023/11/30/NDCLondon-copy.html> My thoughts on Werner Vogels KeyNote re:Invent23 /a> /h3>p>It is the time of the year again, almost time for Saint Nicolas and Christmas but still a few weeks to go. But this at the same time, re:Invent conference time. One of the sessions where I am looking forward, is the keynote of Werner Vogels, CTO of AWS./p>p>Not because of the big launches, but to know his take on the current technology evolutions. This year ain’t different./p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Oct 26, 2023/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2023/10/26/LambdaCDK.html> Deploy a C# function with C# /a> /h3>p aligncenter> img srchttps://raw.githubusercontent.com/robvanpamel/robvanpamel.github.io/main/_posts/cdk/cdk-logo.png width500 />/p>p>When you want to deploy your application to the AWS cloud, there are several options available. You can use Cloudformation, Terraform and since a couple of years there is also the AWS CDK. I haven’t played around with the CDK and after listening to a a hrefhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?vV7ENMLvlzu8&listPLEmxvZeTV09321DS-uzXW2OXBiyYPnamL&index4&ab_channelYanCui>podcast episode/a> of The Burning Monk I decided it was time to take a look./p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Feb 23, 2023/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2023/02/23/OpenTelemetry.html> Find your application's hidden secrets using opentelemetry /a> /h3>p aligncenter> img srchttps://raw.githubusercontent.com/robvanpamel/robvanpamel.github.io/main/_posts/otel/observability.jpg width500 />/p>p>When your project is growing, the need to gain more insights in your application is growing along. You need to know in detail what is happening inside the application, either to resolve a bug or to improve some performance issues. In the past these insights were mainly received by adding extensive logging. The most of us have already done this, and is the easier step to start with. If you would like to go a step further, adding trace and metric information is the way to go. Trace information is extremely valuable when you start to work with distributed applications. They allow you to follow a request across multiple systems./p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Jan 30, 2023/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2023/01/30/NDCLondon-Lookback.html> Looking back to NDC London 2023 /a> /h3>p>Last week my colleagues and I went to the NDC conference in London. This NDC conference is a 3 day conference where you can attend several talks related to different topics like architecture, cloud, testing, .NET and many more./p>p>Each day you can choose between 7 different tracks, whatever triggers you the most. If you like hands-on, there are workshops available during the conference. br />My goal was to get more up to date with latest architecture patterns and look at some AWS tracks./p>p>3 of my favourite sessions are listed below:/p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Jan 24, 2023/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2023/01/24/NDCLondon.html> My agenda for NDC London /a> /h3>p>Tomorrow I’m heading to the NDC Conference in London. NDC Conferences are widely known to offer superb quality related to (but not only) dotnet technology and development. Here below you can find which sessions I would definitly like to attend/p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Nov 26, 2022/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2022/11/26/vscodewebeditor.html> Use vscode web editor in Azure DevOps or Github repositories /a> /h3>p>I am already a fan of visual studio code, but recently I discovered some features which made it only better./p>p>This blog on github is created mainly using visual studio code. But actually I don’t have visual studio code installed. I’m editing it in my browser on my iPad from the kitchen! I love the “new” web editor in github. Actually I really love the fact that you can start editing now from anywhere anytime, almost no prerequisites./p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Nov 21, 2022/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2022/11/21/ManagedIdentitiesBlobStorage.html> Accessing blob storage using User Managed Identities in Azure /a> /h3>p>In my a hrefhttps://robvanpamel.github.io/2022/10/31/ManagedIdentities.html>previous blog post/a>, the benefits of Managed Identities are handled. As mentioned over there, they increase the security inside your Azure environment. Now we will take this theorie into practice and start working with it. We’ll create an azure function which access a storage account and writes a stream to it, by using the user Managed Identity./p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Oct 31, 2022/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2022/10/31/ManagedIdentities.html> Improve security with Managed Identities in Azure /a> /h3>p>When you want to access a resource in Azure like a storage account or a SQL database, there are multiple options available. SharedAccessKeys and connection strings are the most popular one we have nowadays. Who hasn’t used a connectionstring to connect to the sql-database?However, these solutions are based on what you could call “shared credentials” which are not always the most secure way. You have to store the credentials in safe manner, so it doesn’t get compromised./p>p>This is where Azure Key Vault is the obvious solution. The credentials which must remain secret can be stored in a secure way in a key vault. However, it is already stored safely, there is still a possibility that it leaks or gets compromised by human errors. On top of that, you still need to rotate the secrets, which puts load on the responsible team./p>p>In most cases, the resource which we want to access runs in the same Azure environment as the resource/p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Oct 15, 2022/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2022/10/15/UpdatingGitHubPages.html> The next steps in Github Pages /a> /h3>p>After the first steps follows … the next steps. I created the first blogpost and made it public, I already realised that it wasn’t ready yet to be launched. It was way too early, but at least it was something./p>p>So while waiting/p>/li>li>span classpost-meta>Oct 14, 2022/span> h3> a classpost-link href/2022/10/14/CreatingGitHubPages.html> The first steps in Github Pages /a> /h3>p>em>“Are you serious, Rob, you don’t know how to create Github pages?”/em>/p>p>Yes, I never looked into to be honest. I know you can create them with regular HTML, CSS and some JS, but I want to work on something new, so I’ll start with Jekyll and markdown./p>p>I want something that is easy to maintain, so I am able to proceed with it with not too much effort and overhead. Jekyll and markdown seems to be a good fit./p>/li>/ul> p classrss-subscribe>subscribe a href/feed.xml>via RSS/a>/p>/div> /div> /main>footer classsite-footer h-card> data classu-url href/>/data> div classwrapper> h2 classfooter-heading>Rob Van Pamel/h2> div classfooter-col-wrapper> div classfooter-col footer-col-1> ul classcontact-list> li classp-name>Rob Van Pamel/li>li>a classu-email hrefmailto:rob.vanpamel@gmail.com>rob.vanpamel@gmail.com/a>/li>/ul> /div> div classfooter-col footer-col-2>ul classsocial-media-list>li>a hrefhttps://github.com/robvanpamel>svg classsvg-icon>use xlink:href/assets/minima-social-icons.svg#github>/use>/svg> span classusername>robvanpamel/span>/a>/li>li>a hrefhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/rob-van-pamel-83727317>svg classsvg-icon>use xlink:href/assets/minima-social-icons.svg#linkedin>/use>/svg> span classusername>rob-van-pamel-83727317/span>/a>/li>li>a hrefhttps://www.twitter.com/robvanpamel>svg classsvg-icon>use xlink:href/assets/minima-social-icons.svg#twitter>/use>/svg> span classusername>robvanpamel/span>/a>/li>li>a href/feed.xml>svg classsvg-icon>use xlink:href/assets/minima-social-icons.svg#rss>/use>/svg> span>robvanpamel/span>/a>/li>/ul>/div> div classfooter-col footer-col-3> p>Rob Van Pamel | AWS Community Builder | Certified AWS Solution Architect | dotnet Architect/p> /div> /div> /div>/footer>/body>/html>
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Date
Domain
IP
www.robvanpamel.com
2024-11-06
18.161.6.26
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