Can We Ever Achieve a Utopian Release?
What if releases didn't feel stressful? Not just "we followed the process" safe, but actually safe. The kind where you don't hesitate before deploying, don't keep checking Slack afterward, and don'...

Source: DEV Community
What if releases didn't feel stressful? Not just "we followed the process" safe, but actually safe. The kind where you don't hesitate before deploying, don't keep checking Slack afterward, and don't quietly wonder what might go wrong this time. Because if we're honest, most of us recognize a very specific moment. A release finishes. Everything is deployed. Dashboards are open. People are watching. Slack goes a bit quieter than usual. No one says anything, but the same thought is there in the background: Let's see what breaks. We spend a lot of time trying to improve releases. We add better pipelines. We introduce more automation. We create more environments. On paper, things look more mature over time. And yet, the feeling often doesn't change. That's because the real issue is not only technical. Releases don't feel risky because they fail. They feel risky because they are unpredictable. The Myth of the "Perfect Release" There is a quiet assumption behind many teams: If everything is d