This new blog post explains how to use GitHub Copilot CLI with the Azure Cosmos DB Agent Kit to bring Cosmos DB infrastructure best practices directly into your terminal. The approach helps teams review, generate, and optimize Terraform, Bicep, Docker, and CI/CD configurations with consistent, domain-specific guidance.
Written by Sajeetharan Sinnathurai, Azure Cosmos DB Principal Program Manager, the post provides a practical walkthrough for improving infrastructure quality and delivery speed when working with Azure Cosmos DB.
Hey everyone, I’m Jay from the Azure Cosmos DB PM team. We’ve got tons of Azure Cosmos DB and DocumentDB sessions coming up at Microsoft Ignite 2025 and I’d love for you to join us. Whether you’re into real-time analytics, AI-driven architectures, or just want to learn how to build apps that scale globally, this is the place to be.
I put together a blog post with all the details you need: sessions, labs, and expert meet-ups.
Come hang out, learn something new, and connect with the team. See you at Ignite!
[Verse]
And now I got an engine
A big perverted engine
It runs on strength of will
Who could deny me the right to fly?
You know, it's my art
When I form my body in the shape of a plane...
[Chorus]
I'm a plane!
I'm a plane!
I'm a plane!
I'm a plane!
[Verse]
Now I got an airframe
A big perverted airframe
You know, It's my art
When I disguise my body in the shape of a plane
[Chorus]
I'm a plane! (I'm a plane!)
I'm a plane! (I'm a plane!)
I'm a plane! (I'm a plane!)
I'm a plane! (I'm a plane!)
[Outro]
(Look at me, look at me - I'm a plane! Look at me, I'm a plane! Look at me!)
And the plane becomes a metaphor for my life
And as I suffer for it
Like I'm insane, as it says...
So she suffers under the weight of my plane
You know? It's my art! When I disguise my body in the shape of a plane...
They were one of the very best ever. It's a shame Pete Steel died already.. I heard he was heavily inspired by Lycia, pretty deep too, but not the production level of Type O Negative unfortunately.
Let's be honest, lacking behind a few months, especially if it is a major release, isn't a bad idea.
With Rails apps in production I keep upto a year of distance to the major releases because there's so many rubygems that need to catch up or be replaced.
That's probably true. I think it took mLab a couple of months to support 3.6. But then again, having a major version release available at launch doesn't seem that important to me compared to all other database-as-a-service features.
Since you mentioned you work for MongoDB, if you guys could partner with Heroku and add Atlas to their official add-ons our team might be able to take a look and switch ;)
Written by Sajeetharan Sinnathurai, Azure Cosmos DB Principal Program Manager, the post provides a practical walkthrough for improving infrastructure quality and delivery speed when working with Azure Cosmos DB.