Learn to say popular chaos engineering and resilience testing tool names correctly.
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How is Chaos Monkey (Netflix's tool for randomly terminating production instances) correctly pronounced?
Chaos Monkey is pronounced 'KAY-os MUNG-kee' — 'chaos' (hard K sound, long A) plus 'monkey'. In a technical interview: "Chaos Monkey killed a random production server every weekday to prove our system could handle it."
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How is Gremlin (chaos engineering platform for testing system resilience) correctly pronounced?
Gremlin (the chaos engineering tool) is pronounced 'GREM-lin' — exactly like the everyday word for the mischievous creature, stress on GREM. In a technical interview: "Gremlin injected latency into the payment service to see if our timeout logic actually worked."
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How is Litmus Chaos (open-source cloud-native chaos engineering platform) correctly pronounced?
Litmus Chaos is pronounced 'LIT-mus KAY-os' — 'litmus' (like the test) plus 'chaos'. In a technical interview: "Litmus Chaos ran a pod-failure experiment against staging every night automatically."
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How is Toxiproxy (proxy tool for simulating network conditions in chaos testing) correctly pronounced?
Toxiproxy is pronounced 'TOK-see-prok-see' — 'toxic' shortened to 'toxi' plus 'proxy'. In a technical interview: "Toxiproxy simulated a slow, flaky network link between our service and the database."
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How is Steadybit (chaos engineering and reliability testing platform) correctly pronounced?
Steadybit is pronounced 'STED-ee-bit' — 'steady' plus 'bit', both plain English words. Stress on STED. In a technical interview: "Steadybit rolled back the experiment automatically the moment error rates crossed our safety threshold."