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  1. Dictionary
    orchestration
    /ˌɔːkɪˈstreɪʃn/

    noun

    • 1. the arrangement or scoring of music for orchestral performance: "Prokofiev's mastery of orchestration"
    • 2. the planning or coordination of the elements of a situation to produce a desired effect, especially surreptitiously: "the orchestration of the campaign needed tightening"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Sep 7, 2020 · Frequently, orchestration is what we actually mean when we are talking about automating. Orchestration is automating many tasks together. It’s automation not of a single task but an entire IT-driven process. Orchestrating a process, then, is automating a series of individual tasks to work together.

  3. In system administration, orchestration is the automated configuring, coordinating, and managing of computer systems and software. [1] Many tools exist to automate server configuration and management, including Airflow , Kubernetes , Ansible , Puppet , Salt , Terraform , [2] and AWS CloudFormation .

  4. Aug 19, 2020 · What exactly is orchestration, though? How do you define it succinctly – and how do you explain it to others, including non-technical people?

  5. Feb 4, 2022 · Orchestration is the coordination and management of multiple seemingly unrelated pieces to accomplish a specific goal. What makes these pieces related is the outcome of the orchestration that they work together to influence.

  6. orchestration uncountable noun. ...his skilful orchestration of latent nationalist feeling. [ + of] 2. verb. When someone orchestrates a piece of music, they write the individual parts to be played by the different instruments of an orchestra.

  7. Nov 21, 2023 · Orchestration is a composition for a symphony orchestra. An orchestration remains true to the original melody and harmony of a composition created for another instrument, such as the piano....

  8. Jul 19, 2023 · Orchestration involves writing music for an orchestra and deciding the role of each instrument in a musical piece. Think of it as transforming a simple sketch into a colorful painting. The orchestrator takes a composer’s basic sketch and changes it into a full-fledged score for an orchestra, ensemble, or choral group.