When it comes to deploying new workloads, new companies emerging and needing to deploy application stacks, or moving from legacy, Kubernetes seems to be the de facto standard path that everyone is moving
There are three goals for any engineering team, whether it’s a startup, enterprise, or mid-sized organization:
1. Move faster.
2. Less low-hanging fruit.
3. Scalability and integration.
If you think about the
The majority of the time for startups and small-to-medium-sized organizations, stuff just “needs to work”. The pipeline needs to pass, the infrastructure needs to be easy to configure, and the overall deployment needs
Performance, scalability, and redundancy is continuing to be drastically crucial for every organization and enterprise, both big and small. It's the make or break between people using an application and people
When Kubernetes first came out, everyone felt that it was hard to manage and required significant expertise. Then, Managed Kubernetes Services (AKS, EKS, GKE, etc.) came out and the management got a little