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Software Defined Talk

Episode 579: The Headless Lifestyle Episode 578: War for Talent Episode 577: Let’s go to Buc-ee’s Episode 576: Observability's Next Phase Episode 575: UI blizzard Nobody Wants to Be a Measurer Episode 573: How many quadrillions in a Googol? The world isn’t curl Episode 571: The Enterprise Dunbar number The Enterprisification of Agents Episode 569: Agent Assimilation Episode 568: Claude Code, OpenAI Drama, and Is Anyone Still Using Backstage? Episode 567: Building Voice and Streaming Apps for the Enterprise with Alberto Episode 566: The code is actually kinda useless Episode 565: Field Engineering is the YOLO team New Token Machines Episode 563: Claude Camp Episode 562: Bureaucracy: Still Unsolved Episode 561: Two Guys and Their Tokens You Can Feel It Coming Episode 559: A series of OODA loops Episode 558: Tara Raj on Amazon Nova Act Episode 557: Moltbot Maximists Episode 556: This Conversation is Hardened After the Dream The Alpha and The Omega Episode 553: 2025 Year in Review Episode 552: Tech Strategy: Past, Present, Future Episode 551: An Australian Documentary Episode 550: Typeface Philosophy Episode 549: The Fermi Paradox of Agentic Development Episode 548: Household CMDB Episode 547: Whitney goes to KubeCon Episode 546: The cURLing Test Episode 545: No one cares about Chickens Episode 544: The Enterprise Turing Test Arts and Crafts Yuriy Shyyan on owning your own Cloud. Episode 541: Why not do everything Episode 540: How to build a factory Episode 539: The Final Demand Episode 538: Michael Irwin on Docker, Developers, and AI Episode 537: YOLO acquisitions My search engine couldn’t help me Episode 535: Don’t put randomness in your workflow Episode 534: Capitalism is working Episode 533: It’s a Type 2 Kolache Less Goofy. More Enterprise. Episode 531: YAYAML Episode 530: His proper name is Sasquatch Episode 529: Windsurf, AI Agents, and Kiro Episode 528: You can’t spell Clippy without CLI Episode 527: Victor Adossi on WebAssembly Episode 526: The Optimist, the Origin, and the Deck Episode 525: AI Native vs. AI Add-on Episode 524: It’s a Box in a Box Episode 523: Sterling Chin on APIs, AI, and Building MCP Servers Episode 522: A 5-star cannot stand Episode 521: The MacGuffin Episode 520: Excited is overused Episode 519: This is a “hit by pitch” Episode 518: It Is What It Is Episode 517: Trademark’s in the Mail Episode 516: Vibe Strategy Episode 515: Rick Houlihan, MongoDB Field CTO on Document Databases Episode 514: It’s All Affiliate Links Episode 513: Put On A Musical Episode 512: Let’s Not Ruin This Episode 511: G-Wiz Episode 510: Vibe Code This Baby Episode 509: It’s like the Suburbs Episode 508: Software Defined Interviews Crossover: PaaS and Career Advice with Brian Gracely Episode 507: Battery of Potential Episode 506: Put It On Ice Episode 505: There Could be Extra Innings Episode 504: Socrates Didn’t Whiteboard Episode 503: Maybe Puppies Solve Everything Episode 502: Have a Plan or Throw It Away Episode 501: Checkbox Features Episode 500: 2024 Year in Review Episode 499: Star, Archive, or Spam? Episode 498: I’m not ready to start a new streak Episode 497: Big Math Episode 496: It’s Not About Being Paranoid Episode 495: The most honorable of mentions Episode 494: We are going to move the couch Episode 493: Stay in the sandbox Episode 492: Aran Khanna on Cloud Insurance Episode 491: The OSS Money Trap Episode 490: AI's use UI's Episode 489: Whitney Lee: From Wedding Photographer to Cloud-Native DevRel Episode 488: Am I Here for the Mission or the Paycheck? Episode 487: WordPress Drama and Chicken Sandwiches Episode 486: Platform Engineering vs. DevOps Episode 485: It's an Ending, That's Enough Episode 484: A Lot of USB Ports Episode 483: [AGPL does not close deals for you] Episode 482: Tip Jar Economy There Never Was a Rug Episode 480: No offsite content
“I didn’t choose the Immortan Joe life-style, it chose me.”
Software Defined Talk LLC · 2018-06-01 · via Software Defined Talk

Episode 137 · June 1st, 2018 · 48 mins 11 secs

There’s a new IaaS magic quadrant out that we finally take a look at. Plus, with some nerd-fighting in the kubernetes world, we discuss the point of all these blinking cursors.

This episode brought to you by: Datadog!

This episode is sponsored by Datadog, a monitoring platform for cloud-scale infrastructure and applications. Sign up for a free trial at www.datadog.com/sdt

This week Datadog also wants you to know about their upcoming conference DashCon, in NYC on July 11th-12th. You can register to attend at https://www.dashcon.io/sdt use the discount code DASHSDT and save 20%.

DevOpsDays MINNEAPOLIS - JULY 12-13, 2018

Get a 20% discount for one of the best DevOpsDays on the planet, DevOpsDays Minneapolis. It's July 12th to 13th, and you can bet it'll be worth your time. If you're new to DevOps you'll get an idea of what it is, how it's practices, and how to get started. If you're an old pro, you'll dive down into topics and catch-up with all the other old hands. Code: SDT2018.

Follow up

  • Did Matt watch The Tick? (Spoiler alert: no.)

Relevant to your interests

  • BA now part of TSA Pre. Can show up later for that AUS→LHR flight. It’s hard to find where to enter this: on individual flights?
  • Annual Meeker Slide Fest: recording, slides.
  • Cloud is a six-horse race, and three of those have been lapped
  • State Of The Kubernetes Ecosystem
  • Kubernetes won - so now what?
  • Google Cloud Platform breaks into leader category in Gartner's Magic Quadrant. The Full Gartner MQ. Register coverage.
  • IDC survey on digital transformation says organizations are motivated to get more “productivity” and be more competitive, among other survey findings. And, as always, “the biggest barriers are people oriented.” Get the Infor sponsored PDF if you’re into this kind of thing.
  • Infrastructure software is back! Also, Amazon’s DB has huge growth.
  • “Full Life-cycle Developers” at Netflix
    • Like SRE, but “platform ops.”
    • Which is to say, something like, “shallow DevOps.”
    • “Netflix created centralized teams (e.g., Cloud Platform, Performance & Reliability Engineering, Engineering Tools) with the mission of developing common tooling and infrastructure to solve problems that every development team has. Empowered with these tools in hand, development teams can focus on solving problems within their specific product domain.”
    • “As additional tooling needs arise, centralized teams assess whether the needs are common across multiple dev teams. When they are, collaborations ensue. Sometimes these local needs are too specific to warrant centralized investment. In that case the development team decides if their need is important enough for them to solve on their own.”
    • “we arrived at a model where a development team, equipped with amazing developer productivity tools, is responsible for the full software life cycle: design, development, test, deploy, operate, and support”…but not the infrastructure, common middleware and services, and “platform” that they run on. Just like SRE, eh? Which the post says.
    • Use of the roads seems optional, and sometimes challenging to recruit for: ‘Netflix has a “paved road” set of tools and practices that are formally supported by centralized teams. We don’t mandate adoption of those paved roads but encourage adoption by ensuring that development and operations using those technologies is a far better experience than not using them. The downside of our approach is that the ideal of “every team using every feature in every tool for their most important needs” is near impossible to achieve. Realizing the returns on investment for our centralized teams’ solutions requires effort, alignment, and ongoing adaptations.’
    • Coté had dinner with Netflix tools engineer many years ago where they described exactly this.
    • Question: what exactly is DevOps (now) anyways? Is it too expansive to be useful as a phrase, and instead a buffet of thought technologies?
  • BMC changes PE hands:
    • Brenon@451: “Terms of the BMC secondary weren't released. However, early reports indicated that the price paid by the syndicate for BMC and the price received for BMC [$6.9bn five years ago] weren't radically different.”
    • Same: “the software vendor that says it posts revenue of $2bn each year.”
    • The reporters are like “I got no idea what the fuck these people do”: “Houston-based BMC builds various types of software solutions for businesses looking to manage and streamline their information.”
    • “BMC has about 6,000 employees in 30 countries, according to its website.”
    • “BMC has more than $5 billion in debt outstanding, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.”
  • Annual Meeker Slide Fest: recording, slides. Reports that the decks are getting more concise.

Kubernetes Korner

  • PodCTL #37 covers Helm and other deployment schemes - Very responsible Coté hasn’t listened to it yet.
  • Nerd fight on forking:
    • Asay: “Enterprises want stuff that works. As much as we in the open source world chatter and fret about vendor lockin, enterprises have demonstrated a remarkable ability to shrug off that concern and buy deeply into Microsoft, Oracle, and, yes, Red Hat’s OpenShift.”
    • Question: how close are we to going OpenStack on all this? Is that even a helpful question, or just trolling?
  • “Kubernetes has, in fact, already lost the war to serverless,” James Governor.
  • By the time you hear this, Coté will have finally given a Kubernetes talk.
  • The State Of The Kubernetes Ecosystem:
    • Overview of all the (vendor) players.
    • “A Forrester study found that 66% of organizations who adopted containers experienced accelerated developers efficiency, while 75% of companies achieved a moderate to significant increase in application deployment speed.”
    • “According to predictions from 451 Research, the market is set to grow from $762 million in 2016 to $2.7 billion by 2020”

Important nonsense

Listener Feedback

  • Gabriel from Puerto Rico got a sticker
  • Daniel had a sticker sent all they way to South Austin

SDT news & hype

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