Kubernetes Hits 82% in Production – AI Scales on It, But Culture Stalls Everyone Else
82% of container users are running Kubernetes in production. It's the backbone for AI inference at scale – yet culture, not tech, is now the biggest roadblock.
82% of container users are running Kubernetes in production. It's the backbone for AI inference at scale – yet culture, not tech, is now the biggest roadblock.
Spot instances promise 90% cost cuts in Kubernetes clusters. But until v1.35's numeric tolerations, you're stuck with crude hacks. Time to get precise.
Kubernetes v1.36 isn't just another update—it's a cleanup crew evicting risky relics. But are these 'enhancements' forcing you into pricier cloud lock-in?
Picture this: your Kubernetes cluster's traffic routing suddenly orphaned in 2026. Ingress2Gateway 1.0 swoops in like a trusty translator, turning Ingress chaos into Gateway API clarity—for devs everywhere.
Headlamp's 2025 updates promise to tame multi-cluster Kubernetes madness. Skeptical vet weighs if it's real progress or polished PR.
Duolingo had it easy with AWS ECS — simple, reliable. But with 128 million users, they leaped to Kubernetes, unlocking an ecosystem that could turbocharge their language empire.
Every Kubernetes image you pull? It funneled through kpromo. They just gutted and rebuilt it—nobody blinked. Here's why that's a win for cluster wranglers everywhere.
Picture your Kubernetes pods gasping for CPU cycles, starved by a botched conversion formula. OCI runtimes just dropped a quadratic fix – better, but not without pitfalls.
Picture this: your production cluster humming along, oblivious to the patchless void ahead. Kubernetes' top committees just pulled the plug on Ingress NGINX, hitting half of all cloud native environments.
Ever built a Kubernetes CLI and drowned in flag parsing? clientcmd — Kubernetes' own library — rescues you, mimicking kubectl without the headache. But does it deliver?
Cluster API v1.12 just dropped in-place updates and chained upgrades, turning Kubernetes cluster management from a nail-biter into a declarative dream. But under the hood? It's rewriting the rules of infrastructure mutability.
Service account tokens leaking into CSI driver logs? Kubernetes v1.35 kills that risk with a backward-compatible opt-in to the right spot. No more CVEs from sloppy token handling.