Ok starting my morning #KubeCon thread. If you are new to the event my best advice is to pace yourself. I understand FOMO but you can’t possibly do all of the things. The hallway track is very valuable and the talks are all recorded.
It’s not worth stressing about the schedule, whether you’ve picked the best possible talks to watch, etc. Just try to have fun and learn some things.
I’ll be at the @loft_sh booth after the keynote if you have a chance to say hi, it’s booth SU15. I’ll be around there some more during the conference :)
I found coffee 😅
I’m late for the keynotes. I guess coffee > keynotes. At least in the morning. #KubeCon
I’ve already run into one person this morning who is excited about vcluster :) #KubeCon
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Cloud native as a paradigm involved because people wanted vendor agnostic infra, and a more declarative approach to deploying workloads. @Divya_Mohan02#KubeCon
3 categories of projects in the CNCF: Sandbox, Incubating, and Graduated. Sandbox is early with lots of innovation. Incubating projects are being used in production by more people. Graduated projects are mature and stable. #KubeCon@coffeeartgirl
During my chat last night with @LukasGentele and @fabiankramm, Lukas mentioned what a risk it was for me to join @loft_sh when I did. At that time it was mainly Lukas and Fabian and our designer (who is really rad).
My instinct at the time had actually been to join a very large company. I’d been at three early stage companies in a row and felt like I needed a break. I had never heard of Loft Labs and knew nothing about the founders.
But when I looked at the product I was very impressed. I’d been hearing people in the Kubernetes community complain about multi-tenancy pain for years. Virtual clusters were such a new approach and very smart I thought. (At that point they were in the commercial product only.)