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by jasonrichardsmi
1580 days ago
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Hi streetcat1 thanks for responding in such a courteous manner.
To your points:
1. I am not going to get into the ethics of AWS rebranding OSS. That could be an entirely different topic. Unlike almost all other OSS products, K8s was not designed to solve OUR problems. It was developed to solve GCP's lagging marketshare. GCP needed to normalize our workloads in the hopes people could easily migrate to their cloud. 2. I am sorry that is not true. The documentary clearly spells out Kubernetes was not community first. I point out that fact several times. They even quote Urs as saying that. I believed what you believed at one point as well, I don't anymore. 3. I am not understanding your point, I am familiar with the history of Openstack. your next points:
1. That is portability not scalability, and I agree a clear bonus brought by
Docker, not Kubernetes.
2. I am not sure the point here. If you mean I can fork it, I addressed that. AWS has way more workloads then 5%, in just straight market share and as a slice of the K8s pie.
3. I am completely familiar with the "control loop", I hope the best for your business, I guess. |
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2. When I refer to community first, I mean that the product was rushed to market, half baked, and than was iterated in the market. I think that Google worked with redhat on the initial API (I.e. deployment object came from redhat)
Regarding AWS, AWS does not have 5% of the global IT market, of course it have 40% of the global cloud market, but not the IT market. Also, the usage of AWS or any other cloud for that matter, is very skewed, I.e. 63% percent of the customer have one S3 bucket, or one EC2 node.
My point about open stack is reflecting your point about VMWARE / IBM. I.e. kubernetes will end up maintained by companies that sell multi cloud/on prem solution.
Overall, I believe that kubernetes is the only way the IT world can decrease the power of the big 3 cloud providers(I cannot see any other option at this scale), hence usage should be encouraged.