Kubernetes getting better at speeding up development - State of Kubernetes survey, 2024
Plus, people are really starting to question Enterprise AI - what are the apps exactly, they says.
Survey says…
Kubernetes getting out of appdev improvement slump
This is the chart I look forward to in our annual State of Kubernetes report1:
It’s been a rocky few years as Kubernetes has gone mainstream. I pay attention to the “shortened software development cycles,” which you can see started going down. It’s been going up for the past two years, so that’s good. As more “normals” start using Kubernetes, the tolerance the early adopters have erodes. That’s my theory at least.
You can check out my analysis of the survey in this week’s blog post of mine. And, we have a webinar coming up next week looking at the survey as a whole.
You should watch this talk I’ll be doing in a few weeks, FREE in the comfort of your own home/RTO-job!
Register to watch it for free here, or in LinkedIn. Also in YouTube, if you prefer that.
Relative to your interests
Mostly an enterprise AI edition.
CIOs resist vendor-led AI hype, seeking out transparency - There’s a lot of AI de-hyping now. First, you have the “they’re stealing our IP” stuff. Second, you have the “no one has come up with (enterprise) apps for it yet” sentiment. Thankfully, there’s no “AI will kill us” vibing.
GenAI or Die - Big time pro AI for ERP here, with notes of “what’s ERP done for me lately.”
The “Little Tech Agenda” is Just Self-Serving Nonsense - FTC: “Your therapy bots aren’t licensed psychologists, your AI girlfriends are neither girls nor friends, your griefbots have no soul, and your AI copilots are not gods. We’ve warned companies about making false or unsubstantiated claims about AI or algorithms. And we’ve followed up with actions”
Measuring the impact of Developer Relations on Revenue - Figure out how to gather leads, and figure out how to get attribution in the sales pipeline. The second is difficult, especially if your company is already bad at it. But, it’s important to figure out.
Are platforms pointless? - ‘So much of “platform engineering” treats the application process itself as the main event. Sure, great, you make it easy for me to run hundreds of Nginx’s with whatever-the-fuck behind them, and restart and blue-green deploy and autoscale. Great. That’s not my performance bottleneck.’ // He says: (1) It’s just a way to avoid Terraform, and, (2) database management is a more important problem.
Goals of a platform in pictures
This paper by Torsten Volk has a good diagram of the point of platforms, that is, “the outcomes,” the benefits.
Also, the hassles of building you own platform:
Conferences, Events, etc.
Talks I’m giving, places I’ll be, and other plans.
This year, SpringOne is free to attend and watch online. There’s an on-site conference as well at Explore if you’re interested. But, for those who can’t, now you can watch all the fun!
Our analysis of the State of Cloud Native Platforms 2024 survey, online, speaking, July 24th, 2024. SpringOne/VMware Explore US, August 26–29, 2024. DevOpsDays Antwerp, 15th anniversary, speaking, September 4th-5th. SREday London 2024, speaking, September 19th to 20th. VMware Explore Barcelona, speaking(?), Nov 4th to 7th.
Discounts. SREDay London (Sep 19th to 20th) when you 20% off with the code SRE20DAY. And, if you register for SpringOne/VMware Explore before June 11th, you’ll get $400 off.
Logoff
I am continuing to enjoy “Hi-fi relaxation.”
//
Twitter has been slow here in Amsterdam. And I have fiber! Is this some kind of petty revenge, or just standard fail whale problems?
We re-titled the survey “State of Cloud Native Platforms,” but much of it is still just Kubernetes.