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In this episode, we're bringing you a curated selection of conversations from the KubeCon EU 2025 showfloor. We'll be diving into the rise of platform engineering, exploring some cutting-edge technologies, getting updates on core Kubernetes components, and hearing some truly unique user stories, like using Kubernetes on a dairy farm! Do you have something cool to share? Some questions? Let us know: - web: kubernetespodcast.com - mail: kubernetespodcast@google.com - twitter: @kubernetespod - bluesky: @kubernetespodcast.com News of the week CNCF Blog - Announcing the Automated Governance Maturity Model Kubernetes Blog CNCF Blog - Understanding Kubernetes Gateway API: A Modern Approach to Traffic Management Open Observability Summit Links from the interview NAIS at NAV, with Hans Kristian Flaatten and Audun Fauchald Strand Audun Fauchald Strand Hans Kristian Flaatten NAV (Norwegian Labor and Welfare Administration) Kubernetes Podcast 216: NAIS, with Johnny Horvi and Frode Sundby NAIS KubeCon EU 2025 Keynote: Adventures of Building a Platform as a Service for the Government - Hans Kristian Flaatten, Lead Platform Engineer, NAV & Audun Fauchald Strand, Principal Software Engineer, NAV GKE release notes Platform Engineering, with Max Körbächer and Andreas (Andi) Grabner Max Körbächer Andreas (Andi) Grabner Book: “Platform Engineering for Architects: Crafting modern platforms as a product” by Max Körbächer, Andreas Grabner, and Hilliary Lipsig Cloud Native Summit Munich Kubernetes at LinkedIn, with Ahmet Alp Balkan and Ronak Nathani Ahmet Alp Balkan Ronak Nathani Kubernetes Podcast 249: Kubernetes at LinkedIn, with Ahmet Alp Balkan and Ronak Nathani Ahmet's Blog Introducing Multi-Cluster Orchestrator: Scale your Kubernetes workloads across regions LLMs on Kubernetes, with Mofi and Abdel KubeCon EU 2025 talk: Yes You Can Run LLMs on Kubernetes - Abdel Sghiouar & Mofi Rahman, Google Cloud About the Gateway API Gateway API Inference Extension Deploy GKE Inference Gateway SIG etcd with Ivan Valdes Ivan Valdes etcd.io SIG etcd on GitHub Open Source Kubernetes, with Jago Macleod Jago Macleod Google Open Source: Kubernetes Schedmd Slurm Ray Run:ai from Nvidia Medium blog: “Deploy Slurm on GKE” by Abdel Sghiouar AI-Hypercomputer, xpk XPK (Accelerated Processing Kit, pronounced x-p-k) is a command line interface that simplifies cluster creation and workload execution on Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE). XPK generates preconfigured, training-optimized clusters and allows easy workload scheduling without any Kubernetes expertise. Cursor AI Editor Dairy Farm Automation & Banking with Kubernetes, with Clément Nussbaumer Clément Nussbaumer Talos Linux Cluster-api Cluster API is a Kubernetes subproject focused on providing declarative APIs and tooling to simplify provisioning, upgrading, and operating multiple Kubernetes clusters. KubeCon EU 2025 Talk: “Day-2'000 - Migration From Kubeadm+Ansible To ClusterAPI+Talos: A Swiss Bank's Journey” - Clément Nussbaumer, PostFinance Kubeadm Kubeadm is a tool built to provide kubeadm init and kubeadm join as best-practice "fast paths" for creating Kubernetes clusters. Being a First-Time KubeCon Attendee, with Nick Taylor Kubernetes The Hard Way K3s - “The certified Kubernetes distribution built for IoT & Edge computing” Kubernetes Ingress Controllers Kubernetes Up and Running Kubernetes Docs KubeCon EU 2025 Sponsored Keynote: The Science of Winning: Oracle Red Bull Racing's Formula with Open Source, Kubernetes and AI - Sudha Raghavan, SVP of OCI Developer Platform, Oracle
Unlock the secrets of building a fan base that not just listens, but also advocates for your product and/or company. Get ready to be inspired and learn life-changing advocacy strategies from Andreas (Andi) Grabner. Andi is making waves on the world's biggest stages as an advocate for Dynatrace and successfully built a community. Tune in to hear about his inspiring journey his values, and discover why his time on Boston's dance floors led to more than just business success.Episode links:Sue Quackenbush's LinkedInAndi Grabner's Twitter ChannelConnect with Andi Grabner on LinkedInPure Performance PodcastDiscover the possibilities with us and consider exciting career paths at careers.dynatrace.com.Your feedback and thoughts matter to us! Connect directly via employerbrand@dynatrace.com.
Es gibt Neuigkeiten von Keptn! Nach unserer ersten Vorstellung von Keptn in Folge 19 haben wir uns auf der diesjährigen KubeCon abermals mit Andreas Grabner getroffen und mit ihm über die zahlreichen Neuerungen bei Keptn gesprochen. Das Keptn-Projekt hat inzwischen die Sandbox-Phase der CNCF hinter sich gelassen und befindet sich nun in der sogenannten 'Incubating' Phase. Das Projektteam um Andreas hat nun ein klares Ziel. Links zu dieser Folge: https://keptn.sh/
Es gibt Neuigkeiten von Keptn! Nach unserer ersten Vorstellung von Keptn in Folge 19 haben wir uns auf der diesjährigen KubeCon abermals mit Andreas Grabner getroffen und mit ihm über die zahlreichen Neuerungen bei Keptn gesprochen. Das Keptn-Projekt hat inzwischen die Sandbox-Phase der CNCF hinter sich gelassen und befindet sich nun in der sogenannten 'Incubating' Phase. Das Projektteam um Andreas hat nun ein klares Ziel. Links zu dieser Folge: https://keptn.sh/
How cool would it be to enable SREs to automate observability, dashboards & alerting declaratively? In this episode, Andreas Grabner a DevOps Activist at Dynatrace shares all about the open-source tool Keptn. Discover how to save time through automated configuration of observability tools, creation of dashboards, and alerting based on Service-Level Objectives (SLOs). Listen up!
Google's SRE Book popularized the concept of Service Level Objective (SLO) and the SLO-driven approach. But what does it really mean to make SLO driven decisions? How can we generate observability and synchronize teams around joint SLOs? And how can we automate SLOs and integrate them into the software release pipeline? In this episode I'll host Andreas Grabner. We'll discuss the SRE practices, and how to automate SLO from dev all the way to prod. We'll talk about the open source efforts to standardize the process under the Continuous Delivery Foundation, and about Keptn, the new CNCF open source project that promises to help with this automation. Andreas Grabner (@grabnerandi) has 20+ years of experience as a software developer, tester and architect and is an advocate for high-performing cloud scale applications. He is a contributor and DevRel for the CNCF open source project keptn (www.keptn.sh). Andreas is also a regular contributor to the DevOps community, a frequent speaker at technology conferences and regularly publishes articles on blog.dynatrace.com or medium. In his spare time you can most likely find him on one of the salsa dancefloors of the world. The episode was live-streamed on 15 March 2022 and the video is available at https://youtu.be/J81byOpVqrk OpenObservability Talks episodes are released monthly, on the last Thursday of each month and are available for listening on your favorite podcast app and on YouTube. We live-stream the episodes on Twitch and YouTube Live - tune in to see us live, and pitch in with your comments and questions on the live chat.https://www.twitch.tv/openobservabilityhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLKOtaBdQAJVRJqhJDuOlPg Show Notes: What's SRE Where is SRE placed in the organization SRE vs. DevOps Good and bad SLOs How to define SLOs top-down Who owns SLO definition, monitoring, remediation Where is SRE within less mature organizations Keptn OSS project background Who uses and contributes to Keptn project What's the CDF (Continuous Delivery Foundation) Creating a standard CD event format under the CDF (CDF Events SIG) Cloud Native Observability survey by the CNCF Resources: SLO in the age of microservices: Keptn OSS project: https://keptn.sh/ Keptn 0.14.0 major release TechWorld with Nana on Keptn CD Foundation - SIG Events: https://github.com/cdfoundation/sig-events PurePerformance podcast Cloud Native Observability survey by the CNCF Socials: Twitter: https://twitter.com/OpenObserv Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/openobservability YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLKOtaBdQAJVR
Als Erich Wolfgang Korngold mit nur 60 Jahren starb, durfte er sich als ein aus der Mode gekommener Komponist vorgekommen sein. Sein Violinkonzert in D-Dur hat dem Vergessen am hartnäckigsten Widerstand geleistet. Andreas Grabner hat mit der Geigerin Anne-Sophie Mutter über dieses starke Stück gesprochen.
Today I will share with you a conversation with Andreas Grabner, or Andi as we all know him. From Austria, he has more than 20 years of experience in the field, always sharing his knowledge about performance engineering, especially through his podcast called Pure Performance. He is a frequent speaker at technology conferences, I think I’ve met him in every conference related to performance, in different countries. During the interview we talked about why performance engineering is so enjoyable, also, we visited some basic concepts related to performance testing in Continuous Delivery, because I wanted to talk about Keptn, the open source project that Andi has been working on during the last couple of years. I really admire how Andi can explain a lot of very complex concepts easily. Without further ado, let’s listen to the full interview. Enjoy! Episode highlights: - Understanding SLAs, SLOs, SLIs, and Quality Gates - How performance engineers can avoid becoming a bottleneck themselves - Improve the quality of your software with self-service performance engineering using open source tool, Keptn For more notes, links, and a transcript, go here: https://abstracta.us/blog/podcast/introduction-to-keptn/
In episode 7 of The Kubelist Podcast, Marc joins Andreas Grabner of Dynatrace to discuss the continuous delivery control plane Keptn, performance-driven engineering, and the problem with monolithic pipelines.
In episode 7 of The Kubelist Podcast, Marc joins Andreas Grabner of Dynatrace to discuss the continuous delivery control plane Keptn, performance-driven engineering, and the problem with monolithic pipelines.
In episode 7 of The Kubelist Podcast, Marc joins Andreas Grabner of Dynatrace to discuss the continuous delivery control plane Keptn, performance-driven engineering, and the problem with monolithic pipelines. The post Ep. #7, Keptn with Andreas Grabner of Dynatrace appeared first on Heavybit.
Andi and I discussed about Keptn, an CNCF Sandbox Project, which mainly used as control plane for application delivery. Shouldn't Gitlab CI, or Github Action, Circle CI, etc is enough in handling application delivery? Probably not. Lets hear from Andi about what problem Keptn is trying to solve and how easy to extends Keptn to fit our special use cases. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ngobrolinstartup/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ngobrolinstartup/support
Dynatrace sponsored this podcast. The Kubernetes era has made scaled-out applications on multiple cloud environments a reality. But it has also introduced a tremendous amount of complexity into IT departments. My guest on this episode of The New Stack Makers podcast is Andreas Grabner from software intelligence platform Dynatrace, who recently noted that “in the enterprise Kubernetes environments I've seen, there are billions of interdependencies to account for.” Yes, billions. Grabner, who describes himself as a “DevOps Activist,” argues that AI technology can tame this otherwise overwhelming Kubernetes complexity. As he put it in a contributed post, “AI-powered observability provides enterprises with a host of new capabilities to better deploy and manage their Kubernetes environments.” During the podcast, we dig into how AI – and automation in general – is impacting observability in Kubernetes environments. To kick the show off, I asked Grabner to clarify what he means by “AI observability.”
In this episode, we’ll be talking with Andreas Grabner, a DevOps Activist at Dynatrace, all about application performance monitoring (APM) in DevOps & SRE. Andreas also shares a new open-source solution to help you with event-based control plane for continuous delivery and automated operations for cloud-native applications –cool stuff. Listen up
This week we spoke with Andreas Grabner, a DevOps Activist at Dynatrace, about why Kubernetes and artificial intelligence (AI) are made for each other. Grabner wrote a contributed post for us last week, “How AI Solves the Kubernetes Complexity Conundrum” in which he argues that integrating Kubernetes with artificial intelligence and an AIOps culture can make Kubernetes deployments more manageable for IT and DevOps teams. Dynatrace, a sponsor of The New Stack, builds AI-assisted, full stack and completely automated monitoring software for dynamic, web-scale, hybrid cloud ecosystem. "Kubernetes offers enterprises a valuable new tool for kicking digital transformations and time-to-market timetables into a new gear. But to take full advantage of it, IT and DevOps need to drive a culture shift toward AI and automation; most other existing IT approaches simply do not adequately work or scale in this new world," Grabner wrote in the blog.
This week we spoke with Andreas Grabner, a DevOps Activist at Dynatrace, about why Kubernetes and artificial intelligence (AI) are made for each other. Grabner wrote a contributed post for us last week, “How AI Solves the Kubernetes Complexity Conundrum” in which he argues that integrating Kubernetes with artificial intelligence and an AIOps culture can make Kubernetes deployments more manageable for IT and DevOps teams. Dynatrace, a sponsor of The New Stack, builds AI-assisted, full stack and completely automated monitoring software for dynamic, web-scale, hybrid cloud ecosystem. "Kubernetes offers enterprises a valuable new tool for kicking digital transformations and time-to-market timetables into a new gear. But to take full advantage of it, IT and DevOps need to drive a culture shift toward AI and automation; most other existing IT approaches simply do not adequately work or scale in this new world," Grabner wrote in the blog.
Im Zweiten Weltkrieg musste Béla Bartók aus politischen Gründen von Ungarn nach Amerika übersiedeln, wo sich sein Leben schlagartig änderte. Das in den USA entstandene Konzert für Orchester ist sein letztes vollendetes Orchesterwerk. Es bleibt bis heute Bartóks beliebteste Komposition - ein Meisterwerk, voller Schmerz, voller Sehnsucht, voller Hoffnung. Andreas Grabner stellt das Starke Stück vor und lässt Mariss Jansons, Chefdirigent des Symphonieorchesters des Bayerischen Rundfunks, zu Wort kommen.
Als Wolfgang Amadé Mozart am 4. Juni 1789 von einer zweimonatigen Reise nach Wien zurückkehrt, da macht er sich unversehens daran, eine Serie von sechs Streichquartetten zu komponieren. Das Streichquartett F-Dur KV 590 bleibt Mozarts letztes Werk für diese Besetzung. Andreas Grabner stellt es mit Günter Pichler, dem ehemaligen Primarius des Alban Berg Quartetts, vor.
Den Komponisten Ralph Vaughan Williams kennt man als Schöpfer entspannter, pastoraler Klänge. Doch dies ist nicht die einzige Seite des Briten: Seine Vierte Symphonie gibt sich aufgewühlt und spannungsgeladen. Andreas Grabner stellt das Werk gemeinsam mit dem Dirigenten Sir Colin Davis vor.
Einen Monat vor seinem zwanzigsten Geburtstag vollendete Mozart sein fünftes Violinkonzert - das letzte seiner drei "großen" Konzerte für dieses Instrument. Andreas Grabner stellt das Starke Stück zusammen mit der Geigerin Anne-Sophie Mutter vor.
Als Erich Wolfgang Korngold mit nur 60 Jahren starb, durfte er sich als ein aus der Mode gekommener Komponist vorgekommen sein. Sein Violinkonzert in D-Dur hat dem Vergessen am hartnäckigsten Widerstand geleistet. Andreas Grabner hat mit der Geigerin Anne-Sophie Mutter über dieses starke Stück gesprochen.
We continue coverage of Dynatrace Perform 2017 with interviews from John Delfeld of Ixia, our favorite performance geek Andreas Grabner from Dynatrace and strategic partner Ryan Faulk of Faulk Consulting.
We continue coverage of Dynatrace Perform 2017 with interviews from John Delfeld of Ixia, our favorite performance geek Andreas Grabner from Dynatrace and strategic partner Ryan Faulk of Faulk Consulting.
We continue coverage of Dynatrace Perform 2017 with interviews from John Delfeld of Ixia, our favorite performance geek Andreas Grabner from Dynatrace and strategic partner Ryan Faulk of Faulk Consulting.
We continue coverage of Dynatrace Perform 2017 with interviews from John Delfeld of Ixia, our favorite performance geek Andreas Grabner from Dynatrace and strategic partner Ryan Faulk of Faulk Consulting.
Die Sinfonia concertante für Violine, Viola und Orchester Es-Dur ist so etwas wie die Apotheose eines Konzerts für zwei Streichinstrumente. Andreas Grabner stellt das Werk gemeinsam mit der Geigerin Anne-Sophie Mutter vor.
There are lots of reasons to instrument your apps in production - but one of the most powerful is to understand how your users actually use your apps. Richard talks to Andreas Grabner of DynaTrace about the variety of instrumentation approaches possible for applications - some driven by operations, and some by development. But everyone in the organization can benefit from a deeper understanding of how applications are used. Andreas talks about the diversity of metrics that can be taken, from your typical ecommerce financial metrics, to performance metrics, to reliability and scalability. There's a lot to measure!
Web Parts Gone Wild!!! In this episode of PerfBytes Howard and Mark chat with the performance evangelist Andreas Grabner from DynaTrace as we dig deep into the dirty secrets about Microsoft's Sharepoint platform. Whether it's tuning app pools for optimal threading and CPU utilization, or cleaning up those crazy custom list elements, Andreas has tips to help even the most seasoned Sharpoint developer make some improvements! We missed James on this episode due to technical difficulties.This episode is formally sponsored by our good friends at SOASTA (www.soasta.com) and SmartBear (www.smartbear.com) - check 'em out!
Web Parts Gone Wild!!! In this episode of PerfBytes Howard and Mark chat with the performance evangelist Andreas Grabner from DynaTrace as we dig deep into the dirty secrets about Microsoft's Sharepoint platform. Whether it's tuning app pools for optimal threading and CPU utilization, or cleaning up those crazy custom list elements, Andreas has tips to help even the most seasoned Sharpoint developer make some improvements! We missed James on this episode due to technical difficulties.This episode is formally sponsored by our good friends at SOASTA (www.soasta.com) and SmartBear (www.smartbear.com) - check 'em out!
Die Sinfonia concertante für Violine, Viola und Orchester Es-Dur ist so etwas wie die Apotheose eines Konzerts für zwei Streichinstrumente. Andreas Grabner stellt das Werk gemeinsam mit der Geigerin Anne-Sophie Mutter vor.
Andreas Grabner porträtiert das letzte, in New York entstandene Werk Bartóks, das "Konzert für Orchester", das im September 1944 in Boston erfolgreich uraufgeführt wurde.
Vom Taj Mahal bis zu den "Leiden des jungen Werther" - so manches große Kunstwerk verdankt sich dem Impuls der menschlichen Liebe, der glücklichen, der unglücklichen und den vielen Abschattierungen zwischen den beiden. Und auch der ungarische Komponist Béla Bartók verliebte sich als 26-Jähriger einmal unsterblich, machte eine Musik daraus und bekam einen Korb. Andreas Grabner erzählt die Geschichte von Bartóks unerwiderter Liebe.
Im Juni 1790 vollendete Mozart das dritte seiner sogenannten "Preußischen" Quartette. Das Streichquartett F-Dur KV 590 bleibt das letztes Werk des Komponisten für diese Besetzung. Andreas Grabner stellt das Stück mit dem Alban Berg Quartett vor.
Was das potentielle Ausdrucksspektrum seiner Musik anging, hatte man Vaughan Williams unterschätzt. Die vierte Sinfonie war sein bisher wildestes, harschestes, aufwühlendstes Werk. Andreas Grabner führt gemeinsam mit Sir Colin Davis in dieses Starke Stück ein.
Das Streichquartett F-Dur KV 590, 1790 also ein Jahr vor seinem Tod entstanden, bleibt Mozarts letztes Werk für diese Besetzung. Andreas Grabner stellt es mit Günter Pichler, ehemaliger Primarius des Alban Berg Quartetts, vor.
Es ist ein Werk der Reife. Ludwig van Beethovens Klavierkonzert Nr. 4 in G-Dur entstand 1805, in der gleichen Zeit, in der Beethoven an der fünften und sechsten Symphonie arbeitete. Andreas Grabner stellt Ihnen dieses Starkes Stück vor.
Als Erich Wolfgang Korngold mit nur 60 Jahren starb, durfte er sich als ein aus der Mode gekommener Komponist vorgekommen sein. Sein Violinkonzert hat dem Vergessen am hartnäckigsten Widerstand geleistet. Andreas Grabner hat mit der Geigerin Anne-Sophie Mutter über dieses Starke Stück gesprochen.
Andreas Grabner stellt Mozarts Konzert für Violine und Orchester in A-Dur KV 219 zusammen mit der Violinistin Anne-Sophie Mutter vor.