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In this episode of BragTalks, host Heather VanCura interviews Patrick Chanezon about participating in standards and open source projects &/or communities. Patrick shares his experiences and the impact this participation in the projects and communities has had on his career. Listen to hear about how he approached getting involved and even some of the mistakes made along the way. Season 7 is about sharing the experiences of technical professionals and building on the interviews from the recently published book 'Developer Career Masterplan'. This episode is a story that links to Chapters 11 and 14 of the book..hope you enjoy our new look and Season 7 of BragTalks! Biography: Patrick Chanezon manages the Cloud Developer Advocacy team in Developer Relations at Microsoft, helping developers achieve more with AI on Microsoft Cloud. Previously, at Docker Inc., he helped to build Docker, the world's leading software container platform, for developers and sysadmins. He helped establish open source and standards organizations such as Open Container Initiative, Cloud Native Computing Foundation or Green Software Foundation. Software developer and storyteller, he spent 8 years building platforms at Netscape & Sun, then 19 years evangelizing platforms at Google, VMware & Microsoft. His main professional interest is in building and kickstarting the network effect for these wondrous two-sided markets called Platforms. He has worked on platforms for AI, Cloud, Distributed Systems, Web, Social, Commerce, Ads, and Portals.
How have DevOps movements broken down the longstanding cultural barriers between developers and operations teams? What role have container technologies like Docker played in shaping today's IT landscape? John Willis, with over 35 years in IT management, dives into these questions, sharing his insights on simplifying complex systems and fostering integration between development and operations.Tune in to this must-listen episode as we explore the evolution and future of DevOps with a pioneer in the field.John Willis has worked in the IT management industry for more than 35 years and is a prolific author, including "Deming's Journey to Profound Knowledge" and "The DevOps Handbook." He is researching DevOps, DevSecOps, IT risk, modern governance, and audit compliance. Previously he was an Evangelist at Docker Inc., VP of Solutions for Socketplane (sold to Docker) and Enstratius (sold to Dell), and VP of Training & Services at Opscode where he formalized the training, evangelism, and professional services functions at the firm. Willis also founded Gulf Breeze Software, an award winning IBM business partner, which specializes in deploying Tivoli technology for the enterprise. Willis has authored six IBM Redbooks for IBM on enterprise systems management and was the founder and chief architect at Chain Bridge Systems.
Bret is joined by Michael Irwin, Sr. Manager for DevRel at Docker, to review and demo our top 2022 new features and announcements from Docker Inc. We run through the very long list in this episode and sadly, had to skip over the smaller, nuance features or subtle changes and focused on the bigger things - a major one being Docker extensions - as well as Docker Hub support for OCI artifacts, like the Helm charts, volume, WASM, Hardened Docker Desktop, tilt.dev and much more.Streamed live on YouTube on December 1, 2022. Includes demos.Unedited live recording of this show on YouTube (Ep #193)★Topics★Docker Blog, "Products" category (most of our topics came from here)Recapping the last year of Docker Desktop (YouTube, September 2022)What's new in Docker Desktop (YouTube, DockerCon 2022, May 2022)What's new in Docker build (YouTube, DockerCon 2022, May 2022)★Michael Irwin★Michael on TwitterMichael's Website★Join my Community★Best coupons for my Docker and Kubernetes coursesChat with us and fellow students on our Discord Server DevOps FansHomepage bretfisher.com ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Bret is joined by Guillaume Tardif and Felipe Cruz of Docker Inc. for a deep dive into Docker extensions.Docker Extensions are a favorite new feature. Guillaume and Felipe are both engineers at Docker and they walk us through how extensions came about, how to install them, and how to submit them to the marketplace.By the time Docker released extensions at DockerCon in May 2022, there were already a dozen solid extensions, including a disk manager, log explorer, and other third-party tools like Portainer, Snyk, and Anchor. Docker extensions will be most helpful to people who use Docker Desktop.Streamed live on YouTube on June 16, 2022.Unedited live recording of this show on YouTube (Ep #174). Includes demos.★Topics★Docker Extensions homepageDocker Extensions announcement at DockerCon 2022Build your first Docker ExtensionSubmit your extension for the MarketplaceVackup, an example custom extensionExtension SDKOther Extension resources★Guillaume and Felipe★Guillaume Tardif on TwitterFelipe Cruz on Twitter★Join my Community★Best coupons for my Docker and Kubernetes coursesChat with us on our Discord Server Vital DevOpsHomepage bretfisher.com ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Unedited live recording of the complete show on YouTube (Ep #167). Includes demos.Bret is joined by Anca Iordache and Dave Scott, software engineers at Docker Inc, to talk about why they made Docker Desktop for Linux and how it's different from running the Docker Engine daemon.We talk about the origins of Docker Desktop for Linux, why it needs to exist, and how it's different than running Docker Engine on the native host. Docker Desktop for Linux behaves like Mac and windows versions where it uses a VM and we clear up some confusion around that. Further, we talk about some of the functionality with operating it in tandem with Docker Engine on the host so you can run both at the same time and use context to switch between them. ★ Topics ★=========Download Docker Desktop for LinuxDocker RoadmapDocker Desktop for Linux GitHub IssuesDocker Developer Preview ProgramDocker Community SignupDockerCon 2022★ Join My Community ★============Best coupons for my Docker and Kubernetes coursesChat with us on our Discord Server Vital DevOpsHomepage bretfisher.com★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Oxide and Friends Twitter Space: September 13th, 2021Docker, Inc., an Early EpitaphWe've been holding a Twitter Space weekly on Mondays at 5p for about an hour. Even though it's not (yet?) a feature of Twitter Spaces, we have been recording them all; here is the recording for our Twitter Space for September 13th, 2021.In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, speakers on September 13th included Steve Tuck, Tom Lyon, Dan Cross, Josh Clulow, Ian, Nick Gerace, Aaron Goldman, Drew Vogel, and vint serp. (Did we miss your name and/or get it wrong? Drop a PR!)Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them: Topic: Scott Carey's article How Docker broke in halfMore by Carey on Docker: Docker Desktop is no longer free for enterprise users What is Docker? The spark for the container revolution Andrej Karpathy's tweet showing InfoWorld.com spamming ads Carey talked to: Solomon Hykes (Docker cofounder with Sebastien Pahl) Ben Golub (Docker CEO 2013-2017) Craig McLuckie (Kubernetes cofounder) Nick Stinemates (early employee and former VP of Business Development) [@5:21](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=321) Akira Kurosawa's 1950 Rashomon ~90mins. Watch a 2min trailer Box office bomb “The Hottie and the Nottie” movie. Other stinkers: Gigli, Gotti [@9:31](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=571) Jerry Kaplan's 1996 book Startup: A Silicon Valley Adventure Steve's take on commercialization > Bryan: There's no question that they hit on something very big. > We saw a container as an operational vessel, but we failed to see > a container as a development vessel. [@14:36](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=876) dotCloud (PaaS) struggles to find a buyer; ultimately open sources as last resort > All of a sudden a company that nobody had heard of, > was a company that everybody had heard of. They took too much money. [@17:40](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=1060) Pitfalls in raising money and scaling sales by imitating big companiesHBO's Silicon Valley Clip ~1min with Jan the Man, Keith, and Doug (I'm shadowing Keith) > Everybody should be spending time arm in arm with customers understanding > how is this technology going to solve a problem > which they'll want to pay to have a solution. Tom: Was there actually a business anyways? Or was it just technology? What if developers are attracted to those things they know cannot be monetized? There was this belief that if a technology is this ubiquitous, it will be readily monetizable. [@27:26](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=1646) Docker Swarm and Kubernetes > Hykes: We didn't work at Google, we didn't go to Stanford, > we didn't have a PhD in computer science. Stinemates: (The Kubernetes team) had strong opinions about the need for a service level API and Docker technically had its own opinion about a single API from a simplicity standpoint. We couldn't agree. DockerCon 2015: No mentioning Kubernetes! Brendan Burns' talk “The distributed system toolkit: Container patterns for modular distributed system design” was unfortunately made private by Docker sometime in the last two years. The internet archive only has this. Burns wrote a blog post about the topics from his talk. rkt (“Rocket”), CoreOS [@36:11](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=2171) Docker coming to market Enterprise teams wanted support Initial support offerings were expensive and limited (no after hours, no weekends) > Bryan: I floated to Solomon in 2014: run container management as a service. Rancher Labs, K3s (lightweight kubernetes) People care about GitHub stars (for better or worse) [@48:02](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=2882) Monetizing open source technologies Triton implementing the Docker API The support relationships are the foothold to figure out the product. [@54:36](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=3276) Venture capital going into DockerDocker acquires Tutum Product market fitAcquisitions [@1:04:42](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=3882) Could the outcome have been materially different? Who made money on Docker? Cloud companies? Developers? VMware acquires Heptio Who invented containers? BSD Jails, Plan9 namespaces? Tyler Tringas' post about how small teams can create value with little outside investment, as a result of the Peace Dividend of the SaaS Wars. If we got something wrong or missed something, please file a PR! Our next Twitter space will likely be on Monday at 5p Pacific Time; stay tuned to our Twitter feeds for details. We'd love to have you join us, as we always love to hear from new speakers!
Things We Talk About: Father of Indian IT Passes Away Report: IBM Layoffs Loom Canonical Allies with Docker Inc to Secure Containers Sumo Logic Report Sees Major Expansion of Attack Surfaces HashiCorp Extends Service Mesh Pure Storage Tweaks As a Service Model
Docker est un outil apprécié des développeurs pour sa simplicité. Docker compose emprunte cette même philosophie en permettant de démarrer une stack applicative avec une simple commande UP. Mais l'arrivée de Kubernetes est venue changer la donne, et la bien connue "developer experience" n'est plus du tout comparable à ce qu'elle était.Il n'est pas surprenant dans ce contexte de voir certains développeurs se tourner vers Fargate ou Cloud Run qui enlèvent totalement la complexité de l'orchestrateur de l'équation. Mais les fournisseurs de cloud ne sont pas réputés pour simplifier la vie des développeurs.Dans cet épisode, je reçois Nicolas de Loof. Nicolas se qualifie lui même de bricoleur dangereux, et travail pour Docker Inc sur la nouvelle mouture de compose : une version capable de fonctionner aussi bien en local que dans le cloud. Avec lui je reviens sur l'intérêt qu'apporte un outil tel que compose, mais aussi sur les raisons qui l'ont contraint à évoluer.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/electromonkeys)
Seit vor einigen Wochen bekannt wurde, dass Docker Inc. das eigene Enterprise-Geschäft verkauft hat, sind viele (potenzielle) Docker-Nutzer in Aufruhr. Sie fragen sich etwa, ob es klug ist, die Technik als Einsteiger überhaupt noch zu lernen oder mit ihr weiterzuarbeiten. Gleichzeitig gibt es Debatten über die Rolle von Docker Inc. Denn das Unternehmen hat zwar das seltene Kunststück vollbracht, eine Technik zu etablieren und ihr zu großem Erfolg zu verhelfen. Aber während die IT-Welt nicht müde wird, mit Software in Containern zu arbeiten, schafft sich das Unternehmen dahinter quasi selbst ab. Anlass genug, einmal ausführlich über Docker und die Container-Technik zu sprechen. Alle Infos zur aktuellen Sendung gibts unter: https://heise.de/-4638410 #HEISESHOW: TECHNIK-NEWS & NETZPOLITIK Die #heiseshow gibts jeden Donnerstag um 12 Uhr live auf YouTube. Das Moderatoren-Team (Kristina Beer, Martin Holland und Jürgen Kuri) leitet im Wechsel die auf rund 45 Minuten angelegte Talkshow, in der mit Kolleginnen und Kollegen sowie zugeschalteten Gästen aktuelle Entwicklungen aus der IT-Welt besprochen werden.
Seit vor einigen Wochen bekannt wurde, dass Docker Inc. das eigene Enterprise-Geschäft verkauft hat, sind viele (potenzielle) Docker-Nutzer in Aufruhr. Sie fragen sich etwa, ob es klug ist, die Technik als Einsteiger überhaupt noch zu lernen oder mit ihr weiterzuarbeiten. Gleichzeitig gibt es Debatten über die Rolle von Docker Inc. Denn das Unternehmen hat zwar das seltene Kunststück vollbracht, eine Technik zu etablieren und ihr zu großem Erfolg zu verhelfen. Aber während die IT-Welt nicht müde wird, mit Software in Containern zu arbeiten, schafft sich das Unternehmen dahinter quasi selbst ab. Anlass genug, einmal ausführlich über Docker und die Container-Technik zu sprechen. Alle Infos zur aktuellen Sendung gibts unter: https://heise.de/-4638410 #HEISESHOW: TECHNIK-NEWS & NETZPOLITIK Die #heiseshow gibts jeden Donnerstag um 12 Uhr live auf YouTube. Das Moderatoren-Team (Kristina Beer, Martin Holland und Jürgen Kuri) leitet im Wechsel die auf rund 45 Minuten angelegte Talkshow, in der mit Kolleginnen und Kollegen sowie zugeschalteten Gästen aktuelle Entwicklungen aus der IT-Welt besprochen werden.
Seit vor einigen Wochen bekannt wurde, dass Docker Inc. das eigene Enterprise-Geschäft verkauft hat, sind viele (potenzielle) Docker-Nutzer in Aufruhr. Sie fragen sich etwa, ob es klug ist, die Technik als Einsteiger überhaupt noch zu lernen oder mit ihr weiterzuarbeiten. Gleichzeitig gibt es Debatten über die Rolle von Docker Inc. Denn das Unternehmen hat zwar das seltene Kunststück vollbracht, eine Technik zu etablieren und ihr zu großem Erfolg zu verhelfen. Aber während die IT-Welt nicht müde wird, mit Software in Containern zu arbeiten, schafft sich das Unternehmen dahinter quasi selbst ab. Anlass genug, einmal ausführlich über Docker und die Container-Technik zu sprechen. Alle Infos zur aktuellen Sendung gibts unter: https://heise.de/-4638410 #HEISESHOW: TECHNIK-NEWS & NETZPOLITIK Die #heiseshow gibts jeden Donnerstag um 12 Uhr live auf YouTube. Das Moderatoren-Team (Kristina Beer, Martin Holland und Jürgen Kuri) leitet im Wechsel die auf rund 45 Minuten angelegte Talkshow, in der mit Kolleginnen und Kollegen sowie zugeschalteten Gästen aktuelle Entwicklungen aus der IT-Welt besprochen werden.
In this special episode, just a day after Docker announces they've split the company and sold their Enterprise products, I sit down with fellow Docker Captians Jeff Nickoloff, Michael Irwin, and Nirmal Mehta to discuss it, as well as the future of Docker's open source. And as a reminder, this podcast is listener supported by those of you that buy my courses. If you're already one of my 120,000 students, I thank you so much for your support. We're launching a whole new Kubernetes Mastery course soon, an you can get course coupons, join my 20,000 user Slack Community and signup for my newsletter at bretfisher.com
AWS plods on with new capabilities, this time with an AI and enterprise app migration focus, plus, AI: is it actually a thing? We also discuss Microsoft acquiring Cycle Computing and how HPC fits into cloud, also what exactly HPC is and how you measure vibrations passing through a human torso. But most importantly, we’re joined by Andrew Clay Shafer (https://twitter.com/littleidea) in this episode, standing in for Brandon. Removing rebel-slaver memorials Good job (https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/08/16/us/baltimore-confederate-statues.html), Old Bay land. There’s more cities too (https://www.axios.com/what-other-states-are-doing-with-confederate-era-statues-2472806400.html) on the case too. You like white papers? We got white papers Four new Pivotal white papers (https://content.pivotal.io/white-papers/running-microservices-on-pivotal-cloud-foundry): CI/CD, microservices, PCI (wake up! wake up!), and The Scary Clam (BOSH). We discuss them with the co-author of all of them on this week’s Pivotal Conversations. (https://soundcloud.com/pivotalconversations/pci-bosh-cicd-and-microservices-whitepapers-galore-with-jared-ruckle) Also, check out the Members only podcast if you like white papers, which you probably do, because you’re listening to this bullshit. Amazon Summit NYC There was some Amazon event this week. Anything happen (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/aws-summit-new-york-summary-of-announcements/)? Machine learning (http://www.barrons.com/articles/amazon-has-largest-a-i-platform-in-the-world-its-machine-learning-guru-boasts-1502735878), and such. Deep dive blog post (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/launch-amazon-macie-securing-your-s3-buckets/). Interview with Amazon exec (http://www.barrons.com/articles/amazon-has-largest-a-i-platform-in-the-world-its-machine-learning-guru-boasts-1502735878), Matt Wood. AI Winter (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_winter#Overview). Maths (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponential_smoothing). Also, on various industry CEOs strategamizing around Amazon (https://digiday.com/marketing/amazon-effect-echoes-across-industry/). “Alexa, what’s ‘anti-trust’?” (https://twitter.com/hhoover/status/897489269069107200) Building out Azure HPC Microsoft acquiring Cycle Computing. A market ready for some cash, both for HPC and analytics (https://blogs.the451group.com/techdeals/ma/microsoft-tones-its-hpc-cloud-with-cycle-computing/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+InorganicGrowth+%28Inorganic+Growth%29): “[a]ccording to 451 Research’s Voice of the Enterprise Cloud Transformation survey, 21% of data and analytics workloads will move to public clouds in the next two years” What about the GreenButton (https://techcrunch.com/2014/05/01/microsoft-acquires-high-performance-cloud-computing-company-greenbutton/) acquisition in 2014? Peep the long piece on that from 2014 (https://www.cio.co.nz/article/544160/latest_tech_merger_microsoft_acquires_kiwi_cloud_computing_company_greenbutton/). Excellent chart (https://blogs.the451group.com/techdeals/files/2017/08/Vote-for-KBI.png) showing migrating COTS to SaaS, etc. https://d2mxuefqeaa7sj.cloudfront.net/s_2B8493BBB6C86E07A5CDF46F818EAD2B22A9BA45EDBC764A7613A8A9E0E13576_1502894906368_image.png BONUS LINKS! Not covered in show Docker raising more cash-money, container land items Lizette Chapman & Eric Newcomer, Bloomberg (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-09/docker-is-said-to-be-raising-funding-at-1-3-billion-valuation): “HPC is about three to five years behind enterprise computing when it comes to new technology adoption – the applications are generally more sophisticated, and engineers are conservative…. Business software company Docker Inc. (https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/1041069D:US) is raising fresh funds, valuing the company at $1.3 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.” Also, check out this ADP using Docker case, moderated by Alex Williams (https://thenewstack.io/adp-adopted-container-mindset/), pretty good: 1,000 containers in Nov 2016 to 3,771 in April 2017 (I think these were across dev and prod). MIPS rule everything around me (https://www.geekwire.com/2017/new-version-docker-enterprise-edition-adds-new-admin-features-support-old-reliable-mainframes/). Docker Enterprise feature matrix: https://d2mxuefqeaa7sj.cloudfront.net/s_2B8493BBB6C86E07A5CDF46F818EAD2B22A9BA45EDBC764A7613A8A9E0E13576_1502889970877_file.jpeg Also, putting Oracle in a container (https://www.infoq.com/news/2017/08/containers-core-banking), over there in European banking. Hold my beer platforms (https://thenewstack.io/github-goes-kubernetes-tells/) - It’s easy, just build out all the platform things you need yourself. Yaml all the things! Also, Bash, puppet, terraform, go for log draining(!) and more! Bare-metal, what’s the deal? Oracle got it (http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2017/08/14/oracle-supercharges-cloud-database-bare-metal-servers/). What’s Twitter got to say (https://twitter.com/cote/status/897477974496342016)? “You get my deck? Let me check Outlook. Who’s doing meeting notes in Word?” https://d2mxuefqeaa7sj.cloudfront.net/s_2B8493BBB6C86E07A5CDF46F818EAD2B22A9BA45EDBC764A7613A8A9E0E13576_1502811233384_image.png Cloud’s cool, but PowerPoint is the shit (https://www.geekwire.com/2017/new-numbers-show-microsofts-biggest-businesses-really-cloud-era/?utm_content=bufferb54e8&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer): “$25.4 billion in revenue in Microsoft’s 2017 fiscal year, an increase of 7 percent from the previous year” Hot Dog Watch Ever vigilant, we’re keeping an eye on the future. The future is stiching together videos for 360 panorama things (http://mashable.com/2017/08/14/snapchat-crowd-surf-concerts-our-stories/#PqhbXnU0cSqO). See the underside of The Hot Dog. Meta, follow-up, etc. Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/sdt) - like anyone who starts these things, I have no idea WTF it is, if it’s a good idea, or if I should be ashamed. Need some product/market fit. Check out the Software Defined Talk Members Only White-Paper Exiguous podcast over there. Join us all in the SDT Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Mid-roll Get $50 off Casper mattresses with the code: horraymattray NEW DISCOUNT! DevOpsDays Nashville (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-nashville/), $25 off with the code 2017NashDevOpsDays - Coté will be keynoting (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-nashville/speakers/michael-cote/) - October 17th and 18th, 2017. NEW DISCOUNT! DevOpsDays Kansas City (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-kansascity/welcome/), September 21st and 22nd. Use the code SDT2017 when you register (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/devopsdays-kansas-city-2017-tickets-31754843592?aff=ado). PLUS we have one free ticket to give away. So, we need to figure out how to do that. Coté speaking at DevOps Riga (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-riga/welcome/), also will be at DevOpsDays London and Devoxx Belgium. Coté also speaking at Austin OpenStack Meetup (https://www.meetup.com/OpenStack-Austin/events/241908089/), August 17th, 2017. See slides (https://www.slideshare.net/cote/the-cloudnative-enterprise-architect-how-devops-changes-eas-role). The Register’s conference, Continuous Lifecycle (https://continuouslifecycle.london/), in London (May 2018) has it’s CFP open, closed October 20th - submit something (https://continuouslifecycle.london/call-for-papers/)! SpringOne Platform registration open (https://2017.springoneplatform.io/ehome/s1p/registration), Dec 4th to 5th. Use the code S1P200_Cote for $200 off registration (https://2017.springoneplatform.io/ehome/s1p/registration). Matt’s on the Road! August 22nd - Sydney Cloud Native Meetup (https://www.meetup.com/Sydney-Cloud-Native-Meetup/events/241712226/) August 23rd - AWS Sydney North User Group (https://www.meetup.com/en-AU/Amazon-Web-Services-Sydney-North-User-Group/events/240951267/) August 30th - AWS Australian Public Sector Summit (https://aws.amazon.com/summits/canberra-public-sector/) September 12 - Perth MS Cloud Computing User Group (https://www.meetup.com/en-AU/Perth-Cloud/events/241297999/) September 15-16 - DevOpsDays Bangalore (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-bangalore/) September 20 - Azure Sydney Meetup (https://www.meetup.com/Azure-Sydney-User-Group/events/242374004/) October 3-4 - DevOpsDays New Zealand (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2017-auckland/) October 11th - Brisbane Azure User Group (https://www.meetup.com/Brisbane-Azure-User-Group/events/240477415/) Andrew will be at DevOpsDays Singapore, and a few other places. He doesn’t want to make platinum. # Recommendations Andrew: SLOs, three chapters from the Google SRE (https://landing.google.com/sre/book.html) book (https://landing.google.com/sre/book.html). Matt Ray: Run Bootcamp Windows 10 on a USB Stick (https://hackernoon.com/how-to-run-bootcamp-windows-10-on-a-usb3-86551dc3def8) The secret rhythm in Radiohead’s Videotape (https://www.vox.com/videos/2017/8/4/16092184/videotape-radiohead-secret-rhythm-earworm) Coté: bacon grease in a mug by the stove, that’s how we was livin’ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0s0XHVUGF0). Speaking of saving bacon grease: Spyderco ParaMilitary 2 G-10 Plain Edge Knife (http://amzn.to/2fImmaR); works well for camping; I got a good deal. WOCStock (https://www.flickr.com/photos/wocintechchat/) - mix up them pasty white-boy slides. Outro from Angela Rye (https://twitter.com/angela_rye), on (http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2017/08/16/august-16-2017-hn-two) Here & Now (http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2017/08/16/august-16-2017-hn-two), August 16th, 2017 (http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2017/08/16/august-16-2017-hn-two). Special Guest: Andrew Clay Shafer.
Eventually, you have to decide how your open source software is going to make money, and your partners probably won’t like it. That’s what the dust-up around Docker is this week, it seems to us. We also talk briefly about VMware’s big conference this week, and rumors of HPE selling off it’s Software group to private equity. Listen above, subscribe to the feed (http://feeds.feedburner.com/SoftwareDefinedTalk) (or iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/software-defined-talk-podcast/id893738521?mt=2)), or download the MP3 directly (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/9b74150b-3553-49dc-8332-f89bbbba9f92/ea25eafd-1d31-4f4f-a3a6-efad5b9cd5a5.mp3). With Brandon Whichard (https://twitter.com/bwhichard), Matt Ray (https://twitter.com/mattray), and Coté (https://twitter.com/cote). SPONSOR Check out the multi-cloud webinar lead-gen free (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BO2gizEI5O8)! I really like Brian’s part and then the discussion at the end between all of us. I have a discount code for Operability.IO, September 19th and 20th in London. I hear good things about this conference; check out their talks from last year (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK4VB0cauli7-_RIvpmn651ePtddw9_Fp). It has a good list of speakers, including our very own Casey West. You can 10% off registration if you use the code COTEMEMOOIO16 (https://ti.to/highops/operability-io-2016/discount/COTEMEMOOIO16). Check out cote.io/promos (https://cote.io/promos/) for more - free books, free cloud time, etc. Show notes Nippers (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nippers) - "Nippers learn about safety at the beach. They learn about dangers such as rocks, and animals (e.g. the blue-ringed octopus), and also about surf conditions, such as rip currents, sandbars, and waves. Older Nippers also learn some basic first aid and may also learn CPR when they reach the age of 13." Can someone explain this “Docker forking” hoopla? Coté’s write-up (https://cote.io/2016/09/01/deciding-where-the-docker-ecosystem-will-make-money/). Docker Inc. doesn’t want to be a commoditized building block (http://thenewstack.io/docker-fork-talk-split-now-table/) From a Red Hat person (https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/forking-docker-daniel-riek): “The conflict started to escalate earlier this summer, when Docker Inc used its controlling position to push Swarm, it’s own clone of Kubernetes-style container orchestration, into the core Docker project, putting the basic container runtime in a conflict with a notable part of its ecosystem. Docker Inc. then went on to essentially accuse Red Hat of forking Docker - at the Red Hat Summit no less. After that, Docker Inc’s Solomon Hykes came out strongly against the efforts to standardize the container runtime in OCI - an initiative his company co-founded.” Re: that episode where we discuss Docker ecosystem challenges (https://cote.io/2015/04/17/sdt30/): “Yet on a regular basis, Red Hat patches that enable valid requirements from Red Hat customer use cases get shut down as it seems for the simple reason that they don’t fit into Docker Inc’s business strategy.” A fight over where to draw the line between free/open/commodified and costs/proprietary/competitive: "And while I personally consider the orchestration layer the key to the container paradigm, the right approach here is to keep the orchestration separate from the core container runtime standardization. This avoids conflicts between different layers of the container runtime: we can agree on the common container package format, transport, and execution model without limiting choice between e.g. Kubernetes, Mesos, Swarm." Don't bring a pistol to a bazooka fight. Enterprises love RHEL - have you ever tried to sell Ubuntu into organizations? It’s like what selling NT must have been like. VMware hybrid cloud solutionaring Brief notebook from Coté (https://cote.io/2016/08/30/vmwares-foundation-is-a-solution-bundling-of-hybrid-cloud-software/). More coverage (http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexkonrad/2016/08/29/ibm-vmware-deepen-hybrid-cloud-partnership-for-customers-like-marriott/#629acff12853) Keywords “mostly cloud” A representative, not too poorly supported VMware obit (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/08/31/thoughts_from_vmworld_2016_is_vmware_becoming_synonymous_with_legacy/) NSX up in the cloud (http://www.techrepublic.com/article/vmworld-2016-vmware-lays-out-its-strategy-for-cross-cloud-support/) This Week in Tech Private Equity… HPE looking to sell off Software group (http://finance.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-hp-enterprise-talks-sell-181749881.html?soc_src=social-sh&soc_trk=tw), sources say. “hoping it can fetch between $8 billion and $10 billion” “HPE's software unit generated $3.6 billion in net revenue (http://quickbooks.intuit.com/r/revenue/understanding-top-bottom-line-difference-net-revenue-net-income/) in 2015, down from $3.9 billion in 2014.” Dell/EMC thing set to close on Sep 7th, 2016 (http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160830006294/en/Historic-Dell-EMC-Transaction-Set-Close-September) Quest Software, One Identity To Operate Separately From SonicWall After Dell Software Sale (http://www.crn.com/news/security/300081913/quest-software-one-identity-to-operate-separately-from-sonicwall-after-dell-software-sale.htm) BONUS LINKS! Not covered in podcast. Spaces vs. Tabs The data delivers the truth (spaces) (https://medium.com/@hoffa/400-000-github-repositories-1-billion-files-14-terabytes-of-code-spaces-or-tabs-7cfe0b5dd7fd#.m4axg5pe7) Recommendations Matt: Bubble-sort algorithm explained with Hungarian ("Csángó") folk dance (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyZQPjUT5B4) Brandon: LastChanceU (https://www.netflix.com/title/80091742) Coté: Ulysses (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ulysses/id950335311?mt=8&at=1010lohg) - I don’t think there’s any expensive text editors left for me to buy. [This American Life's Worst Song Ever], hear it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-gPuH1yeZ08).
Four years ago, the virtualization industry was blown wide open by the arrival of Docker — a format which made it possible to stage workloads and scale them without the overhead of VMware, Xen, or KVM virtual machines. Last year, Docker Inc. graciously donated its container standard to the Open Container Initiative, run by the Linux Foundation — a neutral governing party. The idea was to end all the bickering over what the container format should be. Instead, what's happening is a fresh re-opening of the debate over why there should be just one. “I think, a couple of years down the road, people are going to be talking less and less about containers, and people are going to be talking more and more about applications again,” said Ben Hindman, the founder and lead engineer of Mesosphere. What a bank in New York City really wants, said Hindman, is the opportunity to test an application on its data center the same way one of its executives tries out an e-mail client on her laptop. If data center apps became more analogous to mobile or desktop apps, the entire business of serving large enterprises could be revolutionized. “At the end of the day, what people care about. . . is being able to run these sophisticated, distributed applications. At least what I hope, in five years' time from now, everyone is talking about that as an ecosystem.” What we've been calling “container architecture” deals primarily with the packaging and constitution of containers — small, firmly packed virtual machines without the hypervisor. Up to now, a lot of folks thought container architecture and container orchestration were the same topic. They're not. The critical issue that data centers are facing today is how to network their workloads. In a container network, each container has its own address. Natively, Docker creates a subnet of containers, each of which has its own port number. For data centers where port numbers have specifically designated purposes — like port 80 for Web traffic — that won't work. They'd already be violating compliance frameworks just for trying this. That's why Kubernetes and Mesosphere and Docker have all adopted different means of orchestration, where each container is given its own IP address. There are different ways of doing this through network overlays, some of which scale better than others. But this does solve the problem with Docker's native networking. However, it also solves a broader class of problem, because VMs have their own IP addresses too. As long as IP addresses provide a layer of abstraction between virtual components and their orchestrators, the substance to the argument in favor of a single container format, disappears.
After John Willis' keynote session next week at Rugged DevOps during RSA Conference 2016, he says he's going to grab a front row seat because he's so excited about the line up. In this interview, I talk with John about his relationship with Josh Corman and how they started working together. We talk about security as part of the software supply chain, the part Docker plays in the reference architecture picture for enterprise DevOps and how the developer world has changed in the past 5 years. About John Willis John Willis has worked in the IT management industry for more than 35 years. Currently he is an Evangelist at Docker Inc. Prior to Docker Willis was the VP of Solutions for Socketplane (sold to Docker) and Enstratius (sold to Dell). Prior to to Socketplane and Enstratius Willis was the VP of Training & Services at Opscode where he formalized the training, evangelism, and professional services functions at the firm. Willis also founded Gulf Breeze Software, an award winning IBM business partner, which specializes in deploying Tivoli technology for the enterprise. John has authored six IBM Redbooks for IBM on enterprise systems management and was the founder and chief architect at Chain Bridge Systems.