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This week on the podcast, Yuri Litvinovich of Scotiabank was able to join Mark Mirchandani and Michelle Casbon to talk about migration from on-prem and their partnership with Google Cloud. Mark Mandel stops in with some cool things of the week and the question of the week, too! With Yuri’s help, Scotiabank is working to become a modern financial services technology company. Their transition from working mostly on-prem to working in the cloud was exciting for him as he discovered how much cheaper, faster, and more secure large enterprise projects can be in the public cloud. Three years ago, Scotiabank’s CEO began encouraging this shift to keep the company up-to-date, with funds allocated to moving all their thousands of applications and products to a more efficient system. To accomplish this, Yuri turned to Kubernetes to make use of containers. Because they are light and homogenous in different environments, the modernization at Scotiabank went much more smoothly with Kubernetes and GKE. They also use a mix of managed systems like BigQuery, Dataflow, and Pub/Sub, as well as made-from-scratch applications that help the Google products to be compatible with Scotiabank’s existing software. Yuri believes this was a key to their success in the migration from on-prem to the cloud. In the process of migration, Yuri experienced some pushback from developers who were concerned about the move. He encouraged them not to “lift and shift” their projects, but to completely re-build them with cloud dev ops principles in mind. Yuri’s goal was to convince developers that doing this would result in projects that were much easier, cheaper, and more secure in the long run. By outlining the benefits and goals of migration and sharing success stories of other businesses who have transferred to Kubernetes and the cloud, Scotiabank was able to help convince developers of the importance of it. Yuri also encourages trust and cooperation between teams. Yuri Litvinovich Yuri is a Senior Cloud Engineer and Kubernetes Tech Lead at Scotiabank. He’s currently part of Platform Organization (PLATO) within Scotiabank, which performs enterprise modernization program to transform the Bank into a modern technology company in financial services. Yuri has extensive experience in Cloud technologies, Kubernetes, DevOps, Site Reliability Engineering, Automation, CI/CD, Linux, networking, and system administration. His pursuit of excellence led him to work on implementing cutting-edge technologies in both startups, and large enterprise environments making them vital part of organization’s digital transformation journey. Cool things of the week Introducing Deep Learning Containers: Consistent and portable environments blog How to implement document tagging with AutoML blog Analyze BigQuery data with Kaggle Kernels notebooks blog GCP Podcast Episode 84: Kaggle with Wendy Kan podcast Introducing the Jenkins GKE Plugin—deploy software to your Kubernetes clusters blog Interview Scotiabank site Kubernetes site Kubernetes Engine site Cloud SQL site BigQuery site Dataflow site Pub/Sub site Stackdriver site Anthos site GKE On-Prem site Istio site Autoscaling Streaming Applications in Cloud Dataflow with Scotiabank video Google Cloud Next ‘19: Day 2 Product Innovation Keynote video Kubeflow site Question of the week Rather than using the standard Cloud Shell image - what if I want to add my own “by default” installed tooling? Where can you find us next? Mark Mirch is working on This Week in Cloud. Mark Mandel is going to Tokyo Next, Open Source in Gaming Day , and the North American Open Source Summit. Sound Effect Attribution “crowd laugh.wav” by tom_woysky of Freesound.org
Dan Dyer is Senior Vice President of Technical Product Management at Optiva, a provider of business support services to the telecommunications industry. Optiva have been moving services to Kubernetes, and with the help of Kyle Bassett and team from Arctiq, a cloud-native consultancy, kicking the tyres of Anthos and GKE On-Prem. Adam and Craig learn about this journey from Dan and Kyle, and discuss dragons and foxes. Do you have something cool to share? Some questions? Let us know: web: kubernetespodcast.com mail: kubernetespodcast@google.com twitter: @kubernetespod Chatter of the week Baby foxes Aaron Crickenberger interview on the Kubernetes blog Dragon research News of the week Red Hat: RHEL 8 and the Universal Base Image OpenShift 4 Operators all the way down Microsoft Azure OpenHat US DoJ approves IBM’s acqusition of Red Hat F5 closes its acquisition of NGINX Docker CEO Steve Singh steps down Alpine Linux root escalation: CVE-2019-5021 Go Distroless! Introducing GitHub Package Registry VS Code extension for Kubernetes goes 1.0 (changelog) WSL 2 brings Linux to Windows Gravitational: AWS vs Colo? and Hacker News debate k8s.af with Kubernetes failure stories Google Cloud launches GKE in Osaka, Tokyo KubeCon US 2019 CFP opens Railyard: Training ML models on Kubernetes at Stripe KubeOne from Loodse Kubedex: Kubernetes operating systems Akrobateo, a general-purpose load balancer for Kubernetes from Kontena Optimization of etcd at web-scale by Xingyu Chen Links from the interview Optiva Arctiq Kyle Bassett on Twitter
Happy Holidays, everyone! Melanie and Mark wrap up a great year by reminiscing about some of their favorite episodes! We also talk about the big news of the year, our favorite articles, and what’s coming up for the GCP Podcast in 2019. Cool things of the week Kubernetes and GKE for developers: a year of Cloud Console blog Reducing gender bias in Google Translate blog Cloud Security Command Center is now in beta and ready to use blog Main content Podcast accomplishments! We have awesome new intro and outro music, new website, new YouTube videos! We hit 1 million and then 2 million downloads! Mark and the podcast are celebrating their three year anniversary! Top 10 most downloaded episodes of all time! GCP Podcast Episode 111: Google Cloud Platform with Sam Ramji podcast GCP Podcast Episode 112: Percy.io with Mike Fotinakis podcast GCP Podcast Episode 146: Google AI with Jeff Dean podcast GCP Podcast Episode 127: SRE vs Devops with Liz Fong-Jones and Seth Vargo podcast GCP Podcast Episode 128: Decision Intelligence with Cassie Kozyrkov podcast GCP Podcast Episode 113: Open Source TensorFlow with Yifei Feng podcast GCP Podcast Episode 88: Kubernetes 1.7 with Tim Hockin podcast GCP Podcast Episode 108: Launchpad Studio with Malika Cantor and Peter Norvig podcast GCP Podcast Episode 130: Data Science with Juliet Hougland and Michelle Casbon podcast GCP Podcast Episode 125: Open Source at Google Cloud Platform with Sarah Novotny podcast Top 10 most downloaded episodes for 2018! Exact same list except Tim Hockin is not #7. Following episodes go up a number and we added to #10 spot. GCP Podcast Episode 122: Project Jupyter with Jessica Forde, Yuvi Panda and Chris Holdgraf podcast Mark’s favorite episodes GCP Podcast Episode 129: Developer Relations with Mandy Waite podcast GCP Podcast Episode 121: Kontributing to Kubernetes with Paris Pittman and Garrett Rodrigues podcast GCP Podcast Episode 131: Actions on Google with Mandy Chan podcast GCP Podcast Episode 148: Wellio with Sivan Aldor-Noiman and Erik Andrejko podcast GCP Podcast Episode 110: CPU Vulnerability with Matt Linton and Paul Turner podcast GCP Podcast Episode 125: Open Source at Google Cloud Platform with Sarah Novotny podcast GCP Podcast Episode 140: Container Security with Maya Kaczorowski podcast Melanie’s favorite episodes GCP Podcast Episode 117: Cloud AI Fei-Fei Li was the Chief Scientist of AI/ML at Google podcast GCP Podcast Episode 114: ML Bias & Fairness with Timnit Gebru and Margaret Mitchell podcast GCP Podcast Episode 141: Accessibility in Tech podcast GCP Podcast Episode 136: Robotics with Raia podcast GCP Podcast Episode 150: Strange Loop, Remote Working, and Distributed Systems with KF podcast DL Indaba GCP Podcast Episode 147: DL Indaba: AI Investments in Africa podcast GCP Podcast Episode 149: Deep Learning Research in Africa with Yabebal Fantaye & Jessica Phalafala podcast GCP Podcast Episode 152: AI Corporations and Communities in Africa with Karim Beguir & Muthoni Wanyoike podcast GCP Podcast Episode 157: NeurIPS and AI Research with Anima Anandkumar podcast Favorite announcements, products, and more at Google Cloud Unity and Google Cloud Strategic Alliance blog Open Match blog Cloud TPU site Google Dataset Search is in beta site No tricks, just treats: Globally scaling the Halloween multiplayer Doodle with Open Match on Google Cloud blog GKE On-Prem site Open Source - Knative release, Skaffold, Istio updates, gVisor, etc. Google in Ghana blog Cloud NEXT blog GCP Podcast Episode 137: Next Day 1 podcast GCP Podcast Episode 138: Next Day 2 podcast GCP Podcast Episode 139: Next Day 3 podcast Unity and DeepMind partner to advance AI research blog Introducing PyTorch across Google Cloud blog Question of the week What were your personal highlights for 2018? Mark Agones Introducing Agones: Open-source, multiplayer, dedicated game-server hosting built on Kubernetes blog github The new website Having Melanie join me on the podcast Melanie Bringing Francesc back Meeting Grace GCP Podcast Episode 142: Agones With Mark Mandel and Cyril Tovena podcast Where can you find us next? It’s the holidays! Special thanks! Thank you guests Thank you Jennifer Thank you HD Interactive: James, Trae, Sabrina, and Sean Thank you Greg Thank you Neil, Chuck, and Shana Thank you MBooth for the website overhaul and social media support Thank you Francesc Thank you listeners!
Melanie and Mark talk with Google Cloud’s VP of Engineering, Melody Meckfessel, this week. In her time with Google Cloud, she and her team have worked to uncover what makes developers more productive. The main focus of their work is DevOps, defined by Melody as automation around the developer workflow and culture. In other words, Melody and her team are discovering new ways for developers to interact and how those interactions can encourage their productive peak. Melody and her team have used their internal research and expanded it to collaborate with Google Cloud partners and open source projects. The sharing of research and products has created even faster innovation as Google learns from these outside projects and vice versa. In the future, Melody sees amazing engagement with the community and even better experiences with containers on GCP. She is excited to see the Go community growing and evolving as more people use it and give feedback. Melody also speaks about diversity, encouraging everyone to be open-minded and try to build diverse teams to create products that are useful for all. Melody Meckfessel Melody Meckfessel is a hands-on technology leader with more than 20 years experience building and maintaining large-scale distributed systems and solving problems at scale. As VP of Engineering, she leads the team building DevOps tools and sharing DevOps best practices across Google and with software development and operations teams around the world. Her team powers the world’s most advanced continuously delivered software, enabling development teams to turn ideas into reliable, scalable production systems. After graduating from UC Berkeley, Melody programmed for startups and enterprise companies. Since joining Google in 2004, Melody has led teams in Google’s core search systems, search quality and cluster management. Melody is passionate about making software development fast, scalable, and fun. Cool things of the week Mark is back from vacation! We are at 2 million downloads! tweet Greg Wilson twitter and github Open source gaming: Agones - 0.6.0 - site Open Match - 0.2.0 RC - site What’s new at Firebase Summit 2018 blog Interview GCP Podcast Episode 137: Next Day 1 podcast Stackdriver site GitLab site Google SRE site Borg site Cloud Spanner site Go site GKE On-Prem site Skaffold site Minikube site DORA site Cloud Build site Bazel site Question of the week If I want to configure third party notifications (such as Slack or Github) into my Cloud Build configuration - how can I do that? Sending build notifications Configuring notifications for third-party services Where can you find us next? Mark will be at KubeCon next week. Melanie will be at NeurIPS this week. She’ll be attending Queer in AI, Black in AI, and LatinX this week as well.
Our guest today is Dr. Mario Lassnig, a software engineer working on the ATLAS Experiment at CERN! Melanie and Mark put on their physics hats as they learn all about what it takes to manage the petabytes of data involved in such a large research project. Dr. Mario Lassnig Dr. Mario Lassnig has been working as a Software Engineer at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) since 2006. Within the ATLAS Experiment, he is responsible for all aspects of its large-scale distributed data, including management, storage, network, and access. He is also one of the principal developers of the Rucio system for scientific data management. In his previous life, he developed mobile navigation software for multi-modal transportation in Vienna at Seibersdorf Research, as well as cryptographic smart-card applications for access control at the University of Klagenfurt. He holds a Master’s degree in Computer Science from the University of Klagenfurt, and a doctoral degree in Computer Science from the University of Innsbruck. Cool things of the week The Machines Can Do the Work, a Story of Kubernetes Testing, CI, and Automating the Contributor Experience blog Google Cloud grants $9M in credits for the operation of the Kubernetes project blog Improving job searches for veterans with Google Cloud’s Talent Solution blog Unity For Beginners… From a Beginner blog GCP Podcast Episode 134: Connected Games with Unity and Google Cloud with Brett Bibby and Micah Baker podcast Neural Information Processing Systems Conference site Interview Rucio - Scientific Data Management site CERN site ATLAS site Google Cloud Storage site Google Compute Engine site G Suite site GKE On-Prem site Rucio on GitHub site University of Oslo site University of Innsbruck site Brookhaven National Laboratory site University of Texas at Arlington site Square Kilometer Array site DUNE site LIGO Lab site Scientific Computing with Google Cloud Platform: Experiences from the Trenches in Particle Physics and Earth Sciences video GCP Podcast Episode 122: Project Jupyter with Jessica Forde, Yuvi Panda and Chris Holdgraf podcast Rucio Workshop site ACM/IEEE Supercomputing 2018 site Question of the week I am not familiar with Docker or Kubernetes - where can I get started? Docker Docker’s official “Getting Started” guide Katacoda’s free, interactive Docker course Kubernetes You should totally read this comic and interactive tutorial Katacoda’s free, interactive Kubernetes course Where can you find us next? Melanie will be at Deep Learning Indaba. Mark will be at Tokyo NEXT. We’ll both be at Strange Loop.
Google builds platforms for developers and strives to make them happy. There's a team at Google that wakes up every day to make sure developers have great outcomes with its services and products. The team listens to the developers and brings all feedback back into Google. It also spends a lot of time all over the world talking to and connecting with developer communities and showing stuff being worked on. It doesn't do the team any good to build developer products that developers don’t love. Today, we’re talking to Adam Seligman, vice president of developer relations at Google, where he is responsible for the global developer community across product areas. He is the ears and voice for customers. Some of the highlights of the show include: Google tackles everything in an open source way: Shipping feedback, iteration, and building communities Storytelling - the Tale of Kubernetes: in a short period of time, gone from being open source that Google spearheaded to something sweeping the industry Rise of containerization inside Linux Kernel is an opportunity for Google to share container management technology and philosophy with the world Google Next: Knative journey toward lighter-weight serverless-based applications; and GKE On-Prem, customers and teams working with Kubernetes running on premise Innovation: When logging into GCP console, you can terminate all billable resources assigned to project and access tab for building by hand GCP's console development strategy includes hard work on documentation, making things easy to use, and building thoughtfulness in grouping services Google is about design goals, tradeoffs, and metrics; it’s about hyper scale and global footprint of requirements, as well as supporting every developer Conception 1: Google builds HyperScale Reid-Centric user partitioned apps and don't build globally consistent data driven apps Conception 2: Software engineers at the top Internet companies do the code and write amazing things instantly 12-Factor App: Opinions of how to architect apps; developers should have choices, but take away some cognitive and operating load complexity Businesses are running core workloads on Google, which had to put atomic clocks in data centers and private fiber networking to make it all work Perception that Google focuses on new things, rather than supporting what's been released; industry is on a treadmill chasing shiny things and creating noise Industry needs to be welcoming and inclusive; a demand for software, apps, and innovation, but number of developers remains because everyone’s not included Human vs. Technology: More investment and easier onboarding with technology and an obligation to build local communities Goal: Take database complexity and start removing it for lots of use cases and simplify things for users to deal with replication, charting, and consistency issues DevFest: Google has about 800 Google developer groups that do a lot of things to build local communities and write code together Links: Adam Seligman on Twitter 12-Factor App I Want to Build a World Spanning Search Engine on Top of GCP DevFest Kubernetes Docker Heroku Google Next Google Reader
This week we learn about how Mercari is handling migrating from an on-prem monolithic infrastructure to cloud microservices architecture with GKE. Terry and Taichi share with Melanie and Mark what drove the decision for the change, the challenges and what the team has learned from the transition. The real value for this change has been about making the platform more scalable as they grow to meet the needs of their millions of daily active users. It’s another great interview we captured out of Google NEXT. Taichi Nakashima Taichi is a tech lead for the microservices platform at Mercari. Prior to Mercari, he was a backend engineer at Rakuten, building internal Platform as a Service. Mercari chose microservice architecture as their next development platform, and built two teams to proceed with the migration. One is the microservice platform team that is building a platform that can deploy any microservices, and the other is the microservice development team that are focusing on migrating the current monolithic API to microservices. Mercari use GKE as a platform and GCP as the main infrastructure for microservices. Tonghui (Terry) Li Tonghui joined Mercari in April 2018 and is responsible for migrating the monolithic backend API to a microservice architecture. Prior to Mercari, he was a tech lead of Indeed, working on different components of the job search engine including Title Normalization, Location system, Job Search API, and more. Cool things of the week How to call the Cloud AutoML API from a web app site GCPPodcast Episode 108: Launchpad Studio with Malika Cantor and Peter Norvig site Who is this street artist? Building a graffiti artist classifier using AutoML blog Datastore Transactions, Batches and Perf! video and twitter Deploy only what you trust: introducing Binary Authorization for Google Kubernetes Engine blog Interview Mercari site Microservices on GKE at Mercari site Continuous Delivery for Microservices with Spinnaker at Mercari site Microservices site GKE site Terraform site Spinnaker site GKE On-Prem site GKE On-Prem - Managing Across Hybrid IT Environments with Open Architectures (Cloud Next ‘18) video Mercari on GitHub site BigQuery site Mercari Engineering Blog blog kubectl site Google Cloud AutoML site Photo credit: Taichi Nakashima Question of the week How do I use my existing identity management system with Google Cloud Platform? site and blog Where can you find us next? Mark is at Pax Dev and Pax West. Find him and say hi. In September, Mark will be at Tokyo NEXT and Melanie will be at Deep Learning Indaba. You can find both of us at Strangeloop.
Neste episódio comentamos um pouco sobre o lançamento do GKE On-Prem que você pode ter mais detalhes aqui. Conversamos ainda sobre integrações do kubernetes com outros sistemas, que trazem novos poderes ao seu orquestrador já tão amado e que podem lhe auxiliar na resolução daquelas necessidades de sua aplicação, desde o já tão utilizado PVC até sistemas de monitoramento ou mesmo um service mesh. Citamos ainda o CSI, que virou imagem tema de nosso kubicast mas que na real estávamos falando deste aqui. E falamos ainda de integrações de segurança como o Clair. Nas recomendações da semana temos: Talita: Indicando o vídeo de zygmunt bauman João: Indicando mais hamburger no General Prime Burguer! Diogo: Indicando em meio a alguns esquecimentos e lembranças assista um filme antigo como ele que assistiu Missão Impossível - Gost Protocol e o inigualável TOP Gun. Até a próxima! o/
Let’s talk container security! This week, Melanie and Mark learn all about the three main pillars of container security and more with our guest, Maya Kaczorowski. Maya Kaczorowski Maya is a Product Manager in Security & Privacy at Google, focused on container security. She previously worked on encryption at rest and encryption key management. Prior to Google, she was an Engagement Manager at McKinsey & Company, working in IT security for large enterprises and before that, completed her Master’s in mathematics focusing on cryptography and game theory. She is bilingual in English and French. Cool things of the week What a week! 105 announcements from Google Cloud Next ‘18 blog Keynotes, Keynote Fireside Chats, & Spotlight Sessions: Google Cloud Next ‘18 videos All Sessions: Google Cloud Next ‘18 videos Sign up for NEXT ‘19 updates site GKE On-Prem site Edge TPU site Interview Def Con site Black Hat site BSides Las Vegas site Cloud KMS site Kubernetes site GCPPodcast Episode 46: Borg and Kubernetes with John Wilkes podcast Large-scale cluster management at Google with Borg research Open-sourcing gVisor, a sandboxed container runtime blog Kata Containers site Nabla Containers site Google Container Registry site GKE security overview doc KubeCon site Container security blog series blog GKE hardening guide doc Seccompsandbox wiki Docker seccomp profile site Using RBAC in Kubernetes blog Terraform site Helm site Google Container Registry: Getting Image Vulnerabilities doc Container security overview site GCPPodcast Episode 110: CPU Vulnerability Security with Matt Linton and Paul Turner podcast Question of the week How do I setup SSL termination on Kubernetes with Let’s Encrypt? GitHub: Tutorial for installing cert-manager to get HTTPS certificates from Let’s Encrypt site Ahmet Alp Balkan, DPE on Google Cloud Where can you find us next? Mark will be at Pax Dev and Pax West starting August 28th. Melanie will be at the 2018 Nuclear Innovation Bootcamp at Berkeley on August 6th.
"Harness that peer pressure for good” This week we cover all the important announcements from the Google Next conference including: GKE On-Prem, Knative and “serverless containers.” Plus, an important parenting discussion on tying shoes. Relevant to your interests Google Next GKE On-Prem | Google Cloud (https://cloud.google.com/gke-on-prem/) Google answers 'Why Google Cloud?' with services and spectacle (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/07/24/google_cloud_next/) Knative Enables Portable Serverless Platforms on Kubernetes, for Any Cloud (https://thenewstack.io/knative-enables-portable-serverless-platforms-on-kubernetes-for-any-cloud/) IBM, Google Give Birth to Knative Serverless Cloud Project (http://www.eweek.com/development/ibm-google-give-birth-to-knative-serverless-cloud-project) Google’s Cloud Functions serverless platform is now generally available (https://techcrunch.com/2018/07/24/googles-cloud-functions-serverless-platform-is-now-generally-available/) Google announces Cloud Build, its new continuous integration/continuous delivery platform (https://techcrunch.com/2018/07/24/google-announces-cloud-build-its-new-continuous-integration-continuous-delivery-platform/) Google CEO confirms Target as big cloud customer, continuing retail moves toward AWS competitors (https://www.geekwire.com/2018/google-ceo-confirms-target-big-cloud-customer-continuing-retail-defections-aws/) Portable Cloud Programming with Go Cloud (https://blog.golang.org/go-cloud) (Supports AWS and GCP) Matt’s skeptical https://deltacloud.apache.org/ https://libcloud.apache.org/ https://github.com/fog/fog Bonkers Azure bookings give Microsoft a record-breaking $110bn year (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/07/19/microsoft_huge_2018_q4/) Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Twitter unite to simplify data transfers (https://www.engadget.com/2018/07/20/google-facebook-microsoft-data-transfer-project/) IBM stock rises after earnings beat (https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/18/ibm-earnings-q2-2018.html) SolarWinds | SolarWinds Acquires Trusted Metrics (https://www.solarwinds.com/company/press-releases/2018-q3/solarwinds-acquires-trusted-metrics?mc_cid=8b3259d8a3&mc_eid=825c180d0b) Cisco, networking stocks drop on a report Amazon Web Services is considering selling network devices (https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2018/07/13/aws-network-devices-report-cisco-juniper-fall.html) Exclusive: Apple to deploy 1Password to all 123,000 employees, acquisition talks underway (https://www.google.com/amp/s/bgr.com/2018/07/10/apple-1password-acquisition-deal/amp/) Amazon Web Services crosses the $6 billion mark in quarterly revenue, up 49 percent (https://www.geekwire.com/2018/amazon-web-services-crosses-6-billion-mark-quarterly-revenue-49-percent/') Sponsored by Datadog This episode is sponsored by Datadog, a monitoring platform for cloud-scale infrastructure and applications. Built by engineers, for engineers, Datadog provides visibility into more than 200 technologies, including AWS, Chef, and Docker with built-in metric dashboards and automated alerts. With end-to-end request tracing, Datadog provides visibility into your applications and their underlying infrastructure—all in one place. Sign up for a free trial (https://www.datadoghq.com/ts/tshirt-landingpage/?utm_source=Advertisement&utm_medium=Advertisement&utm_campaign=SoftwareDefinedTalkRead-Tshirt) at www.datadog.com/sdt (http://www.datadog.com/sdt) This week DataDog is pleased to announce that Datadog APM has officially released support for monitoring Node.js applications, which joins our existing support for Java, Ruby, Python and Go. Read their announcement blog. (https://www.datadoghq.com/blog/node-monitoring-apm/) Important nonsense I got the beer you asked for (https://reddit.app.link/lNcM81P9BO) Conferences, et. al. Sep 24th to 27th - SpringOne Platform (https://springoneplatform.io/), in DC/Maryland (crabs!) get $200 off registration with the code S1P200_Cote. Also, check out the Spring One Tour - coming to a city near you (https://springonetour.io/)! SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Buy some t-shirts (https://fsgprints.myshopify.com/collections/software-defined-talk)! DISCOUNT CODE: SDTFSG (40% off) Send your name and address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you a sticker. Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Recommendations Brandon: The Sinner (http://www.usanetwork.com/thesinner/blog/season-1-of-the-sinner-streaming-on-netflix) on Netflix Home Depot text message shortcut: Text the this message “121 hammer” to 24564 and you will get a link to the a map of the store showing the section for hammers. Replace "121” with the store number you are in and replace “hammer” with the item you are searching for to make new queries. You will likely have to ask a Home Depot Associate what the store number is or find it online. This is an internal tool used by Home Depot Associates to find stuff when customers ask them. Matt: https://www.synology.com/en-global/products/RT2600ac https://pqrs.org/osx/karabiner/ photo credit (https://www.flickr.com/photos/chefranden/241215585/in/photolist-ehUp3w-7SxrtA-njhZp-573GUS-cCYit-bDSQx-f6dDAs-23pXxU7-f6dyqQ-2FeTSt-6gt5NM-3KqSC-8sJDib-2SENLL-jUSMBZ-9Ftikz-f6dCd5-HSmQ1-f6dAco-87rJB2-f6do9Y-f6dqUS-f6dmaC-f5Y9Kn-f6dshY/)
Show: 43Show Overview: Brian and Tyler talk about Kubernetes 3rd Anniversary, Istio, Knative, and the Kubernetes-related announcements from GoogleNEXT2018. Show Notes:Kubernetes 3rd Anniversary Google Cloud Services Platform (GCSP) - Hybrid and Multi-cloud application development stack, built on Kubernetes and Istio - custom-configured, enterprise-hardened, and delivered by Google.GKE On-Prem - A core component of CSP, with GKE On-Prem, customers get the Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) experience in their data center. The first private cloud option for deployment is vSphere 6.5 in alpha release this fall and Google will continue to look at the hardware and other virtualization environments. In a parallel statement, Cisco Hybrid Cloud for Google Cloud will be the first GKE-certified hybrid cloud platform, although any direct relationship to GKE On-prem is unclear.Project Knative - (Knative on Github) it provides fundamental building blocks for serverless workloads in Kubernetes, empowering the creation of modern, container-based and cloud-native applications which can be deployed anywhere on Kubernetes. OpenShift + Knative (blog).Istio 1.0 - Istio service mesh is now version 1.0, and available as a managed add-on to GKE, as well as being integrated into Google Stackdriver. PodCTL #23 - Microservices with IstioGoogle Cloud Platform Marketplace (pre-announced) - Marketplace of packaged applications to run on GCP and Google Cloud services (e.g. Kubernetes) GKE Serverless Containers Add-On - Similar to AWS Fargate, Google announced an early-trial serverless infrastructure option to GKE , simplifying infrastructure operations management. Feedback?Email: PodCTL at gmail dot comTwitter: @PodCTLWeb: http://podctl.com
Day two of NEXT was another day full of interesting interviews! Melanie and Mark sat down for quick chats with Haben Girma about accessibility in tech and Paresh Kharya to talk about NVIDIA. Next, we touched base with Amruta Gulanikar and Simon Zeltser to learn more about Windows SQL Server and .NET workloads on Google Cloud. The interviews wrap up with Henry Hsu & Isaac Wong of Holberton. Haben Girma The first Deafblind person to graduate from Harvard Law School, Haben Girma advocates for equal opportunities for people with disabilities. President Obama named her a White House Champion of Change. She received the Helen Keller Achievement Award, and a spot on Forbes 30 Under 30. Haben travels the world consulting and public speaking, teaching clients the benefits of fully accessible products and services. She’s a talented storyteller who helps people frame difference as an asset. She resisted society’s low expectations, choosing to create her own pioneering story. Haben is working on a book that will be published by Hachette in 2019. Paresh Kharya Paresh Kharya is Group Product Marketing Manager for data center products at NVIDIA responsible for product marketing of NVIDIA’s Tesla accelerated computing platform. Previously, Paresh held a variety of business roles in the high-tech industry, including group product manager at Adobe and business development manager at Tech Mahindra. Paresh has an MBA from the Indian Institute of Management and a bachelors of computer science and engineering from the National Institute of Technology, India. Amruta Gulanikar & Simon Zeltser Prior to joining Google Amruta spent 5+ years as a PM in the Office division at Microsoft working on many different products. Just before she left, she worked on launching a new service and supporting apps - “O365 Planner” which offers people a simple and visual way to organize teamwork. At Google, Amruta owns Windows on GCE which includes support for premium OS & Microsoft Server product images, platform improvements to support Windows workloads on GCE. Simon Zeltser is a Developer Programs Engineer at Google, working with .NET and Windows on Google Cloud Platform. Henry Hsu & Isaac Wong Henry Hsu is a software engineer trained at Holberton School. He has experience with C, C++, Python, Ruby/Rails, JavaScript, HTML/CSS, MySQL/Postgres, Unity, Game Maker Studio, Linux, Photoshop, 3D Studio Max, systems design, algorithms, and devops. Isaac Wong attends the Holberton School. He has a degree in horticulture from Texas A&M. Interviews Edge TPU site Cloud IoT Edge site Cloud Armor site Titan Security Key site Building on our cloud security leadership to help keep businesses protected blog Google Cloud Container Registry site Haben Girma’s website site Haben Girma’s presentation at NEXT video San Francisco Lighthouse for the Blind site National Federation of the Blind site National Association of the Deaf site NVIDIA site NVIDIA and Google Cloud Platform site Google Cloud Platform Podcast Episode 119 podcast Velostrata site GKE site Google App Engine site Stackdriver Debugger site Windows on Google Cloud Platform site SQL Server on Google Cloud Platform site .NET on Google Cloud Platform site Holberton School site Unity site GKE On-Prem site TensorFlow site Where can you find us next? We’ll both be at Cloud NEXT in Moscone West on the first floor, so come by and say hi! We have chocolate!
On this very special episode of the Google Cloud Platform Podcast, we have live interviews from the first day of NEXT! Melanie and Mark had the chance to chat with Melody MeckFessel, VP of Engineering at Google Cloud and Pavan Srivastava of Deloitte. Next we spoke with Sandeep Dinesh about Open Service Broker and Raejeanne Skillern of Intel. Melody Meckfessel Melody Meckfessel is a hands-on technology leader with more than 20 years experience building and maintaining large-scale distributed systems and solving problems at scale. As VP of Engineering, she leads the team building DevOps tools and sharing DevOps best practices across Google and with software development and operations teams around the world. Her team powers the world’s most advanced continuously delivered software, enabling development teams to turn ideas into reliable, scalable production systems. After graduating from UC Berkeley, Melody programmed for startups and enterprise companies. Since joining Google in 2004, Melody has led teams in Google’s core search systems, search quality and cluster management. Melody is passionate about making software development fast, scalable and fun. Pavan Srivastava Pavan is a technology leader with 20 years of experience in developing strategies and implementation of SAP focused technology solutions. Pavan leads Deloitte’s SAP technology capability that focuses on helping clients adopt innovative technology solutions such as cloud and SAP HANA to improve business efficiencies. Pavan has led several engagements helping clients develop strategy, architecture and implement SAP on the cloud and SAP HANA platform. Sandeep Dinesh Sandeep Dinesh is a Developer Advocate for Google Cloud. He blends and creates new opportunities for businesses and people by leveraging the best technology possible. Raejeanne Skillern Raejeanne Skillern is the VP of Data Center and General Manager of Intel’s cloud service provider (CSP) business. Her goal is to make it easier, more cost-effective and more efficient for CSPs to build new infrastructure and services. She is privileged to lead an exceptional team that manages Intel’s business, products and technologies for cloud infrastructure deployments and works closely with the world’s largest cloud providers to ensure Intel’s data center products are optimized for their unique needs. Interviews Cloud AutoML site GKE On-Prem site Melody Meckfessel’s Speaking Schedule at NEXT site DevOps site Google Open Source site Cloud Build site Spinnaker site Kubernetes site Stackdriver site Application Performance Management site OpenCensus site Deloitte site SAP site Deloitte and Google Cloud blog Google Cloud Platform Service Broker site Open Service Broker site Pub/Sub site Cloud Spanner site Intel Cloud Computing site Intel Xeon site Intel Optane DC Persistent Memory site Partnering with Intel and SAP on Intel Optane DC Persistent Memory for SAP HANA blog Where can you find us next? We’ll both be at Cloud NEXT in Moscone West on the first floor! Come by and say hi!
Learn about the announcements from Google Cloud Next, including GKE On-Prem, Cloud Services Platform, and Istio 1.0. Google’s product management lead for Kubernetes and CNCF governing board member Aparna Sinha joins Adam and Craig to discuss what’s new. Do you have something cool to share? Some questions? Let us know: web: kubernetespodcast.com mail: kubernetespodcast@google.com twitter: @kubernetespod News of the week Rugby Sevens World Cup Kubernetes wins the OSCON award for most impactful Open Source project When Does Kubernetes Become Invisible And Ubiquitous? Links from the interview Aparna Sinha on Twitter Google Power Women Of The Cloud Cloud Services Platform: Launch blog Web site GKE On-Prem Knative Cloud Build Bringing the best of serverless to you Next OnAir