The New Stack Analysts show

The New Stack Analysts

Summary: Alex Williams, founder of The New Stack, hosts "The New Stack Analysts," a biweekly round-table discussion covering The New Stack's latest data research, and topics related to app development and back-end services. Listen to our other TNS Podcasts on SoundCloud: The New Stack Makers: https://soundcloud.com/thenewstackmakers The New Stack Context: https://soundcloud.com/thenewstackcontext The New Stack @ Scale: https://soundcloud.com/thenewstackatscale

Join Now to Subscribe to this Podcast

Podcasts:

 #169: Red Hat-IBM Acquisition - Clash of Cultures or Best of Both Worlds? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:33:46

Red Hat’s acquisition by IBM has been the biggest story of the year, dwarfing Microsoft’s acquisition of GitHub. But the acquisition has been notable for many reasons, one of them is that this is 3rd largest IT acquisition after Broadcom and Dell-EMC. New Stack Founder & Editor-in-Chief, Alex Williams sat down with Lauren Cooney, Founder & CEO, Spark Labs, Tyler Jewell, CEO, WSO2 and Chris Aniszczyk, CNCF CTO/COO, to discuss the repercussions of this acquisition. The core points discussed included the impact on the market, the impact on open source contribution made by Red Hat, the impact on the culture within Red Hat and the possible clash between the product teams of both companies fighting over the same client. But when companies bring two different cultures together, things could go wrong.

 #168: Cutting Through the Daze and Confusion of Cloud Native DevOps | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:39:53

Successful cloud native deployments largely hinge on DevOps’ ability to break down silos and other inter-organizational barriers by directly engaging all stakeholders, including business teams, developers, operations and other otherwise separate groups throughout the entire process. But aside from the general description, DevOps can mean a lot of different things to many different people. In some extreme cases, DevOps’ role in cloud native development and operations might just represent a job ticket for some organizations, such as when a developer discovers a security vulnerability in an application’s code in a cloud native deployment. He or she then merely delegates fixing the security hole to an on-staff security staff while their responsibility ends there. What Cloud Native DevOps really means, as well as its future, was a main theme of this podcast, hosted by The New Stack Editor-In-Chief Alex Williams during The New Stack pancake breakfast held during Cloud Foundry Summit Europe 2018. Devin Davis, vice president, marketing, for the Cloud Foundry Foundation, served as the co-host. The panel consisted of the following guests: Abby Kearns, executive director, the Cloud Foundry Foundation; Chisara Nwabara, technical program manager, Pivotal software; Dieu Cao, director of product management, Pivotal software; Frederic Lardinois, analyst and journalist, TechCrunch; Julian Friedman, the Cloud Foundry project lead, IBM. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/QXL0urTSN88

 #167: The Widening Gap Between Serverless and Kubernetes | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:44:24

The divide continues to grow between people developing serverless technologies and those in DevOps roles building, deploying, and managing Kubernetes. "Questions about serverless approaches and Kubernetes don't really come up with developers," said Timirah James, a developer advocate with Cloudinary on today’s episode of The New Stack Analysts podcast. James joined TNS founder Alex Williams and Analyst/Co-Host Klint Finley, contributor at WIRED, to discuss how organizations and developers both can help bridge this gap. Detailing her experience at Notre Dame University in Belmont, California, James noted that, "If you're pursuing education in this field and trying to go to college for it, if you're trying to go to college for anything, you want to make sure you're attending an institution that has a network, community, and foundation around what you're studying. Especially something as niche as Computer Science."

 #166: Anne Currie of Container Solutions Talks Ethics | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:31:31

Anne Currie Chief Strategist, Container Solutions, has been thinking about some of the deeper questions the software industry poses. These questions aren't just about interconnected systems, and the repercussions of everyone having access to the Internet. Rather, they're about the moral and ethical obligations faced by software developers. Are developers responsible for the things done with their software? In a recent StackOverflow survey, most developers said "No." "My job is to go out and talk to a load of people about what they're doing. I go out and talk to a lot of industry, enterprise folks, building thigns, finding out what's happening. What's become clear is that over the past couple of years we have enormously increased the speed with which we can get products to market and ideas to market by three orders of magnitude. It's actually quite astonishing. When people start to use the new DevOps technologies and cloud all together, and CI/CD, and everything that's coming through at the moment in DevOps, they're aim is to get ideas from basically developers typing into a keyboard out to customers incredibly fast. It's more like fifteen minutes as opposed to six months. Three years ago it was six months. Now it's fifteen minutes if you're really advanced with using DevOps technology, which, eventually, all of us will be," said Currie.

 #165: Discussing Blockchain with Wired, Hyperledger, and IBM | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:26:30

Blockchain has finally gotten over the Wall Street hump. Now that BitCoin and Ethereum are essentially old news, the actual technology behind these commodities is beginning to trickle into real world enterprise applications. Blockchain, it seems, has many useful use cases out there in the business world, and with the help of the Linux Foundation and IBM, enterprises can now take advantage of the open source Hyperledger implementation of blockchain technology. On today's episode of The New Stack Analysts recorded live at OSCON 2018, Klint Finley, Reporter with Wired and the author of the Wired Guide to Blockchain, said that he had a few real and hypothetical use cases the piece he wrote a few months ago. One of those use cases was that of, "Blockchain feels like the thing that is the most hard to parse the value out of the hype. With cloud computing it was clearly an enormously hyped concept, but there were use cases and benefits. With big data it was coming out of actual real use cases at places like Google and Yahoo! With the Internet of Things, that's probably the least well established of those at this point, but there are still established use cases for that. With Blockchain it feels really preliminary," said Finley.

 #164: Discussing Serverless with Symphonia.io and Serverless Inc. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:26:59

Serverless computing and functions as a service are both growing in appeal for enterprises, but there are still many questions about how they fit into a standard business environment. For a start, how do you manage your dependencies in a serverless environment? How are applications, themselves, tracked and managed over time? And how do the various serverless and fucntions-as-a-service offerings handle in real world enterprise use cases? To find the answers to these questions and more, we sat down with Mike Roberts, partner at Symphonia.io and Austen Collins, Founder and CEO of Serverless, Inc. Together, they've got front row seats into how business application developers and administrators are utilizing serverless technologies today. One of the big topics of discussion, however, still focuses on where these functions will live: in the cloud, or in Kubernetes?

 #163: Tackling Operational Serverless and Cross-Cloud Compatibility | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:35:53

Serverless compute sounds like heaven, but without the right mindset it can be hell. Between the constraints placed on serverless environments by cloud providers, the potential for proliferation of applications and variations of versions, and the general mind shift required to build for serverless, the shift to cloud functions isn't something that just happens overnight. "The interesting thing about serverless platforms is they are a constrained execution environment, which is a good thing. It means that the cloud vendor can provide capabilities for customers at a fraction of the cost of what they were if they were fully customizable... The problem is, as these platforms are still maturing, they are necessarily constrained in what kind of execution they will allow. For instance, most of them don't let you run for more than five or ten minutes... The challenge is, what if you can't run in that uniform environment? This is where containers come into play," said  Donna Malayeri, Product Manager at Pulumi. "OK, we're going to write some functions, but how do we deal with our data? We have 14 petabytes of data and we can't just whimsically move it somewhere. So, introducing more environment control from that perspective is kind of a big deal to me. I keep running into these scenarios, and a lot of the times it's still a big question mark. What are we going to do? We started to build on this new serverless architecture, but we still have huge data problems," said Adron Hall, of Thrashing Code.

 #162: Serverless, Containers and Application Operations | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:35:01

Serverless, containers? The debate doesn't matter for customers coming to ioPipe, says Erica Windisch, founder and CTO of ioPipe. Their customers have already decided to adopt or even further adopt serverless architectures. They are not talking about containers or Kuberbetes. Her comments speak to a deeper discussion about the role of container and serverless architectures that TNS Analysts Guest Host Adron Hall addresses in discussing the larger picture about the decisions any company is trying to make now. "I have been hearing more about trying to run Open FaaS in Kubernetes, which is an interesting take on the whole situation," said Hall. Full cloud services offer it all but there are also applications running on bare metal, others in VMs, across a heterogeneous infrastructure and hybrid/CDN-style hosts. It's a deeper discussion that will help me at least think of guide posts as we talk to more people who are making decisions about serverless or not. It may all come down to what Windisch describes as "application operations."

 #161: Pancakes At Kubecon + CloudNativeCon EU: All About SPIFFE And SPIRE | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:48:23

To do cloud-native computing, you need to identify all your workloads, and, more importantly, they need the ability to identify each other, so they can work together in automated chains. To aid in this task, the Cloud Native Computing Foundation has adopted the open source SPIFFE specification, and its associated SPIRE runtime. SPIFFE provides a standard for securely identifying software components in heterogeneous IT systems and SPIRE is the engine that can make it happen (and, in this setup,  CNCF's Open Policy Agent [OPA] can enforce the authorization duties). If you feel all this is a bit much to take in, then you are not alone.  For our latest "pancakes and podcast" edition of the The New Stack Analysts — recorded live at the Kubecon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2018 on May 3 — we focused our panel discussion on SPIFFE, and the room was filled with those curious about this topic (and/or hungry for delicious pancakes). Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/lO7CZZVGRz4

 #160: Cloud Foundry Summit Pancake Breakfast Podcast: Containerzing Cloud Foundry | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:45:50

For this latest edition of The New Stack Analysts, we took our pancakes and our podcast equipment to Boston, for the Cloud Foundry Summit in Boston, for a wide ranging discussion on Cloud Foundry, cloud-native computing and Kubernetes. Hosted by TNS founder Alex Williams, with TNS managing editor Joab Jackson, our panel consisted of: Frederic Lardinois, reporter for TechCrunch. Abby Kerns, executive director for Cloud Foundry Foundation. Chen Goldberg, engineering director for Google. Jennifer Kotzen, senior product manager for SUSE. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/ekBh7_9ZVYA

 #159: The Cloud Native Market's Open Source Economic Realities | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:41:08

How venture capitalists and technologists view the cloud-native technology space is the subject matter for this episode of The New Stack Analysts. It’s getting to the point that service level agreements pretty much don’t allow access to source code unless it’s open source. To Lightstep Co-Founder Ben Sigelman that pretty much means that open-source code is now part of business and it’s a matter of developing the code into stadard techologies that may be used by all. Sigleman was joined by RedPoint Venture Capital’s Astasia Myers and Scott Raney who say there is no way to attack the infrastructure layer market unless you have a core belief in the role of open source. RedPoint is a co-author of the cloud native landscape run in conjunction with the Cloud Native Computing Foundation.

 #158: Exploring Kubernetes Abstractions | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:42:47

On today's episode of The New Stack Analysts, TNS Founder Alex Williams, TNS Correspondent TC Curie, and  Janakiram MSV, Principal Analyst at Janakiram & Associates were joined by Heptio Co-Founder and CTO and Kubernetes co-founder Joe Beda, alongside Sebastien Goasguen, Kubernetes Tech Lead at Bitnami. The discussion this week centered around the many abstractions available to developers working with Kubernetes, and how these impact developer teams both large and small. “What I’m seeing is there is this full effort to bring in another abstraction layer on top of Kubernetes to encourage users, beginners, and even large enterprise IT teams to target Kubernetes without understanding the nuts and bolts of Kubernetes certificates," said MSV.

 #157: The Monkigras Conference: What it Takes to Make the Magic Things | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:34:27

The concepts of craft and how it applies to software development is quite relevant but at times contradictory.  Technologists aspire to make great tools and services that reflect their attention and passion for making things but paradoxically we also face a culture with values based upon speed and the mass consumption of resources. How craft relate to the way we work and how is it relevant in a culture that puts such a premium on speed and consumption is what we discuss in this episode of The New Stack Analysts with RedMonk Co-Founder James Governor and Charity Majors, Honeycomb.io co-founder and CEO. It's also a core theme for Monkigras, the conference in London that Governor is hosting this week and where Majors is one of the speakers. It's this idea of sustainable craft that Governor is building as a core theme of Monkigras. The conference will put an emphasis on "topics such as apprenticeship, community management, writing sustainable documentation, software archaeology, sustainable open source, hop farming, and typefaces."

 #156: Setting Core Values for the IT Industry | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:44:19

In the second instalment of our podcasts on Values and how they affect workplace culture, Alex Williams and TC Currie from The New Stack are joined by Sam Ramji, VP Product Management at Google, Daniel Lopez Ridruejo, CEO Bitnami; Chris Brandon, CEO, StorageOS and Dave McCrory, VP of Software Engineering at GE Digital. Their companies range in size from seventeen employees to many thousands, but the need for consistent values across the company, no matter its size, is universal. “What we’ve found at The New Stack,” said Williams, “is it all comes down to trust, respect, and integrity.” Google’s mission, said Ramji, “is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and universally useful.” This core value is overlaid at the engineering level with the focus of “How are we doing this at the next order of magnitude?” As a company, they are working on how to provide engineers with a level of empathy for individual engineers. Listen to part one of our miniseries on Values at: https://soundcloud.com/thenewstackanalysts/154-how-do-values-affect-software-companies

 #155: Running Mesos Application Frameworks On Kubernetes With The Universal Resource Broker | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:37:45

In this livestream from KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 2017, The New Stack Analysts will take a deep dive into Univa’s Universal Resource Broker (URB). We learned how this open source adapter allows Kubernetes and Mesos workloads to run on the same infrastructure, where TNS Founder Alex Williams was joined by Univa Corporation CTO and Business Developer Fritz Ferstl, and Thrashing Code Software Architect Adron Hall. "I know a lot of groups want to containerise [their applications]. Bring over the modularisation and isolation without worrying about the 30 year old hardware that it runs on," said Hall. Ferstl added that people running Kubernetes rather than Mesos may look at it and say, "There is something useful there, I can work with that, rather than try to force code into Kubernetes, I can take something like the URB that just runs it." Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/sIkzQC9DOSc

Comments

Login or signup comment.