I feel extremely proud of what we accomplished at CoreOS. We changed the way the web works in our own unique way. I’ll forever be grateful for our community, customers, and team. Today is my last day at CoreOS and Red Hat. Not sure what is next, but this will be hard to top!
This is how we’re bringing @CoreOS tech to @RedHat – learn about what’s next for OpenShift, the open source #Kubernetes community, Quay, and more https://t.co/rbcKe3UjjT
Introducing the Vault Operator, an open source tool to streamline installing, managing, and maintaining instances of Vault on #Kubernetes https://t.co/xkwUr6TNfr
Big news: CoreOS agrees to join Red Hat! This powerful combination of our companies is aimed at making important #containers and distributed systems technology ubiquitous in business, as well as the world. https://t.co/QCo4GA6ZaM
I'd love to see the cloud providers work together to invest in a widely deployed open x86 chipset design (given Meltdown/Spectre). They have the talent, scale, and resources to pull it off. /cc @googlecloud@awscloud@Azure
Here is an idea I've been thinking about to make it easier to build custom controllers and operators for kubernetes. Would this be useful to the k8s community? Is anyone working on something like this? https://t.co/O5GmRSbCHy /cc @kelseyhightower@brendandburns
Extremely proud of our team for helping get a stable fix for Meltdown into the upstream Linux kernel AND then propagating the patch automatically to Container Linux users. These situations are exactly the reason automated operations are key to security.
https://t.co/xViukP7eVg
Tectonic 1.8, the enterprise #Kubernetes platform, is now available! Try the industry-first features like Open Cloud Services for #etcd, @Prometheusio and Vault, free up to 10 nodes https://t.co/vtvctOEI2B
@johnolilly Thanks. So as a practical example: An ISP could make more money (with fast lanes, or whatever), therefore creating more market, thus more opportunity for new ISPs and that further choice for end users?
Just for the sake of having a complete understanding of the issue, has anyone heard a solid argument for how lower regulation (i.e. no net neutrality) on the internet will help it be more free?