Wednesday, November 23, 2022

Developer Data Platforms

Andrew Davidson (SVP Products, @MongoDB) talks about MongoDB's evolution from a software company to a cloud services company (MongoDB Atlas), how developers traditionally interacted with databases, and the need for Developer Data Platforms going forward.

SHOW: 671

CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotw

CHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"

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SHOW NOTES:

Topic 1 - Welcome to the show. Let’s talk about your background, and what you focus on at MongoDB.

Topic 2 - Data is a weird beast. It’s cheap to create, it’s expensive to move, and it’s complicated to use because there’s so many ways to interact with it depending on the use-case. So for someone that thinks about data a lot, how do you frame up the challenges of how applications interact with data?   

Topic 3 - People tend to think about MongoDB as a database company, and then a Cloud database company. What did the company learn as it moved to the cloud, as a lot of barriers for developers got knocked down in that transition? 

Topic 4 - As a developer today, do I still need to think about the relationship between the underlying data and the database access model needed to make that useful to an application, or are any of those lines blurring or going away?

Topic 5 - Databases have traditionally followed the CAP theorem, and different choices have different strengths and tradeoffs. As you start to think about this concept of developer data platform, how do you try and reframe those tradeoffs? Do any of them go away?   

Topic 6 - What are some examples of how companies and their developers are able to think differently about how their new applications can be built with this new platform approach to data?

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Sunday, November 20, 2022

API First, Lifecycles and Governance

Kin Lane (@kinlane, Founder API Evangelist  & Chief Evangelist @Postman) talks about getting started with APIs. We also cover API lifecycle & governance.

SHOW: 670

CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotw

CHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"

SHOW SPONSORS:

  • Granulate, an Intel company - Autonomous, continuous, workload optimization
  • gProfiler from Granulate - Reduce Kubernetes costs by up to 60%
  • CDN77 - Content Delivery Network Optimized for Video
  • 85% of users stop watching a video because of stalling and rebuffering. Rely on CDN77 to deliver a seamless online experience to your audience. Ask for a free trial with no duration or traffic limits.
  • JetBrains Datalore: Collaborative data science for your whole organization
  • Enhance your core data team’s performance by bringing real-time collaboration, a first-class coding experience, and no-code automations to Jupyter notebooks. Make conversation with business stakeholders easy through the sharing of interactive data apps. Start for free at datalore.team/cloudcast.

SHOW NOTES:

Topic 1 - Kin, for those out there that maybe haven’t heard of you, give everyone a brief introduction.

Topic 2 - You’ve been doing APIs since before APIs were cool. You started the API evangelist site 12 years ago. Tell us about that journey. As a follow up, how do new folks get started?

Topic 3 - As you mention on the API Evangelist website. APIs are more than technology. The headline of the website is “making sense of the technology, business, and politics of APIs since 2010. What do you mean by that? How does business and politics come into play with APIs.

Topic 4 - We often hear the phrases Cloud First and API First thrown around. What does that mean? Also, help everyone out with terminology differences between say Open API, GraphQL, etc.

Topic 5 - Follow up to API First question. Let’s talk about API First companies, we often hear about the poster children: Twilio, Stripe, and SendGrid for instance. Are they still valid examples? Who are the latest examples and use cases? 

Topic 6 - Let’s talk about API Lifecycles and dig into Postman a bit. We’ve reached a point in our industry that APIs are treated like a product, have PM and full development teams, and just like any product or service a company would produce. What are the typical steps you see and how does Postman help with this journey? 

Topic 7 - You are active in API research, publishing of articles and research around APIs. I noticed you have been digging into Government APIs recently for instance. Where is your focus these days and what are the latest emerging trends you are seeing?


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Wednesday, November 16, 2022

Cloud Cost Management

Kayla Taylor (Sr. Product Manager @datadoghq) talks about taking control of cloud costs and managing costs along with observability and troubleshooting.

SHOW: 669

CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotw

CHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"

SHOW SPONSORS:

SHOW NOTES:


Topic 1 - Welcome to the show. Let’s talk about your background, and what you focus on at Datadog.

Topic 2 - Cloud cost management has become a very active focus area since the economy has been slowing down. How are you seeing customers, or engineering teams thinking about cost differently than before? 

Topic 3 - Since Datadog provides so much visibility into active applications (APM, Observability, Troubleshooting), do you take a similar approach to Cost Management? 

Topic 4 - Accountants understand costs, but not technology. Engineers understand technology, but do you find that they understand costs? How do you help them conceptualize costs and be able to make changes that impact their applications? 

Topic 5 - What are some of the unique things that Datadog does with the new Cloud Cost Management offering? How does it tie into the other aspects of Datadog?

Topic 6 - The service is new, but what are some of the surprising things you’ve observed about how companies are using this insight into their cloud costs?

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Sunday, November 13, 2022

What if Twitter Goes Away?

Twitter is going through some things. For the life of The Cloudcast, it’s been our ERP, CRM, Collaboration and PR engine. What if it goes away? Are there lessons to be learned?

SHOW: 668

CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotw

CHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"

SHOW SPONSORS:

  • CDN77 - Content Delivery Network Optimized for Video
  • 85% of users stop watching a video because of stalling and rebuffering. Rely on CDN77 to deliver a seamless online experience to your audience. Ask for a free trial with no duration or traffic limits.
  • JetBrains Datalore: Collaborative data science for your whole organization
  • Enhance your core data team’s performance by bringing real-time collaboration, a first-class coding experience, and no-code automations to Jupyter notebooks. Make conversation with business stakeholders easy through the sharing of interactive data apps. Start for free at datalore.team/cloudcast.
  • Granulate, an Intel company - Autonomous, continuous, workload optimization
  • gMaestro from Granulate - Reduce Kubernetes costs by up to 60%

 

SHOW NOTES:

 

IT’S CRAZY NOW, BUT IT’S ALWAYS BEEN SORT OF CRAZY….AND USEFUL

  • Lots of apps tell you what you know, Twitter helps you find what you don’t know
  • Twitter can be real-time, or the beginning of deep-dive scrolling
  • Twitter is the most difficult to understand, but the most valuable

DEPENDENCE ON TWITTER IS MORE COMPLEX THAN A SINGLE CLOUD

  • Twitter removes the barriers of journalists, we get news and opinions and insights
  • Twitter has always given us a way to do research into new things 
  • Twitter has helped us build friendships with people we’ve never met
  • Did we make a mistake in being too reliant on Twitter? Were there other options?

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Wednesday, November 9, 2022

From Monolith to Microservice with CI/CD

Marko Anastasov (@markoa, Co-Founder Semaphore CI) talks about how to manage the evolution of monoliths to microservices using modern CI/CD.

SHOW: 667

CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotw

CHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"

SHOW SPONSORS:

SHOW NOTES:

Topic 1 - Marko, let’s start with a quick introduction. How did you get involved with SemaphoreCI?

Topic 2 - You have been working on CI/CD for 10+ years. Many listeners are familiar with the concepts of CI and CD but what brought you into the space and what are the primary benefits you see in clients you work with?

Topic 3 - We hear success stories from organizations that are doing hundreds to thousands of deployments a day (Netflix, Twitter, etc.). Many didn’t start out that way. Some didn’t even start with microservices, but started with monoliths and moved to microservices as they outgrew a monolithic architecture. Is this common?

Topic 4 - What are the tradeoffs between monoliths and microservices? Also, does the concept of a greenfield deployment vs. a brownfield deployment factor into the decision? Where does an organization start?

Topic 5 -  What are the guidelines to building a successful microservices strategy? Where do you even start to split up a monolith? Is it a line of business function, technical boundary in the application, keeping the size of the development team small?

Topic 6 -   In the journey to microservices, what are the first advantages seen? What are the first pitfalls encountered?

Topic 7 - Developers just want to go fast and automate all the things. Once a microservices strategy is built, my next thought goes to governance, compliance, security & cost. All items that keep developers from going fast. Doesn’t “shifting left” come at a price?

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Sunday, November 6, 2022

The Future of KubeCon?

Many people are asking about the future of KubeCon now that Kubernetes isn’t the central focus. How does it evolve? Is it like re:Invent or VMworld or something else? 

SHOW: 666

CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotw

CHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"

SHOW SPONSORS:

  • JetBrains Datalore: Collaborative data science for your whole organization
  • Enhance your core data team’s performance by bringing real-time collaboration, a first-class coding experience, and no-code automations to Jupyter notebooks. Make conversation with business stakeholders easy through the sharing of interactive data apps. Start for free at datalore.team/cloudcast.
  • Granulate, an Intel company - Autonomous, continuous, workload optimization
  • gProfiler from Granulate - Production profiling, made easy
  • CDN77 - Content Delivery Network Optimized for Video
  • 85% of users stop watching a video because of stalling and rebuffering. Rely on CDN77 to deliver a seamless online experience to your audience. Ask for a free trial with no duration or traffic limits.

SHOW NOTES:

 

WHAT’S THE FUTURE OF KUBECON / CLOUDNATIVECON

KubeCon feels like it’s at a cross-roads now that Kubernetes is not the central focus of the event. So where does it go from here? 

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THERE ISN’T A CENTRAL FOCUS?

  • Is it OpenStack Big Tent 2.0?
  • Is the CNCF trying to define a stack anymore, or just a governance home?
  • Is it VMworld post-2012?
  • Is it the re:Invent of Cloud-native technologies?
  • Could some company be the GTM for many of the companies at KubeCon?
  • Would it be good or bad to have individual project conferences? 
  • Are the pre-event event good or bad for people trying to learn a specific domain?

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Wednesday, November 2, 2022

Reviewing KubeCon Detroit

Aaron and Brian talk about all things KubeConNA (Detroit) 2022.

SHOW: 665

CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotw

CHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"

SHOW SPONSORS:

SHOW NOTES:

Topic 1 - Let’s start with what was good or bad at CloudNativeCon/KubeCon. Overall vibes at the conference? 

  • 7,000 attendees, 300 vendor-companies, good amount of end-users
  • Good: Well-organized, live interactions
  • Bad: City choice, keynotes, Day1 & 2 pricing models
  • Is this Big Tent 2.0? (Aaron - I don’t think so…)

Topic 2 - Interesting technologies or technology trends? 

  • Kubernetes is no longer the center of this conference
  • Service Mesh, WASM (Web Assembly), Cost-Mgmt, various forms of Security
  • Starting to see fragmentation (e.g. Cloud-Native Security is it’s own conference)

Topic 3 - Are we in a bubble? Lots of companies in each technology category? Will we see consolidation, failures or buyers? 

  • What’s the mission for CNCF - place for projects to incubate with no “horse in the race”, all areas will eventually consolidate down to a few players over time?

Topic 4 - What’s next for KubeCon? 

  • Can it survive as a big event without a central technology? 
  • Will it splinter into lots of little events?
  • Did the CNCF turn this into too much of a marketing event?
  • What’s in it for the sponsors? Especially if it splits into different events?
  • Why do they keep making bad location choices? (Amsterdam 4/20, Chicago - Nov ‘23)

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