The New Stack Podcast

Architectures at the Edge to Go the Last Mile

Episode Summary

Justin Johnson is development director at StackPath and our guest on this latest episode of The New Stack Makers, recorded at the Open Source Leadership Summit in March. StackPath acquired companies in the CDN, software and security market to manage deployment of content and applications across its infrastructure. Positioning itself as a security as a service, StackPath is using open source technologies to interconnect the different products it has acquired into one single platform. Customers write code to the StackPath APIs, which then manage the content and applications across its distributed network, as opposed to one big data center, or one big pipe. The longer the distance traveled to the user, the more latency. The limits of livestreaming lies in the distance large files have to travel to the user. There are different types of workloads that require different networks. For example, Microsoft works with StackPath to update Xbox machines. To do so efficiently requires an infrastructure that can distribute the load as close as possible to the device, Johnson said. It's that last mile that is the biggest challenge. Coming up, The New Stack will be live at Cloud Foundry Summit, KubeCon + CloudNativeCon, OpenStack Summit and ChefConf. We’ll be podcasting, hosting pancake breakfasts and spending a lot of time talking with people. Thanks to all our sponsors who make our work possible here at The New Stack. Chef, Cloud Foundry, KubeCon+CloudNativeCon, Microsoft and OpenStack are sponsors of The New Stack.

Episode Notes

Justin Johnson is development director at StackPath and our guest on this latest episode of The New Stack Makers, recorded at the Open Source Leadership Summit in March. StackPath acquired companies in the CDN, software and security market to manage deployment of content and applications across its infrastructure. Positioning itself as a security as a service, StackPath is using open source technologies to interconnect the different products it has acquired into one single platform. Customers write code to the StackPath APIs, which then manage the content and applications across its distributed network, as opposed to one big data center, or one big pipe.

The longer the distance traveled to the user, the more latency. The limits of livestreaming lies in the distance large files have to travel to the user. There are different types of workloads that require different networks. For example, Microsoft works with StackPath to update Xbox machines. To do so efficiently requires an infrastructure that can distribute the load as close as possible to the device, Johnson said. It's that last mile that is the biggest challenge.

Coming up, The New Stack will be live at Cloud Foundry Summit, KubeCon + CloudNativeCon, OpenStack Summit and ChefConf. We’ll be podcasting, hosting pancake breakfasts and spending a lot of time talking with people. Thanks to all our sponsors who make our work possible here at The New Stack.

Chef, Cloud Foundry, KubeCon+CloudNativeCon, Microsoft and OpenStack are sponsors of The New Stack.