The New Stack Podcast

Continuous Integration and Deployment in Kubernetes

Episode Summary

Cloud economist, Corey Quinn, said that "Day to day, I solve one problem: I fix the AWS bill. There's a few things it tends to break down into; data transfer and figuring out region arbitrage," said Quinn. In his work, he sees a great many enterprise cloud environments and has some insight into what problems still face microservices adoption in big businesses. "People with an engineering background tend to have a natural bias where we focus on the tooling and the how.  For example, there's been a 30 or 40 year war going on about vi versus emacs, and there's still no clear winner. Some people say vi is the answer, other people are just wrong. So there's this natural tendency to get into how work gets done, almost to the point where it occludes what the work is. You see elements of this periodically arising these days with the microservices revolution. People are now starting to frantically cargo cult around what they see at conference talks, on bus advertisements, who knows where. They're starting to twist a sort of technology that is aimed at solving political and cultural problems and trying to use it in ways that are inappropriate. You can build a fantastic torque wrench, doesn't help you put the nail in any more effectively unless you hold it very wrong," said Quinn.

Episode Notes

Cloud economist, Corey Quinn, said that "Day to day, I solve one problem: I fix the AWS bill. There's a few things it tends to break down into; data transfer and figuring out region arbitrage," said Quinn. In his work, he sees a great many enterprise cloud environments and has some insight into what problems still face microservices adoption in big businesses.

"People with an engineering background tend to have a natural bias where we focus on the tooling and the how.  For example, there's been a 30 or 40 year war going on about vi versus emacs, and there's still no clear winner. Some people say vi is the answer, other people are just wrong. So there's this natural tendency to get into how work gets done, almost to the point where it occludes what the work is. You see elements of this periodically arising these days with the microservices revolution. People are now starting to frantically cargo cult around what they see at conference talks, on bus advertisements, who knows where. They're starting to twist a sort of technology that is aimed at solving political and cultural problems and trying to use it in ways that are inappropriate. You can build a fantastic torque wrench, doesn't help you put the nail in any more effectively unless you hold it very wrong," said Quinn.