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0:12

What Is Kubernetes

10:22

Cncf Landscape

11:30

Nodes

14:27

Declarative Management

16:10

Pods

17:17

Deployments

19:25

Kubernetes Is a Distributed System

21:53

Master Nodes

26:05

Worker Nodes

26:23

The Container Runtime

27:29

Customize these Resources

31:58

Create Your Own Resources

32:08

Cube Proxy

32:54

Create a Cluster

34:26

Build from the Kubernetes Source

34:54

Role-Based Based Authentication

38:21

Kubernetes Books

46:17

Community Resources

46:52

Ways To Approach Kubernetes

47:46

Azure Container Apps

48:39

Kubernetes Is Open Source

52:45

Why Kubernetes Is So Powerful

57:00
You Probably Don’t Need Kubernetes, Here’s How It Works
Kubernetes is an open-source project by the CNCF (Cloud Native Computing Foundation) that allows you to create and scale your services across a large number of machines. This architecture allows you to build reliable and scalable services that serve almost any purpose. This power also brings complexity that can require a lot of time and investment to understand and operate effectively. In this session we’ll be diving into Kubernetes, how it works and some of the abstractions available to you in Azure that remove some of that complexity from your services. This session will cover the Kubernetes control plane and the services that make your Kubernetes cluster work, how the control plane communicates with the worker nodes to schedule your applications and some of the stuff you might not see in daily use of a Kubernetes Cluster. We’ll also be exploring how you communicate with your Kubernetes cluster using the Kubernetes API and kubectl. Speaker: Sam Wronski, Regional Cloud Advocate, Microsoft Sam Wronski is a Regional Cloud Advocate at Microsoft focused on empowering the San Francisco area to build awesome things with Azure. Sam has spent years building applications and tooling powered by containers. He's run the World of Zero channel on YouTube for the past 5 years where he's taught software engineering and game development. [eventID:16665]

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Microsoft Reactor

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