29:19 What the speaker calls "tech stacks" is what used to be called "platforms", and the speaker calls Kubernetes a platform whereas it would have been called infrastructure or IaaS a couple of years ago. It seems that "platform" means "platform or infrastructure" these days, in other words "PaaS or IaaS". I wonder why the IT community hasn't picked up on this change in what words mean.
Excellent presentation, away from dogmatic, apostolate and evanligistic views. It brings , concisely, words to my inner gut feelings about the whole of it. Not only is for engineers, not only the cool tools and trend of the moment, as you expose it, I find it to be independent as it can always extend, restrain whilst keeping guidelines and flexibility. How do you integrate, mix legacy stuff into the equation though and still provide some of the benefits you presented, thanks. JC
This is great. Nicely organised and presented
Excellent presentation. So many takeaways from this.
Conngratulations on the presentation. This is one of the most fantastic works I've ever seen.
Exceedingly high level. Meant for an executive or other senior manager with virtually no prior understanding of what a platform might actually be.
Fantastic presentation. I really like your perspective on freedom vs autonomy. You have convinced me to use freedom instead.
This is fantastic, thank you so much for sharing this.
I loved it.
Very well laid out
29:19 What the speaker calls "tech stacks" is what used to be called "platforms", and the speaker calls Kubernetes a platform whereas it would have been called infrastructure or IaaS a couple of years ago. It seems that "platform" means "platform or infrastructure" these days, in other words "PaaS or IaaS". I wonder why the IT community hasn't picked up on this change in what words mean.
Excellent.
Excellent presentation, away from dogmatic, apostolate and evanligistic views. It brings , concisely, words to my inner gut feelings about the whole of it. Not only is for engineers, not only the cool tools and trend of the moment, as you expose it, I find it to be independent as it can always extend, restrain whilst keeping guidelines and flexibility. How do you integrate, mix legacy stuff into the equation though and still provide some of the benefits you presented, thanks. JC
Awesome 👍
Linux is a platform on many platforms...
Distros provide the curation
GNU Tools to build it.
Everyone has some sort of platform, whether it's well engineered or not even thought about.