New Tools for Cloud Native Developers


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Mar 06 2019 25 mins   2
Show: 388 Description: Brian talks with Eric Rudder (@ericrudder; Co-Founder and Executive Chairman @PulumiCorp) about the evolving tools and supply-chain for both developers and operations in a cloud-native world. Show Sponsor Links: Datadog Homepage - Modern Monitoring and Analytics Try Datadog yourself by starting a free, 14-day trial today. Listeners of this podcast will also receive a free Datadog T-shirt Cloud News of the Week Lyft announces IPO plans and explains AWS spending (including a big contract with AWS) https://www.businessinsider.com/lyft-ipo-amazon-web-services-2019-3 A Reddit discussion on AWS limits https://www.reddit.com/r/aws/comments/aun29l/a_new_candidate_for_the_list_of_stupidest_aws/ Wikibon - Hybrid Cloud Taxonomy https://wikibon.com/hybrid-cloud-taxonomy/ ServerlessConf 2019 - New York (October 7-9) https://nyc2019.serverlessconf.io/ Show Interview Links: Pulumi - https://www.pulumi.com Show Notes: Topic 1 - Welcome to the show. Tell us a little bit about your background prior to Pulumi, and your motivation for creating Pulumi. Topic 2 - Pulumi’s stated goal is “Create, deploy, and manage modern cloud apps and infrastructure”. Break that down for us, as it cuts across a lot of different job functions and (currently) different tooling being used today. Topic 3 - Between serverless and containers, it’s been pretty well acknowledged that the developer experience has a long way to go. Lots of burden put on the developer to understand the underlying systems. How does Pulumi attempt to simply or standardize around this challenge? Topic 4 - You obviously have a bunch of experience with developer communities from your days at Microsoft. Getting developers to standardize on things in mass is not a simple task. What are some of the ways to create movement to newer tools or technologies? Topic 5 - What are some of your expectations about how much of the software supply-chain, from writing code to testing/securing code to deploying will have to get disrupted with new cloud-native applications (containers, serverless, etc.) and how much do you feel like is solved enough to leave in place? Feedback? Email: show at thecloudcast dot net Twitter: @thecloudcastnet and @ServerlessCast