The rise of managed Kubernetes services that run in the public cloud — in addition to commercial platforms that run in any cloud, including your own data center — means there are choices for just about everyone, including organizations that don't want or need to build a robust internal team to manage everything.
Rob Farage, co-founder of Kubecost, expects a separate but related trend to emerge that intersects with both the cloud-native workforce and the growth of commercial and managed services: vendors and internal platform teams will prioritize features that make it easier for developers to work with Kubernetes without having to fiddle with its fundamentals.
“ they can to compete for developer attraction, and the egypt mobile database experience that companies can offer in managing Kubernetes can be — and increasingly will be — a critical differentiator,” Faraj says. “In 2022, I think we’ll see a significant push to reduce infrastructure sprawl and create more developer-friendly processes for managing Kubernetes.”
5. The Kubernetes community will continue to prioritize security
Kubernetes has significant security features built in, provided you configure (and reconfigure) the right settings correctly. Its thriving ecosystem also places a strong emphasis on platform security, with OperatorHub.io listing 29 different security apps.
In 2022, organizations will use the tools and services available to them to sharpen their cloud and cloud-native security strategies. Kirsten Newcomer, Red Hat’s director of cloud and DevSecOps strategy, predicts that we’ll see changes in how organizations validate applications during deployment, among other things.
Organizations therefore need to do everything
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