Posts in 2015

  • Participate in a Kubernetes User Experience Study

    Tuesday, March 31, 2015 in Blog

    We need your help in shaping the future of Kubernetes and Google Container Engine, and we'd love to have you participate in a remote UX research study to help us learn about your experiences! If you're interested in participating, we invite you to …

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  • Weekly Kubernetes Community Hangout Notes - March 27 2015

    Saturday, March 28, 2015 in Blog

    Every week the Kubernetes contributing community meet virtually over Google Hangouts. We want anyone who's interested to know what's discussed in this forum. Agenda: - Andy - demo remote execution and port forwarding - Quinton - Cluster federation - …

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  • Kubernetes Gathering Videos

    Monday, March 23, 2015 in Blog

    If you missed the Kubernetes Gathering in SF last month, fear not! Here are the videos from the evening presentations organized into a playlist on YouTube

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  • Welcome to the Kubernetes Blog!

    By Kit Merker (Google) | Friday, March 20, 2015 in Blog

    Welcome to the new Kubernetes Blog. Follow this blog to learn about the Kubernetes Open Source project. We plan to post release notes, how-to articles, events, and maybe even some off topic fun here from time to time. If you are using Kubernetes or …

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Posts in 0001

  • Kubernetes v1.36: Advancing Workload-Aware Scheduling

    By Maciej Skoczeń (Google), Antoni Zawodny (Google), Matt Matejczyk (Google), Bartosz Rejman (Google), Jon Huhn (Microsoft), Maciej Wyrzuc (Google), Heba Elayoty (Microsoft) | Monday, January 01, 0001 in Blog

    AI/ML and batch workloads introduce unique scheduling challenges that go beyond simple Pod-by-Pod scheduling. In Kubernetes v1.35, we introduced the first tranche of workload-aware scheduling improvements, featuring the foundational Workload API …

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  • Kubernetes v1.36: Admission Policies That Can't Be Deleted

    By Anish Ramasekar (Microsoft), Benjamin Elder (Google) | Monday, January 01, 0001 in Blog

    If you've ever tried to enforce a security policy across a fleet of Kubernetes clusters, you've probably run into a frustrating chicken-and-egg problem. Your admission policies are API objects, which means they don't exist until someone creates them, …

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