Culture, not code, is the biggest challenge for Kubernetes
Briefly

Culture, not code, is the biggest challenge for Kubernetes
"Every year, the CNCF takes stock of cloud native computing, the technology to which it owes its existence. Whether it's cloud native computing as a whole, Kubernetes, or containerization, the entire ecosystem has matured. However, the rollout of containers in IT environments faces an old-fashioned problem: personal convictions. The CNCF is now able to apply a comprehensive maturity model to organizations utilizing cloud native. For those following this path, it is already clear that the tech itself is battle-tested."
"The trade-off for near-universal adoption is that explosive growth is likely a thing of the past, or at the very least, it is now tied to the growth of the IT industry as a whole. Consequently, the challenges facing cloud native over the next decade will differ fundamentally from those of the past ten years. The struggle for full adoption is no longer about stripping away technical complexity, but about persuading personnel to embrace further change."
Cloud native technologies show near-universal adoption, with 98 percent of surveyed organizations using cloud native tools. Adoption ranges from experimentation to full migration: about one quarter have moved nearly all development to cloud native, 34 percent have moved the majority, and 32 percent are partially engaged. The ecosystem is mature and battle-tested, so future growth will track the broader IT industry rather than continue explosive expansion. The primary barrier to further adoption is cultural: 47 percent cite personnel resistance as the greatest challenge. Kubernetes is widely used for AI, yet real-world deployment remains the primary risk.
Read at Techzine Global
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]