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Kubernetes 社区如何庆祝其 10 周年_AI阅读总结 — 包阅AI

包阅导读总结

1. 关键词:Kubernetes、10周年、社区、庆祝、贡献者

2. 总结:Kubernetes 迎来 10 周年,全球各地举行庆祝活动。包括伦敦、丹麦、挪威等地,证明其是全球现象。社区成员设计周年纪念 logo 获奖,感谢众多贡献者,项目在不断发展演进。

3. 主要内容:

– Kubernetes 10 周年

– 全球多地举办庆祝活动

– 如加州、挪威、伦敦、丹麦、巴西等

– 活动形式多样

– 包括演讲、聚会等

– 纪念 logo 设计

– 来自佛罗里达公司团队的作品获奖

– 奖品为 KubeCon 会议通行证

– 感谢贡献者

– 众多贡献者来自不同公司和国家

– 可通过在线界面查看个人贡献卡

– 项目的发展与展望

– 不断演进,如移除内置云提供商集成

– 未来由用户、生态和贡献者引领

思维导图:

文章地址:https://thenewstack.io/how-the-kubernetes-community-celebrated-its-10th-anniversary/

文章来源:thenewstack.io

作者:David Cassel

发布时间:2024/6/16 22:14

语言:英文

总字数:1876字

预计阅读时间:8分钟

评分:88分

标签:Kubernetes,科技文化


以下为原文内容

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It’s been 10 years since an open source project from a scrappy team at Google burst onto the scene and became a global phenomenon. And last week, people celebrated all over the world.

In many ways, the 10th anniversary of Kubernetes became a celebration of the community itself — of all the maintainers and contributors, the SIGs and developers advocates — and especially, all of the Kubernetes users around the world.

All Over The World

Google‘s Kubernetes Podcast has been celebrating with a special four-part series, starting with Kubernetes maintainers active since the early days who are still involved today. (It was followed by an interview with Tim Hockin and Kelsey Hightower.) But last week the podcast’s two co-hosts said they were headed to big celebrations out in the larger Kubernetes community — one in Mountain View, California and one in Bergen, Norway.

Community celebrations had been happening all of last week, co-host Kaslin Fields pointed out. (“The first one started I think on June 1st…”) On Thursday nearly 100 people turned up for the London party by OpenUK, according to TNS reporter Jennifer Riggins (who heard this joke from Matt Barker, a vice president at Workload Identity Architecture. “Now recruiters can actually require 10 years experience in Kubernetes.”)

And the parties were still continuing around the world on Monday. At a “birthday bash” in Denmark, Google senior cloud developer Abdel Sghiouar gave a talk on the Kubernetes Gateway API — while another birthday bash was celebrated in Oslo, Norway.

The festivities were still raging on this week, with two U.S. events — trivia, party favors, and “food and drink” in Arlington, Virginia, and in Boston a talk about the Gateway API from Google Kubernetes Engine product manager Spencer Bischof. Tuesday also saw a celebration in Brazil (“Kubernetes está completando 10 anos!“) with more events later in Colombia, Brazil, Guatemalaand Costa Rica.

It’s happening all over the world, with celebrations everywhere from Amsterdam to Tunisia, the country of Georgia, Israel, and four in India. The Cloud Native Computing Foundation has a complete list of all the events…

Logo Wins a KubeCon Pass

It’s all proof that Kubernetes is a truly global phenomenon — and something special happened when the Linux Foundation invited community members to design a logo for Kubernetes’ 10-year anniversary. The winning entry came from a team at Florida-based cloud platform company Cuemby, lead by COO/co-founder Cristher Castro (also a CNCF ambassador.) But Castro is also co-founder of the nonprofit Fundación Hispana de Cloud Native, an educational group serving Latin America and Hispanic communities. “I’ve been part of this beautiful community since 2018 when we opened the meetup chapter in Medellin…” Castro told the CNCF in an interview. “My participation is more logistical and operational, but every role counts in a community.”

Their prize? A full-access conference pass for KubeCon + CloudNativeCon. “I’m excited about CNCF announcing the first KubeDay in the region, which will occur in Medellin, Colombia, on October 9th, 2024,” Castro told the CNCF.

“The increasing adoption and active contribution to these technologies in emerging regions will have a profound and far-reaching impact on professionals and businesses…”

 The winning logo was also featured on the home page of kubernetes.io

The winning logo was also featured on the home page of kubernetes.io

Thanking Contributors

But community has always been a long-running theme for the project.

Even back in 2015, at the first KubeCon held in San Francisco, Brendan Burns said in his opening keynote that the thing that makes him most proud is “the number of people who’ve come together to submit code, to work on code, to send us issues, everything else that makes a community, that builds an ecosystem, that creates something that is more than just any one person or any one company, but a really amazing community that’s developing around a lot of really cool ideas.”

VIDEO

And in 2019 Joe Beda even contributed his own domain K8s.af for a quality-obsessed user’s collection of educational postmortems and other Kubernetes failure stories.

“There’s a whole league of these hidden contributors,” Kelsey Hightower reminded the audience at Friday’s Mountain View event (remembering that he once met someone with a Kubernetes tattoo).

Kubernetes now has over 88,000 contributors from more than 8,000 companies in 44 countries, according to 10-year anniversary post. (Plus 4,228,347 contributions.) There’s been 311,787 pull requests and 158,530 issues — and GitHub shows 38,700 forks. (They also show over 108,000 stars…)

Joe Beda's contributor card for Kubernetes (2024)

Joe Beda’s contributor card for Kubernetes (2024)

Even the number of questions asked about Kubernetes on Stack Overflow has climbed to over 58,270…

So for the birthday bash in Mountain View, an online interface was created where 61,000 Kubernetes contributors could see and share their own personal Contributor Card, featuring the date of their first commit and all the years they’ve contributed. A Linux Foundation blog post called it “your passport to a world of recognition within the vibrant Kubernetes community” and “a token of gratitude… a tangible symbol of your dedication and expertise in shaping the future of cloud native technology.”

But expressions of community appreciation have also been appearing spontaneously around the web…

One especially heartfelt tribute came from blog post from software engineer Michelle Noorali, who among other things was a Kubernetes Steering Committee member from 2018-2019 and a developer representative on the CNCF Governing Board from 2017-2021 — and is also a SpinKube maintainer. “I’m especially thankful for the focus on collaboration and community,” Noorali wrote, “and for the technology that remains aflame a decade later.”

And Craig McLuckie even crafted a commemorative blog post titled “All I really need to know I learned from co-founding Kubernetes,” which includes lessons like “Find strength in diversity.”

“I strongly encourage folks to avoid the trap of self-replication in building teams. Sure, replicating strengths can be good — but you will be better off if you have a team with relatively non-overlapping superpowers.”

The View From Mountain View

A lot happened over the last 10 years. Among the speakers at Mountain View was Kit Merker, a former Google product manager for Kubernetes, who drew some knowing laughter when he appeared on the stage wearing a pair of Google Glasses. “In 2014 Google launched two products that were destined to change the trajectory of how we do computing for the rest of time,” he joked. “We’re here to celebrate one of those products….”

 Kit Merker removes Google Glasses at Kubernetes 10 celebration in Mountain View (screenshot)

But hundreds of Kubernetes enthusiasts had packed the audience, and by the end of the three-and-a-half-hour presentation, Sarah Novotny was ready for some community networking. “(You’ve heard the whole of the history and the fun stories of the community and the project,” Novotny told the audience, adding “and now there’s cake!”)

In a post Friday on LinkedIn, longtime Google staff software engineer Janet Kuo wrote that it was an honor to take the stage in front of an appreciative audience at the event. “It’s been a privilege to witness the growth and impact of Kubernetes over the years, and I’m excited to see what the next decade holds.”

But even as the celebrations were happening, the project was continuing to evolve. Last month Kubernetes finished removing all its built-in cloud provider integrations (1.5 million lines of code), migrating them all to external plugins while reducing core-component binary sizes by 40%.

And last week Joe Beda turned up in a CNCF video with the perfect quote:

“The future is yet to be written.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZ__Pec5pyo

As Brendan Burns said in 2019, “Thank you to everyone who has enabled us to get this far, and thanks to everyone who will take us further.”

VIDEO

Or, as the Kubernetes blog puts it, “The next 10 years of Kubernetes will be guided by its users and the ecosystem, but most of all, by the people who contribute to it.”

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