Skip to content

[en] Fix Borg research publication link #49521

New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Closed
wants to merge 1 commit into from
Closed
Changes from all commits
Commits
File filter

Filter by extension

Filter by extension

Conversations
Failed to load comments.
Loading
Jump to
Jump to file
Failed to load files.
Loading
Diff view
Diff view
2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/en/blog/_posts/2016-07-00-The-Bet-On-Kubernetes.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ I believe that reach to be a validation of the vision underlying Kubernetes: to
- managing and maintaining clustered software like databases and message queues


Allow developers and operators to move to the next scale of abstraction, just like they have enabled Google and others in the tech ecosystem to scale to datacenter computers and beyond. From Kubernetes 1.0 to 1.3 we have continually improved the power and flexibility of the platform while ALSO improving performance, scalability, reliability, and usability. The explosion of integrations and tools that run on top of Kubernetes further validates core architectural decisions to be [composable](https://research.google.com/pubs/pub43438.html), to expose [open and flexible APIs](/docs/api/), and to [deliberately limit the core platform](/docs/whatisk8s/#kubernetes-is-not) and encourage extension.
Allow developers and operators to move to the next scale of abstraction, just like they have enabled Google and others in the tech ecosystem to scale to datacenter computers and beyond. From Kubernetes 1.0 to 1.3 we have continually improved the power and flexibility of the platform while ALSO improving performance, scalability, reliability, and usability. The explosion of integrations and tools that run on top of Kubernetes further validates core architectural decisions to be [composable](https://research.google/pubs/large-scale-cluster-management-at-google-with-borg/), to expose [open and flexible APIs](/docs/api/), and to [deliberately limit the core platform](/docs/whatisk8s/#kubernetes-is-not) and encourage extension.

Today Kubernetes has one of the largest and most vibrant communities in the open source ecosystem, with almost a thousand contributors, one of the highest human-generated commit rates of any single-repository project on GitHub, over a thousand projects based around Kubernetes, and correspondingly active Stack Overflow and Slack channels. Red Hat is proud to be part of this ecosystem as the largest contributor to Kubernetes after Google, and every day more companies and individuals join us. The idea of Kubernetes found fertile ground, and you, the community, provided the excitement and commitment that made it grow.

Expand Down