News

Brendan Burns, corporate VP for Azure Compute at Microsoft and co-founder of the Kubernetes open source project while at ...
A good middle ground between AKS and ACS, AKS Automatic makes running cloud-native applications easier for companies without ...
The Microsoft Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) reached "general availability" status on Wednesday, and can now be commercially used in 10 Azure regions. Five of the 10 regions are new for the AKS ...
Companies interested in using Kubernetes to help manage their containerized applications have a new option from Microsoft and Red Hat that should ease them into the notoriously complex world of ...
Microsoft and Isovalent on Monday announced efforts to bring eBPF capabilities to Microsoft's Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS). The various eBPF integrations with AKS appear to be mostly at the preview ...
Tools such as Kubernetes go a long way to simplifying the process of building distributed applications at scale. But they’re only part of the story, offering ways to replicate containerized ...
Microsoft and Google don’t get along all that often, but they do agree on using Kubernetes for cloud container orchestration. Kubernetes is generally available for use with Azure Container Service, ...
As far as container orchestration goes, Kubernetes is quickly becoming the de facto standard, even as Docker Swarm and Mesos/Mesosphere DC/OS continue to find their own niches. For the longest time, ...
Microsoft's current Azure Container Service (ACS) for developing, deploying, and maintaining containers has supported Kubernetes since early 2017. Kubernetes has emerged as the open-source container ...
Microsoft Azure becomes the first public cloud to support all the mainstream container orchestration engines including Docker Swarm, Mesosphere DC/OS, and Kubernetes. Microsoft is also one of the few ...
At its Build developer conference, Microsoft today announced that Azure Arc, its service for managing cloud resources anywhere, including competing clouds like AWS and GCP and platforms like Red Hat’s ...