VMware Tanzu is tightly coupling Kubernetes and modern app development workflows in to the already widely used vSphere virtualization platform. There are multiple engineering roles, everything from k8s internals, to networking, storage, virtualization, and everything in between. Looking for good all around problem solvers, plus if you are already familiar with k8s and golang, but not a prerequisite.
This is exactly what VMware Horizon VDI does to create desktop VMs very quickly, called Instant Clone (aka VM Fork), and has been around for several years now.
With that, you don't even need to do deduplication after the fact, it comes for free. When a new VM is forked, it's memory and disk are copy-on-write from the source/parent VM.
> Unless they mean it'll instantly show a loading screen, I'll bet it doesn't.
You absolutely can. I am not sure what tech Microsoft is using, but a similar experience can be had with VMware Horizon VDI product with something called Instant Clone, which is essentially forking an already booted up Desktop VM. On each esxi hypervisor host, you would have one of these parent/seed VMs that is booted up and ready in a frozen state, and when a new desktop VM is needed, it's created from the seed/parent using copy-on-write memory/disk and runtime state less than a second.
VMware Tanzu is tightly coupling Kubernetes and modern app development workflows in to the already widely used vSphere virtualization platform. There are multiple engineering roles, everything from k8s internals, to networking, storage, virtualization, and everything in between. Looking for good all around problem solvers, plus if you are already familiar with k8s and golang, but not a prerequisite.
What differentiates this from k3s? Seems like there's a lot of overlap. Would be great if there was a quick summary of why someone would use this instead of k3s/microk8s/minikube/etc.
VMware Tanzu is tightly coupling Kubernetes and modern app development workflows in to the already widely used vSphere virtualization platform. There are multiple engineering roles, everything from k8s internals, to networking, storage, virtualization, and everything in between. Looking for good all around problem solvers, plus if you are already familiar with k8s and golang, but not a prerequisite.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYO4WrPKWI8 https://tanzu.vmware.com/
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