I have been using ksonnet but that is now officially dead. Working with jsonnet seemed unnecessarily painful when coming from coding typescript. This information is quite timely and welcome, I'll look further at the ts example.
I'm not sure you understand the value k8s proposes based on your comments throughout this entire thread.
Managing many nodes is the reason orchestration software exists. Your suggestion to "put some effort into configuration management" is effectively naive, homegrown orchestration.
Build or buy? That's the same argument - except k8s is free and available from many providers.
I get the sense that the naysayers outweight the supporters, simply because the headline alone is not news. Don't let them deter you, spend a few hours and decide for yourself.
> What keeps people highly coupled with could provider is not where their code is running but rather other "here only" solutions like custom DBs or infrastructure.
I agree, and the advent of k8s adoption is one less thing that locks you into a provider.
Which part of kubernetes is "developed with the intention to eventually get you to use the hosted version"?
Offering software for free, software that is widely adopted cannot be based on the motivations you propose, unless there is a grand conspiracy of cloud providers for which I am unaware.
Use k8s exactly for the reason of either being federated across cloud providers or simply portable across cloud providers. You can't do that with vendor specific solutions e.g. elastic beanstalk
That's effectively anti-globalization. Adapt and overcome. Good developers will always have a job in the forseeable decades to come, weak or stagnant developers will be at risk, it is a maturing industry. White knuckling tech by resisting change/momentum is no more effective than starting a trade war with tariffs.
Yes. Based solely on your desire to be on top of tech and given the broad adoption by every major provider, you probably want to invest at least a couple of days.
That doesn't mean there is any impetus to transition your current production, only that it is most definitely worth a cursory understanding for the future.
All major cloud providers have/will have managed kubernetes and they are free to use the name, therefore I doubt it could be regarded as direct marketing for GCP. I would expect many to consider GCP but I just don't perceive this as a backdoor way of Google getting your apps, given the broad buy-in by the cloud provider community.
Read the DSM description. If you are a technologist you will recognize the format, it is a set of tests that you can likely apply yourself. While I recommend leaving it to a professional, your own curiosity can lead to quite a bit of learning.
Perhaps, but uncertainty plagues all those in the borderline's sphere of influence, and more likely than not, it's a save yourself situation. If you are realistically willing to give your life for this BPD, then by all means stick it out and good luck to you. But don't presume it is any more hopeful than highly unlikely of even leading a troubled relationship. Most likely a relationship full of anguish - probability speaking.
The closest thing to a magic wand I've ever seen seen or heard of. Living with trauma for 38 years only to have it wiped away in 5 50 minute sessions. Amazing! I then spent 3 years in psychotherapy learning to be a person (literally a child in an adult's body), but it was life saving. Profound.
Stop going to counselors. The standard for counselors is surprisingly low, and many are damaged themselves and bring their own biases into sessions. Research PHDs in your area and talk with a psychotherapist. Go on your own, without your wife and find your bearings. They will help you from there. Don't be afraid to find a different one early if you don't feel they are connecting with you.