VMblog visits the Containous booth during KubeCon 2019 in San Diego.
Containous is on a mission to make routing simpler so developers can focus on building instead of operating. They deliver open source routing software specifically built for a world of containers and microservices. From Traefik the open source cloud native edge proxy and TraefikEE its commercial offering, to Maesh open source SMI-compliant Service Mesh for Kubernetes, their products are fitting in the cloud native landscape with a focus on openness, simplicity, scalability, reliability and high availability.
Are you attending KubeCon 2019 in San Diego? If so, I invite you to add Containous to your MUST SEE list of vendors.
KubeCon 2019 is shaping up to be a fantastic event! And the number of sponsoring vendors at this year's show is extremely impressive as the show continues to grow in scope and size! One of the companies that will be on VMblog's MUST SEE list this year at the event is Containous. They are a leading cloud-native networking company that brings the future of software architecture by offering powerful tools to ease the deployment of modern IT environments. The company's stated mission is to simplify cloud-native adoption for all enterprises.
Read this exclusive pre-show interview between VMblog and Containous to learn what they have planned for the upcoming KubeCon North America 2019 event and why you need to visit their booth.
Selecting the right ingress controller is critical to the success of your Kubernetes deployment - but the choice can be challenging given that there are more than a dozen popular options listed in the Kubernetes documentation alone. Ingresses themselves provide the ability to define the way that external (as well as internal) traffic is routed to services in your cluster. For example, an ingress can be used to add externally-reachable URLs to services, load balance traffic, terminate SSL and TLS, and provide name-based virtual hosting.
VMworld is the premiere virtualization and cloud computing event held every year by VMware going back to 2004 when it kicked things off in San Diego. This year, the show returns to San Francisco after a three year run in Las Vegas.
Come along as VMblog takes you on a tour of VMworld through the years, rock and roll style. View the City and Attendance play bill. View the VMworld Set List. Find out how many Keynotes were hosted by which CEO. What about the bands who have played over the years? Check out the key updates made during each VMworld event and the tag lines used over the years. And find out which vendors you should be adding to your must see list at VMworld 2019.
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Enjoy! See you there.