 Good morning, cloud community, and welcome back to beautiful Paris. It's day three of KubeCon, cloud native con, here in fantastic Europe. My name's Savannah Peterson, joined by Rob Stoetsche and Dustin Kirkland. Gentlemen, what a week we have had. Here we are, it's Friday. Here we, yes, quite literally. Here we are, and it is Friday. Thank you for that in-depth analysis there. I'm here for the hard-headed news. We're bringing it home with that hard news. What is, okay, opening question for you. What's your favorite thing you've eaten so far this week? Rob, I'm going to start with you. Muscle's freaks, I just, I can't get enough of them. I had it twice now, and I'm at probably my muscle limit, but you know, they're going to break out. You have been a great Paris guide for all of us, by the way. I just want to say thank you. You've been awesome on the reservations and sharing things. What about you, Dustin? Oh my God. Crepes after midnight were pretty good. You had that cheeky little sneaky crepe. I did. I did. The caramel sucre, biore, the caramel butter crepe was incredible. I love that. Yes. Some of the cheese we've had has just... Cheese has been great as well. The cheese is fantastic. And the wine, oh my goodness. So in non-Parisian news, keynote analysis, sounds like there was a bit of a trip down memory lane, if you will. This is a nostalgia morning for sure. I mean, it's 10 years of Kubernetes and CNCF celebrated that. And we heard a number of stories from, you know, some people who've been around the community for a very long time. Yeah, I mean, they're going to have a whole celebration. I think that was the biggest piece of news out of this morning was they're going to do kubbertennis.cncf.org or something like that. We'll put it up there afterwards where you can go and sign up and they're going to sponsor parties in June for the 10-year anniversary. I thought that was interesting. I thought that could have been the trip down memory lane. I didn't know that we needed three trips down memory lane. I thought it was interesting. I liked when they got into some of the accessibility aspects, I know you have her on. And you're having her on later on today. I thought it was a very good, from that perspective, I just think they went overboard with the, you know, hour and a half of memory lane. It's just hard for some people to relate to that. And then, you know, over half of this. Now I was just going to bring it up, Dustin, exactly. Yeah. Half of this conference has never been to a cloud native or KubeCon ever before. Right. I mean, it's just a little self-serving, I think, to spend so much time talking about, you know, the good old days, if people can't really relate to that. Well, and I think as we've been talking about Kubernetes having its Linux moment, there's this ubiquity play happening, we're only just now seeing what Kubernetes is really going to do. Kubernetes has been a tool for 10 years, but it has not been deployed across verticals at scale until, honestly, like fairly recently, the last couple of years. And even the last couple of months in some cases. And with AI pushing some of that tech stack forward. So I think that, to your point, folks coming here, they need the excitement and the hype in the gateway. This is their first time. Teach me what's next. Or show me if we're going to do nostalgia, show me a bunch of really cool applications of Kubernetes at the edge and fun stuff and so that I can turn around and tell my friends and family or whatever, this is where Kubernetes is running. This is why I'm excited about this technology and why I'm proud to be a part of the cloud native community. Yeah, and I think again, you know, Heroku was up there as a sponsor and that was another trip down memory lane, but I think, you know, them being grounded on Kubernetes was like the takeaway from that. We had Oracle up there talking about their contributions. Again, where they have Kubernetes, the platform, they have open telemetry and a number of other projects that are developing on those free credits, the $3 million that they announced back in Chicago and they're continuing to do that. And they talked about how, you know, again we'll have her on and actually next. So I think it'll be very interesting to get into that they're contributing to over 500 different projects. And I think, again, this whole community has been great this week. I agree. I think we should be also looking forward. This should have been, they had a moment to say, here's happy 10 years, here's where we go in the next 10 years and lay out the roadmap. And that's what I was wanting out of this morning and didn't get it. I think, again, we had Chris on last night, CTO, CNCF talking about the changes they made and they made those recognitions this morning. Yeah, he gave us a preview on the show on theCUBE last night and I think we saw that and what he announced there this morning in the keynote. And I thought he did a good job of pointing out to people in, I guess, blue jackets. I didn't realize they had blue jackets. I don't remember that from last night. But, so I think it was good, but I think, I thought his talk was excellent, but I thought you could have then gone into the roadmap and said, here's how we get these 180 projects to all go in the same direction to help cloud native. We were actually having a conversation earlier this morning too about, do some of the smaller projects combine forces if they're complimentary so that there's more contributors and more folks engaged and it is an interesting, you know, it's an interesting balance, right? Yeah, one thing we did get, literally, where we're going in the future, they announced the next two years worth of cube cons and those locations, Salt Lake City, I think we knew, but the next London, the next cube con EU in April, followed by Los Angeles, sorry, Atlanta in the US. We're going to Atlanta. Atlanta, back to Amsterdam after that. I think you may enjoy that. Yes. And then Los Angeles, so they announced. I like the comment of why they said we're going back to Amsterdam, which is after being in this building, the light that was in there and I just remembered the natural light coming in on us. I had my sunglasses on. Literally got to broadcast the shades on. So we just got to remember for that to bring our sunglasses to back to Amsterdam. Or to find some great swag vendors. There you go. I agree. With some awesome optical, I didn't realize they announced that. Normally, they're a little quiet about that. Two years out. Yeah, it's kind of nice actually to be able to, you know. So we're going to, are we going to London next year? Or is it? London next. Yeah, London and then Amsterdam. Wow. So hopefully we come back to Paris though. This has been. Be fun. This is a magical business trip. This is, we're talking about Kubernetes in Paris. Filing are things I did not anticipate in this wonderful wildlife we've designed. But I am grateful for it. That's for sure. Yeah. I think what was interesting, just tying it back to Paris was Solomon's discussion about, you know. Docker started in his mother's basement. Yeah, walking distance from here. Yeah. That was actually one of the cooler moments. So Solomon, founder of Docker and now dagger IO gave a keynote about kind of the history of Docker and the precedence that it set for Kubernetes. And I think Bob Wise, now the CEO of Heroku. Heroku being that pass that paved the way quite a bit. App Engine and Google's App Engine and Heroku. That sort of sets it up, right? And both of those paved the way for wanting and needing the open source infrastructure that is Kubernetes itself. Docker providing the better reinvention of Solaris containers, Linux containers to put it into this developer friendly Docker mindset. I thought Solomon actually did a really nice job of tying this back to AI, which he described. We haven't talked about that at all this week. Yeah, you're right. We should do a segment on AI, right? He brought it back to AI saying that, look, all of this was about building, all of the previous Docker work was about building factories to make software, cloud native applications, make those able to deploy. And then he kind of gave this hint that, guess what, artificial intelligence is just a better factory. It's really helping us make software faster, better, cheaper, more efficient in the long run. So anyway, I thought that was a nice way to sort of tie it all back together. There's a lot of love. I mean, Docker, Kubernetes, sometimes tools that companies use both. Sometimes there's a little bit of healthy competition there, but definitely a foundational and important component of this whole ecosystem. Yeah, I will say that even before Solaris, mainframes had containers as well. So I'm just not even going to go there because we didn't go that far back. But anyways, those of us who had to use green screens at one point in time in our life understood that. It's 3270s, maybe. Absolutely, so. But I thought it was good to- Now who's getting nostalgic? No care, we're going down- I'm going to call you both out for that, after you complain about it, you know. But we're giving it for five minutes. Yeah, like I said, two minutes is a real- But where we're going, I thought the software factory aspect and tying that back into AI and what people are really looking to do is build cloud-native applications and AI is just going to be a cloud-native application. And I think some of the talks that we've had this week with people about AI being integrated in. And I think especially on the UX when we were talking to Moe from Red Hat, when she talked about that and I think she, you know, and her closing remarks really set a good direction of- I agree. Like, I look at it and go, I don't want to use a prompt all the time. I don't necessarily want to talk to my AI all the time. I want it to be there, like I don't even notice it's there. And I think that's where AI is going to go. And I think a lot of the developers here this week have been talking about that. Yeah, I think you're definitely right. I do love that one of the key themes of the show has really been the developer experience. And I mean, we've talked about platform engineering, but really the UX of all of this stuff, because decreasing complexity has been a component of Kubernetes, is a component of AI. Nobody wants things to be as hard as they are. No. No, so it's, yeah, I don't know. So I'm curious, are there any big surprises for you guys from the show? Or anything you expected to talk more about that didn't come up as much? Well, I think when we talked about this on Wednesday, I was hoping we'd talk a little more about security, but I think we had a solid, I do, I do, I do, I do. I come by it honestly. I think we had a good solid program all day yesterday on security, so I'm glad we kind of wet that appetite. I think again, they could have said, hey, by the way, join us at SecurityCon and other stuff. Because I think still to the discussion we had yesterday, pretty much everybody who was on talking about security also admitted that there wasn't a lot of security here. That's right. At the show, other than us. I think that shows an appetite for it. Yeah, I think the appetite is more than just me saving. Yeah. I mean, okay, you affirm yourself however you want here. Yeah, but when the EU puts out an AI act, a week and a half before, and a big piece of it is security, and making sure that we're- And security is really important. Yeah, it's very important. Especially to data and to AI and to all of that. And I think even in Salt Lake, I think they'll maybe arc a little bit back to that hopefully. We'll see. I mean, I think it's also an interesting demarcator of the talk tracks, right? So these proposals and the agendas set quite a bit in advance of these shows. So maybe that wasn't the hottest topic. I mean, this is our first European show since ChatGPT was released where the papers were actually representative of that. And I actually, I would say the biggest surprise for me now that I'm talking all out, and I'll ask myself this question, is, I have insights too, not just the pretty face here. Is, I'm surprised, I actually thought we would be talking about AI more. Okay. I genuinely did. I thought there would be some more large-scale examples or interesting, and it's come up, but it's been a subtle thread, not the main fabric of the show. Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if within these next couple of conferences, the biggest booths right in the front center are the hyper-scale clouds. The Googles and the Microsofts and Oracle, Intel, all of which have an AI play. I think one or two of these AI startups are going to break through and become some of the biggest players in this space within the next six to 18 months. I like that hot take. Six is probably too short, but. Maybe by London. Yeah. I mean, I think you might be right. I think so. I agree with that. I think, again, where they retold the story of open AI running on Kubernetes and how they had really done a large cluster on it, people are looking at it and people aren't building open AI per se. So I think to your point, I expected to hear more about Kubeflow and some of the other in MLops and things in MLflow and things of that nature, but I do think there was a lot of undercurrents of it and a lot of different, especially on Tuesday in the days. Pretty much every session that I went to had some amount of AI in it on Tuesday. So I know it's being talked about out there. And it is. And how it's changing it. It just didn't make its way to this desk. It didn't make its way as obviously to here. So that was interesting though. I agree with your insight on that. Thank you. Yeah. I appreciate the validation. No problem. I'm here for you. Last question before we wrap up this morning segment. What are you hoping we can say in London? That we can't say today. Oh, good question. I really think like if we take that AI and security and put those two together and really say that we've got secured tool chains, supply chains, models, the whole thing that we can deploy that at the edge in the back end infrastructure and know that our precious data that's being used to train those models is secured. I really hope that's a mostly solved problem by London. I agree. I think the security aspect of it and for me it's the data's not getting any smaller. And I think the operations aspect of it needs to get simpler and especially with still the overlap in some of the projects. I'm hoping that some of these projects come together and kind of put out joint roadmaps versus kind of operating in silos a little bit and almost competing with each other. I mean, competition is healthy, but at the same time it causes confusion, especially to the 51% of new people who are coming in here trying to figure out which part do I use to go and do that, so. Yeah, I hope I have a really good example to tell the people in my life that don't know anything about Kubernetes or this space, how it's transforming the world and either saving lives or improving the quality of life of everyday people and not just in our little geek silo. So there was, I mean, from the keynote, there was the discussion about the hackathon with the UN. They're going to do that again in Salt Lake or is it in London? I can't remember which one it was now. But, you know, I mean, again, it was around sustainability and parks. I thought they were interesting. I didn't quite get all the ties to sustainability for some of them. No, I definitely want to go and learn a bit more about those projects. I'm going to take in on that. It didn't get nearly enough airtime, I think actually in the keynote, but they awarded three prizes for second, third place for three different hackathon winners from five or six different countries. You know, it was all over the place. So that was pretty cool. Yeah. But that's something that can bring this back and make it, you know, more, make what we do more relatable to our friends and family who have no idea what a Kubernetes is. Exactly, exactly. I always love those real world stories and love sharing the nerdy stories with you both. So, Rob, Dustin, thank you both so much for being here this week. You've absolutely smashed it. It's a pleasure to work with all of you. And thank you for tuning in live for our wonderful Paris broadcast here at KubeCon, CloudNativeCon. My name's Savannah Peterson. You're watching theCUBE, the leading source for enterprise tech news.