"And this is why I think Kubernetes will disappear. It’s so generic that there’s no reason to do it yourself. Few organisations operate on a scale where it makes sense to run datacentres. The practical friction of running Kubernetes creates a similar dynamic. Like reliable infrastructure, it’s too hard, slow or expensive to justify doing it really well yourself, but there probably is value in paying for that as a service from a cloud provider."
Basically saying: it will still exist, but just outsourced to some one else's computer.
[+] [-] stargrazer|6 years ago|reply
"And this is why I think Kubernetes will disappear. It’s so generic that there’s no reason to do it yourself. Few organisations operate on a scale where it makes sense to run datacentres. The practical friction of running Kubernetes creates a similar dynamic. Like reliable infrastructure, it’s too hard, slow or expensive to justify doing it really well yourself, but there probably is value in paying for that as a service from a cloud provider."
Basically saying: it will still exist, but just outsourced to some one else's computer.