loader from loading.io

DOP 324: Kubernetes Resource Right-Sizing and Scaling with Zesty

DevOps Paradox

Release Date: 11/12/2025

DOP 339: DNS Is Old Tech (And That's Why It Still Runs the Internet) show art DOP 339: DNS Is Old Tech (And That's Why It Still Runs the Internet)

DevOps Paradox

#339: DNS has been around since the 1980s. Nobody's writing blog posts about how it changed their life. But every single thing on the internet depends on it -- including all those AI tools everyone's excited about. Anthony Eden has been in the DNS business since the late nineties, when he was CTO of one of the first seven domain registrars after the .com deregulation. In 2010 he started DNSimple, and he did it without a dime of venture capital. Sixteen years later, his 20-person team runs a global DNS infrastructure with 14 edge nodes and 9 origin servers spread across multiple continents. The...

info_outline
DOP 338: The Assembly Line Problem: Why Adding AI to One Step Breaks Everything show art DOP 338: The Assembly Line Problem: Why Adding AI to One Step Breaks Everything

DevOps Paradox

#338: Every company adding AI coding tools runs into the same wall. Developers produce more code, but features don't ship any faster. The bottleneck just slides downstream -- to QA, to security, to legal, to whoever comes next in the pipeline. And the team that got faster? They don't even realize the people upstream could be feeding them more work. Viktor's take: the fastest possible setup is one person carrying a feature from idea to production. Not one person doing everything alone -- a system designed so nobody waits. Tests run in CI. Deployments happen through Argo CD. Security scanning is...

info_outline
DOP 337: Nanoseconds Matter - InfluxDB and the Future of Real-Time Data show art DOP 337: Nanoseconds Matter - InfluxDB and the Future of Real-Time Data

DevOps Paradox

#337: Time series databases have become essential infrastructure for the physical AI revolution. As automation extends into manufacturing, autonomous vehicles, and robotics, the demand for high-resolution, low-latency data has shifted from milliseconds to nanoseconds. The difference between a general-purpose database and a specialized time series solution is the difference between a minivan and an F1 car - both will get around the track, but only one is built for the demands of real-time operational workloads. The open source business model continues to evolve in unexpected ways. While...

info_outline
DOP 336: Why Top Talent Won't Work for You Anymore show art DOP 336: Why Top Talent Won't Work for You Anymore

DevOps Paradox

#336: The workplace is on the verge of a transformation as significant as the Industrial Revolution. Just as Bring Your Own Device policies emerged after the iPhone disrupted corporate mobile standards, we are now entering an era where employees may arrive with their own AI teams in tow. The question is no longer whether AI will change hiring and employment - it is how quickly companies will adapt before being left behind by competitors who embrace this shift. Current AI productivity gains remain largely individual rather than organizational. Writing code twice as fast means nothing if the...

info_outline
DOP 335: Stop Building Dashboards and Start Getting Answers With Coroot show art DOP 335: Stop Building Dashboards and Start Getting Answers With Coroot

DevOps Paradox

#335: Observability tools have exploded in recent years, but most come with a familiar tradeoff: either pay steep cloud vendor markups or spend weeks building custom dashboards from scratch. Coroot takes a different path as a self-hosted, open source observability platform that prioritizes simplicity over flexibility. Using eBPF technology, Coroot automatically instruments applications without requiring code changes or complex configuration, delivering what co-founder Peter Zaitsev calls opinionated observability—a philosophy of less is more that aims to reduce cognitive overload rather than...

info_outline
DOP 334: If Code Is the Easy Part, What Should Developers Actually Be Doing? show art DOP 334: If Code Is the Easy Part, What Should Developers Actually Be Doing?

DevOps Paradox

#334: The debate over whether AI saves developers time misses a fundamental truth: coding was never the hardest part of software development. Writing code is mechanical work - the real challenges have always been understanding problems, designing solutions, communicating with stakeholders, and navigating organizational complexity. AI is now forcing a reckoning with this reality, pushing developers at every level to reconsider what skills actually matter. The traditional separation between architects who design and developers who implement is breaking down. AI enables a return to something like...

info_outline
DOP 333: The Hidden Problems Behind Every Data Pipeline show art DOP 333: The Hidden Problems Behind Every Data Pipeline

DevOps Paradox

#333: Pete Hunt, CEO of Dagster and early React team member, explores the evolution from Facebook's early React development through trust and safety infrastructure at Twitter, to building modern data orchestration tools. The conversation reveals how similar infrastructure problems plague every industry - whether you're launching rockets or managing porta-potties, the core challenges remain consistent: late data, quality issues, and mysterious errors that require both automated solutions and human oversight. The discussion dives into the technical realities of scaling systems, from the...

info_outline
DOP 332: 2026 - The Year of Discovery show art DOP 332: 2026 - The Year of Discovery

DevOps Paradox

#332: AI adoption in enterprise software development is accelerating, but operations teams are lagging behind. While application developers embrace AI tools at a rapid pace, those on the ops side remain skeptical—citing concerns about determinism, control, and a general resistance to change. This mirrors previous technology waves like containers, cloud, and Kubernetes, where certain groups initially pushed back before eventually adapting. The prediction for 2026: AI will not see widespread adoption in operations despite its growing presence elsewhere in the software lifecycle. The bigger...

info_outline
DOP 331: Looking Back on Our 2025 Predictions show art DOP 331: Looking Back on Our 2025 Predictions

DevOps Paradox

#331: At the end of 2024, predictions were made about what 2025 would bring to the tech industry. A year later, on New Year's Eve, it's time to look back and see what actually happened. The prediction episode from January 1st covered four major topics: rug pulls from companies switching to business source licenses, the rise of WebAssembly adoption, a wave of company acquisitions, and AI becoming embedded in existing tools. Some predictions hit the mark while others missed entirely, but what emerged was something nobody fully anticipated.   YouTube channel:   Review the podcast on...

info_outline
DOP 330: Merry Christmas (You Should Probably Be Doing Something Else) show art DOP 330: Merry Christmas (You Should Probably Be Doing Something Else)

DevOps Paradox

#330: In this short episode, Darin and Viktor reflect on the holiday season.   YouTube channel:    Review the podcast on Apple Podcasts:    Slack:   Connect with us at:

info_outline
 
More Episodes

#324: Kubernetes has reached a mature state where boring releases signal stability rather than stagnation. While the platform continues evolving with features like in-place resource updates in version 1.33, the real challenge lies in optimizing AI workloads that demand significantly more resources than traditional applications. The discussion reveals how auto-scaling capabilities become crucial for managing these resource-intensive workloads, with vertical and horizontal scaling finally working together through new features that allow pod resizing without restarts.

The conversation explores the ongoing tension between cloud costs and data center investments, particularly as companies navigate uncertain AI requirements. While cloud providers offer flexibility for experimentation, the hidden costs of skilled personnel and infrastructure management often make cloud solutions more economical than initially apparent. The debate extends to startup strategies, where outsourcing infrastructure complexity allows teams to focus on core business value rather than operational overhead.

Omer Hamerman joins Darin and Viktor to examine the common misconceptions about resource allocation, arguing that developers fundamentally cannot predict CPU and memory requirements accurately. This limitation makes automated right-sizing and intelligent scaling essential for modern Kubernetes deployments, especially as AI workloads continue pushing infrastructure boundaries.

 

Omer's contact information:

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/omer-hamerman/

 

YouTube channel:

https://youtube.com/devopsparadox

 

Review the podcast on Apple Podcasts:

https://www.devopsparadox.com/review-podcast/

 

Slack:

https://www.devopsparadox.com/slack/

 

Connect with us at:

https://www.devopsparadox.com/contact/