The cloud-native world brings real benefits to your development cycle, but it also brings new costs: clusters, gateways, uploads and downloads, and don't forget operations staff. Thankfully, it's possible to use open-source CNCF projects to help manage those costs. In this webinar, we'll explore a couple of ways of doing exactly that with Linkerd and Telepresence.
Linkerd is the first graduated CNCF service mesh, bringing security, reliability, and observability to your application at a platform level while also making operational simplicity a priority. With Linkerd, you can lower your development costs by letting Linkerd worry about critical cloud-native features, and also lower your operational costs by reducing the resources needed by the mesh and by not needing mesh experts on-staff.
Telepresence is a CNCF tool that lets you see the impact of your code changes interacting with other remote services and dependencies without waiting for your application to be containerized, pushed to a registry, and deployed. With Telepresence, you can consolidate multiple personal development clusters into a single shared remote cluster, reducing cloud costs and maintenance efforts without tripping over your teammates.
Watch this on-demand session with Flynn, Tech Evangelist at Buoyant, and Edidiong, Senior Developer Advocate at Ambassador Labs, as they provide an hour of hands-on learning demonstrating how these tools can help manage costs for your organization!
Edidiong is a Senior Developer Advocate with skills in software engineering, technical writing, community building, video creation, and public speaking. Over the years, she has improved the developer experience of several tech companies' products, created technical content, and implemented initiatives that increased awareness, drove sales, and made the company a thought leader in their respective sectors .When she's not doing anything tech-related, she travels across the world, takes beautiful pictures, and analyzes movies.
Flynn is a technology evangelist at Buoyant, spreading the good word about the Linkerd service mesh and educating developers about Linkerd, Kubernetes, and cloud-native development in general.