Kubernetes Axes Ingress NGINX: Half of Clusters Exposed
Kubernetes is killing off Ingress NGINX, the ingress controller half your clusters rely on. No more security fixes after March 2026—time to panic or plan?
Imagine your cloud setup as a wild jungle of custom hacks — that's where the World Bank was. Now? Sleek Terraform highways. Here's what it means for devs everywhere.
Kubernetes is killing off Ingress NGINX, the ingress controller half your clusters rely on. No more security fixes after March 2026—time to panic or plan?
Forget endless machine recreations—Cluster API v1.12 introduces in-place updates that tweak live nodes without the chaos. And chained upgrades? They skip the manual minor-version hopscotch.
Back in 2004, amid Iraq War spin, a blogger dropped a brutal truth from business school: good ideas don't need lies to sell. Fast-forward, and it's the perfect gut-check for tech's endless hype machine.
Broadcom just donated Velero to the CNCF Sandbox. It's not charity; it's a masterstroke to kill vendor mistrust and supercharge Kubernetes backups.
Containers are choking AI agents with slowness. Cloudflare's Dynamic Worker Loader flips the script using battle-tested V8 isolates.
Multi-vector attacks aren't knocking anymore—they're swarming from every angle. Cloudflare's Log Explorer promises the full picture with 14 new datasets; here's if it holds up under scrutiny.
Picture this: you're a solo dev, hammering out an app, and your AI coder pulls git history, files Jira tickets, scans your codebase – all offline, zero cloud bills. Docker just made Claude Code your personal AI beast, safely caged.
GitHub reviewed just 4,101 advisories in 2025, the lowest since 2021. Don't pop the champagne—new vulnerabilities jumped 19%, and npm malware spiked 69%.
George Goble didn't just guess—he computed. In an office microwave bet, he boiled water in exactly 3.1 seconds, showcasing the engineer's unyielding precision.
Docker Captains aren't just experts—they're the glue holding cloud-native dev together. Sunny's story proves Microsoft's betting big on open-source evangelists to win the container wars.
Your security agent just devoured 7 billion tokens daily, nailing 15 bugs — for pennies. Cloudflare's Workers AI with Kimi K2.5 isn't hype; it's the engine turning sci-fi agents into daily grind reality.
Picture this: Your first meeting back at Azure, and the team floats porting half of Windows to a fanless Linux chip the size of a fingernail. That's how a trillion-dollar trust erosion began.