<div dir="ltr"><div><div><h1><a href="https://trilug.org/node/219" target="_blank">March 10th - Openshift 3 and the next generation of PaaS</a></h1></div><div><div>Topic: Openshift 3 and the next generation of PaaS</div></div><div><div>Presenter: Clayton Coleman</div></div><div><div>When: <span>Thursday, 10 March 2016 - <span>7:00pm</span> to <span>9:00pm</span></span></div></div><div><div>Where: Bandwidth, Venture III, 900 Main Campus Dr, Raleigh, NC 27606</div></div><div><div>Parking: Venture Center Deck, adjacent to Venture III (visitor spaces are unrestricted after 5pm)</div></div><div><div>Map: <a href="http://osm.org/go/ZYRUokxgI--" target="_blank">OpenStreetMap</a></div><div><div>
</div></div></div><div><div><div><p>Clayton Coleman is architect and engineer on cloud orchestration and<br>
containers at Red Hat, in charge of both technical direction for<br>
Kubernetes and OpenShift (Red Hat's platform as a service built on top<br>
of Kubernetes) as well as the broader container and container content<br>
efforts at Red Hat. Clayton is one of the top contributors to both<br>
Kubernetes and OpenShift and has been involved in many projects in the<br>
container, platform-as-a-service, and ci/cd ecosystem over the last<br>
four years. He enjoys sleeping, but rarely has time to do it anymore.</p>
<p>Abstract:</p>
<p>Containers, Microservices, Continuous Integration and Deployment, and<br>
DevOps are the buzzwords of the day. But how do they actually help<br>
make it easier to build and run software? How do<br>
container-as-a-service systems like Kubernetes, Mesos, or Docker Swarm<br>
change how software is deployed?</p>
<p>In this talk I'll cover how all of<br>
these topics come together, how they can benefit developers and<br>
operators, and how we've built a platform (OpenShift) that supports,<br>
exposes, and safeguards that flexibility and power for devs AND ops.<br>
I'll do an overview of the features and patterns in OpenShift that<br>
make it easy to build and deploy applications, with a quick demo of<br>
how it puts Docker containers to work in a cluster for local and<br>
remote development.</p>
<p>Since OpenShift is built on top of Kubernetes,<br>
I'll also describe how Kubernetes was built to solve Google-scale<br>
problems and how even the humblest local web application can benefit<br>
from those patterns.</p><div class=""><div id=":116" class="" tabindex="0"><img class="" src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/ui/v1/icons/mail/images/cleardot.gif"></div></div><span class=""><font color="#888888">
</font></span></div></div></div></div><span class=""><font color="#888888">Jeremy Davis<br></font></span><span class=""><font color="#888888">TriLUG PR</font></span></div>