У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Kubernetes Finally Gets Vercel-Style Deployment Safety или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Every deployment is a gamble. A user mid-session hits a new backend. A renamed field breaks a form. A shared TypeScript interface diverges between client and server, and suddenly your support queue is full and three teams are in a bridge call trying to figure out who broke what. This is version skew, and it's been quietly slowing down engineering teams on Kubernetes for years. In this episode of The Node (& More) Banter, Luca Maraschi and Matteo Collina introduce Skew Protection in Platformatic's Intelligent Command Center (ICC), bringing the deployment safety that frontend teams love about Vercel, directly into your existing Kubernetes setup. No migrations. Use the tools you're already using for your CI/CD pipeline. Just safer, faster shipping. We'll explore: ✅ Why version skew is a developer velocity problem disguised as a reliability problem ✅ How broken deployments silently erode user trust, and what it costs enterprises at scale ✅ How ICC pins users to their session version using cookie-based, version-aware routing ✅ The Active → Draining → Expired lifecycle that makes zero-downtime deploys predictable ✅ Why immutable per-version Deployments change how teams think about risk ✅ How Prometheus traffic monitoring automates cleanup. No manual rollback babysitting ✅ What this means for teams running Next.js, Remix, or monorepos on Kubernetes The big picture? Fear of breaking changes leads to bigger, rarer deployments, and that's where velocity goes to die. ICC's skew protection gives enterprise dev teams the confidence to ship smaller, ship faster, and stop making users pay the price for infrastructure gaps. Kubernetes just got a lot less scary.