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Microsoft continues to evolve its Azure Kubernetes Service. Kubernetes co-creator Brendan Burns tells us where it’s going next.
Microsoft announced at the end of January 2025 that it would be closing its experimental support for WASI (WebAssembly System Interface) node pools in its managed Azure Kubernetes Service. This ...
Kubernetes is generally available for use with Azure Container Service, Microsoft’s managed cloud container hosting offering, as of Tuesday. ACS support for Kubernetes comes along with the ...
Microsoft and Isovalent on Monday announced efforts to bring eBPF capabilities to Microsoft's Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS).
Microsoft has made Kubernetes, the open source container cluster manager, available on its Azure public cloud. Kubernetes is designed to provide a "platform for automating deployment, scaling, and ...
Apart from VMs, Azure ARC can also register Kubernetes clusters. Once onboard, any external Kubernetes cluster can be managed like Azure’s own Kubernetes service, AKS.
Kubernetes in 2019 is supported by all three major public cloud providers—AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform (GPC)—as well as across multiple on-premises and private cloud vendors.
Microsoft this week announced optional service-level agreements for the Azure Kubernetes Service.
Microsoft launched a preview of support for Kubernetes in its Azure Container Service last year; today it is taking this service out of beta and making it generally available.
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