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NUnuslil y a 11 minutes
This is genuinely really cool. I guess the added complexity and/or performance hit will require some justification but I can see it paying off for some use cases.
DIdinklebergil y a 16 heures
This is cool. As someone who has authored Kubernetes educational content in a past role, I can definitely see the appeal of building something like this. iirc we first used Katacoda and then used some other similar platform and they were very useful since they spun up a fresh instance on the fly for each user with a specific setup.
Though it seems like right now this is probably better for conceptual/architectural education. The real fun is when you start learning to master kubectl.
MRmraza007il y a 7 heures
As someone who loves teaching and building this can be very useful
For example i built this
https://kubernetes-made-simple.vercel.app/
Now i can add this
RAraychisil y a 16 heures
First thing is first, this is really cool.
This feels like the right way to frame LLM-assisted engineering. AI can generate a shocking amount of code, but the actual value is in the review discipline, and tests around it. The browser Kubernetes angle is cool, but what I find more interesting is the workflow, and especially testing behaviour against k8s instead of just trusting “looks right.” I do wonder how many teams are already doing this level of verification for AI-written code. It might be the direction everyone goes in over the next few years.
DUduncanghil y a 16 heures
Investing early in this hn post before it’s a banger. Instant classic
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This is genuinely really cool. I guess the added complexity and/or performance hit will require some justification but I can see it paying off for some use cases.
This is cool. As someone who has authored Kubernetes educational content in a past role, I can definitely see the appeal of building something like this. iirc we first used Katacoda and then used some other similar platform and they were very useful since they spun up a fresh instance on the fly for each user with a specific setup. Though it seems like right now this is probably better for conceptual/architectural education. The real fun is when you start learning to master kubectl.
As someone who loves teaching and building this can be very useful For example i built this https://kubernetes-made-simple.vercel.app/ Now i can add this
First thing is first, this is really cool. This feels like the right way to frame LLM-assisted engineering. AI can generate a shocking amount of code, but the actual value is in the review discipline, and tests around it. The browser Kubernetes angle is cool, but what I find more interesting is the workflow, and especially testing behaviour against k8s instead of just trusting “looks right.” I do wonder how many teams are already doing this level of verification for AI-written code. It might be the direction everyone goes in over the next few years.
Investing early in this hn post before it’s a banger. Instant classic