I used a disposable email service to receive the ebook.
This is the permalink to the attached ebook:
<a href="https://rainmail.xyz/attachments/nginx@filerpost.xyz/143/CloudNativeDevopswithKubernetesfullbook.pdf" rel="nofollow">https://rainmail.xyz/attachments/nginx@filerpost.xyz/143/Clo...</a>
Step 1: implement Kubernetes<p>Step 2: completely transform your existing organization to be a matrix of agile teams with chargeback budgets aligned to resource use of shared services and collaborating on product lifecycles in scrum and kanban using full test coverage on both legacy and modern apps stored in asset-managed Docker containers in ci/cd pipelines triggered by Jira tickets deploying declarative immutable infrastructure and integrating an array of site reliability services that don't ship with k8s while adding policy and compliance enforcement with secret management and process auditing including in-line content filters using redundant services in multiple data centers without wasting resources or money<p>Step 3: document it<p>(I haven't read the book yet, so ymmv)
Business email, company, job title — what if someone doesn't have one or more of these? I know one can give fake information, but why are all the fields on the form marked with an asterisk indicating that they're mandatory? It's asking for phone number too?! Thanks, but no thanks. This is not for me.
Its an eBook, not a book.<p>Even though I work in tech, I was excited that they were giving a way a print copy I could flick though easily, and bookmark, annotate or share.<p>EBooks have some advantages, but I still prefer print.
Here's a lengthy interview with John Arundel, an author of the book: <a href="https://semaphoreci.com/blog/2019/02/14/a-reality-check-about-cloud-native-devops-john-arundel-interview.html" rel="nofollow">https://semaphoreci.com/blog/2019/02/14/a-reality-check-abou...</a> You can get a lot from it without giving away any of your personal or fake information. :)
Example code that goes with the book is also freely available:<p><a href="https://github.com/cloudnativedevops/demo" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/cloudnativedevops/demo</a>
Kubernetes is an overkill for 90% of systems. The hype will die off eventually, but not before ruining fair number of projects. Death by overengineering. I wonder how things even worked before containers :)