The Business of Open Source

The Business of Open Source

Whether you're a founder of an open source startup, an open source maintainer or just an open source enthusiast, join host Emily Omier as she talks to the people who work at the intersection of open source and business, from startup founders to leaders of open source giants and all the people who help open source startups grow.

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Cutting through the Multicloud Hype with Chris Psaltis

Cutting through the Multicloud Hype with Chris Psaltis

This week on The Business of Cloud Native I spoke with Chris Psaltis, CEO and co-founder of mist.io. We spoke about why multicloud is necessary (and scenarios where multicloud is not necessary), where multicloud is headed in the future and the journey Chris and his co-founders have been on with Mist. HighlightsThe difference between using multicloud for legal / regulatory reasons or because of the company’s history and using multicloud strategically to improve developer velocity or improve customer experience. The complexity involved with pursuing multicloud and why many organizations are better off in just one cloud. Why being cloud agnostic from day one is not a good strategy in the vast majority of cases. Why no one seems to be able to correctly estimate how difficult it is to build a multicloud platform. Why ‘silos’ are the competitive alternative to a unified platform for companies How Mist went from working primarily with smaller teams before figuring out that they provided more value for large teams because the pain from multicloud management increases exponentially as the number of engineers, applications and environments increases. When the founding team decided to stop being consultants and start an open source technology startup. LinksMistChris on LinkedInChris on Twitter

24 Mars 202126min

Security, Clouds and Open Source with Tzury Bar Yochay

Security, Clouds and Open Source with Tzury Bar Yochay

This week on The Business of Cloud Native, I talked to Tzury Bar Yochay, founder and CTO of Reblaze, about building a cloud native security company before twelve thousand people were going to KubeCon. Highlights:Why your security measures have to keep up with hackers’ sophistication.The moment when Tzury decided to go from being a contractor for the defense industry to founding a company.Why the default path for startups is failure. Why open source is key to securing your cloud environment.How selling a security product to developers has evolved over time. Why lazy developers are good developers. Why selling software to developers is different from selling software to other types of professionals. Why he thinks the most brilliant developers tend to gravitate towards open source. Why security based on obscurity is a terrible, perhaps even evil, strategy. Links:ReblazeTzury on LinkedIn@tzury on TwitterTzury on GitHubCuriefense

17 Mars 202135min

Building a reliable, transactional cloud native database with Karthik Ranganathan

Building a reliable, transactional cloud native database with Karthik Ranganathan

This week, I talked with Karthik Ranganathan about the challenges going from employee of a large company to startup frounder and why he founded Yugabyte because he wanted a database that both was transactional and still could be highly available.Highlights: Why the ability to scale is important for any cloud native application, including for a cloud native database.Why Yugabyte is still open source and why being open source is important to the company. Why enterprises wanted an open source database to house their mission-critical data. Why the company went from an open core model to open source / managed service model. Why end customers care about open source. Why early-stage, small companies have trouble establishing trust and how being open source helps build trust. Why building around open source helps nudge customers to ‘buy’ instead of built it themselves. Why finding the right position and the right message is a major challenge at the beginning of the company. Links: Karthik on LinkedInKarthik on Twitter YugabyteYugabyte Slack

10 Mars 202137min

Hiring a Team for your Technical Startup with Natalie Ledbetter

Hiring a Team for your Technical Startup with Natalie Ledbetter

This week, I talked to Natalie Ledbetter, Head of People and Platform at Boldstart Ventures. We talked about how startups can approach team and culture building, including:How to prioritize your hiresCommon mistakes founders make when building a teamWhy you should always avoid brilliant jerks, even if they are very brilliantHow to divide responsibilities between foundersAnticipating growth and setting your team up so that it can scale as easily as possibleThe difference in skills sets between 'startup people' and employees you would want to hire later onLinks: Natalie on LinkedInNatalie on TwitterBoldstart Ventures

3 Mars 202137min

What Does Cloud Freedom Mean with Sirish Raghuram

What Does Cloud Freedom Mean with Sirish Raghuram

In this episode of The Business of Cloud Native, we talk about the hard business goals behind words like "freedom" as well as what it's like to go from engineer to CEO. My guest, Sirish Raghuram, is the CEO and co-founder of Platform9.Links: https://platform9.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/sirishraghuram/

24 Feb 202136min

The Importance of Managing SaaS Applications with Shawn Lankton

The Importance of Managing SaaS Applications with Shawn Lankton

In this episode of The Business of Cloud Native, Shawn Lankton talks about how Microsoft 365 and related applications fit into an organization's move to the cloud and why organizations need to pay attention to security for all their SaaS applications.  Links: https://www.coreview.comShawn on Twitter

17 Feb 202120min

Overcoming hosting challenges for OSS with Thomas Markey

Overcoming hosting challenges for OSS with Thomas Markey

Thomas Markey talks about how to remove some of the barriers to running an open source project with free hosting services.  Links: https://fosshost.orgThomas on LinkedInFOSSHOST on TwitterDiscord

10 Feb 202128min

Separating Compute and Storage with Ranjan Parthasarathy

Separating Compute and Storage with Ranjan Parthasarathy

Ranjan Parthasarathy talks about why separating compute and storage makes it easier to operate at hyper scale and why he decided to found Logiq.ai to make it easier for companies to do so. Links: LinkedInLogiq.ai

3 Feb 202124min

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