Kubernetes deployment is the skill that quietly separates engineers who ship with confidence from those who cross their fingers every Friday afternoon. Here's what's happening: 82% of companies now run Kubernetes in production, up from 66% just two years ago. And the engineers who know how to deploy on it? They're earning a median salary of $186,750. But none of that is what made me want to write this post. The New York Times used to take 45 minutes to deploy a new version of their customer-facing apps. Forty-five minutes. After moving to Kubernetes, that dropped to seconds. Not because they hired a hundred more engineers. Not because they rewrote everything from scratch. Because they stopped fighting their own infrastructure and let Kubernetes do what it's built to do. That's the thing about Kubernetes deployment nobody tells you upfront. It looks complicated. The YAML files, the pods, the nodes, the clusters — it feels like a lot. But once the mental model c...
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