https://kubernetespodcast.com/episode/062-cern/
Back in 2012, CERN announced one of its most important achievements; the discovery of the Higgs boson. This work led to the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics. Ricardo Rocha, Lukas Heinrich and Clemens Lang of CERN redid the data analysis on top of Kubernetes this year, which Ricardo and Lukas demonstrated at a keynote at KubeCon EU. All three join Adam and Craig for a short physics lesson and a view into computing at the largest scale, for particles at the smallest.
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Chatter of the week
- 50th anniversary of the launch of Apollo 11 by NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day, and as reported by CBS News in real time
- LEGO Saturn V - mid-completion
-
47th annual Seafair Milk Carton Derby
- Adam’s pictures, including the Saturn V rocket
News of the week
- IBM announced it has closed its acquisition of Red Hat
- Hashicorp Consul 1.6
- Benchmarking best practices for Istio by Megan O’Keefe, Mandar Jog and John Howard
- IPv6 enhancement proposal for Kubernetes
- Architecting with Google Kubernetes Engine specialization
- Weave Ignite
- Cloud Native CI/CD with OpenShift Pipelines
- k3v
- Avoid time-of-measurement bias with Prometheus
Links from the interview
- CERN
- Standard model of particle physics
- Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, with Neil deGrasse Tyson
- Baryonic matter
- Dark matter
- History of computing at CERN
- Where the web was born
- Large Hadron Collider
- Higgs boson
- Servicing the first web server - Tim Berners-Lee’s NeXT cube
- CERN Program Library (FORTRAN)
- KubeCon EU keynote: Reperforming a Nobel Prize Discovery on Kubernetes
- CERN openlab partnership
- ROOT Data Analysis Framework
- Particle physics is embarassingly parallel
- Open Data Initiative
- Clemens’ shirt
- Our guests on Twitter: