To be honest I think we should be adopting the full ecosystem we've been busy building around containerization.
Imagine calling up breakdown assistance because your car won't start, mechanic comes out, cracks the hood and is like "ah there's your problem right there, ignition service has only 1/2 pods healthy because the node went into NotReady due to DiskPressure. I can clear up some log files so it goes underneath 80% disk usage again but sucks teeth it's gonna cost ya. I'd recommend throwing the whole car out and getting a new one. You shouldn't get an attachment to these things, they're cattle not pets."
Looks like your cars Kubernetes certificates have expired after a year, we'll need to SSH in and run kubeadm to refresh them. Wait, the 5G pod isn't starting ...
You joke, but I decided I wanted to try out Kubernetes, so I set it up at home and moved some of my local services into it, one of them being my custom lighting automation software. Eventually my lights just stopped working, and after a lot of rummaging it turned out to be expired certificates. I promptly put the software back where it was before, removed Kubernetes, and decided there were better things for me to play around with.
Imagine calling up breakdown assistance because your car won't start, mechanic comes out, cracks the hood and is like "ah there's your problem right there, ignition service has only 1/2 pods healthy because the node went into NotReady due to DiskPressure. I can clear up some log files so it goes underneath 80% disk usage again but sucks teeth it's gonna cost ya. I'd recommend throwing the whole car out and getting a new one. You shouldn't get an attachment to these things, they're cattle not pets."
Truly breathtaking.