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Ingress-NGINX Is Dead. Here's How to Migrate Without Panic.

On March 24, 2026, the most-used ingress controller in Kubernetes became read-only. If you’re running ingress-nginx, your cluster didn’t catch fire, but any CVE discovered after that date will never get a patch.

That’s the honest version. Not “immediate action required” and not “don’t worry about it.” The project is gone, the security exposure is real, and the migration is more manageable than the scaremongering articles suggest if you understand what you’re actually dealing with.

· 14 min read
ai-agents

AI Agents in DevOps: A Practical Guide for Small Teams in 2026

Your lead developer is spending 12 hours a week on deployments, alert triage, and hunting through logs. That’s $2,400/week in engineering time burned on work that isn’t building your product. Meanwhile, AI agents in DevOps are cutting that toil by 30-50% at companies that implement them well.

The problem? Every guide on AI agents is written for enterprises with 200-person platform teams. If you’re running a 10-50 person company where developers do ops on the side, that advice is useless.

· 14 min read
automation

Kubernetes for SaaS Startups: Do You Actually Need It?

According to the CNCF 2025 Annual Cloud Native Survey, 82% of container users run Kubernetes in production. That stat makes startup CTOs panic. But your 15-person SaaS company is not in the same category as the enterprises driving that number.

Every growing startup hits the Kubernetes question eventually. Your app is getting real traffic, deployments are getting messy, and someone on the team suggests K8s. The anxiety is real because the internet makes it sound like you’re not a serious company until you’re running clusters.

· 10 min read
cloud-cost

Cloud Cost Optimization Strategies That Actually Work in 2026

78% of companies waste 21-50% of their cloud spend. For a startup on a $10K/mo AWS bill, that’s $2,500-$5,000 going nowhere every month. And nobody on your team has time to figure out where.

Most cloud cost optimization guides assume you have a dedicated FinOps team, a cloud architect, or at least someone whose full-time job is staring at billing dashboards. You don’t. You have engineers building product who occasionally glance at the AWS bill and wince.

· 10 min read
toil-reduction

How to Identify Toil in Your Infrastructure: A Practical Checklist

Your team is losing 10-15 hours a week to work that should be automated. The problem isn’t that nobody cares. It’s that nobody’s counting.

Toil hides in plain sight. It’s the deploy script someone runs manually every afternoon. The alert that fires every Thursday at 3am because the disk fills up. The DNS record change that requires SSH’ing into a box and editing a file by hand. Each task feels small. But add them up across your team and you’re looking at 30-40% of engineering time burned on work that produces zero lasting value.

· 10 min read
toil-reduction

The True Cost of Toil: How to Calculate What Manual Ops Is Costing Your Team

Your 10-person engineering team is spending roughly $490,000 a year on work that a script could do. That’s not a guess. That’s the math, and we’ll show you how to run it for your own team in the next five minutes.

Toil is the quiet tax on every engineering org. It doesn’t show up on your P&L. Nobody tracks it.

But it’s there. Every hand-edited YAML file. Every SSH session to restart a service. Every 45-minute deploy that should take 45 seconds. We’ve audited dozens of small engineering teams and the pattern is always the same: 30-40% of engineering hours burned on work that produces no lasting value.

· 10 min read
toil-reduction

Case Study: How We Reduced One Client's Toil by 60%

One of the engineers on the team I’m going to describe was spending roughly three hours a day not engineering. He was SSHing into servers to run deploys, digging through log files via tunnels, triaging alerts that didn’t mean anything, and resetting staging environments that never stayed stable. He was good at his job. He was also quietly looking at job listings.

This is a devops toil reduction case study. Here’s what we found in week one, what we fixed over six weeks, and what the numbers looked like on the other side.

· 6 min read
toil-reduction

How to Build a Toil Reduction Roadmap

The DORA 2024 report dropped a finding that should have caused a minor crisis in every engineering org: toil rose to 30% of engineering time, up from 25% the year before. That’s the first increase in five years, and it happened while teams were actively adopting AI tools and automation platforms. More tooling, more toil. Something isn’t working.

If you want to eliminate toil at your organization, the problem usually isn’t motivation. Engineers hate repetitive manual work by definition. The problem is that nobody has ever measured it, named it, or prioritized fixing it. It’s just “how Fridays work.”

· 14 min read
cloud-cost-optimization

Why Your AWS Bill Is Out of Control (And How to Fix It Without a Full-Time DevOps Engineer)

Your developer is technically “handling the cloud stuff.” They know enough to keep things running, and they’ve got more important things to do than audit billing. So the AWS bill sits on autopilot, until the day it shows up $400 higher than last month and nobody knows why.

This is how small business cloud costs spiral. Not because AWS is expensive. Because nobody’s watching.

Most of the waste is findable in a few hours if you know where to look. This article covers the five AWS line items that quietly drain small teams, how to set up a basic safety net in five minutes, and a realistic 30-day plan to cut your bill by 20-30%, without hiring a DevOps engineer.

· 10 min read