But how do you get started? What are the tools of the trade and basic primitives that you should understand before writing your first Kubernetes operator?
Even if you are not a (Go) developer, in this session we will walk you through the steps of creating your first operator from scratch by explaining the fundamentals of the Kubernetes platform
and applying our knowledge in a live coding session.
Add to Calendar
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://addevent.com/libs/atc/1.6.1/atc.min.js" async defer></script>
Meet our {code} coach Michael! Michael Gasch is a Staff Engineer in the Office of the CTO at VMware with a focus on event-driven systems, Kubernetes and service mesh. When asked what motivates him to do the work he does, Michael said, ” Growing up in communism (East Germany) before the wall came down I had to wait for my first computer (C64) until the age of 10. I was super curious and there was so much to learn but I never thought I was “smart” enough to learn a programming language like C or Java. So I doubled down on the “ops” side of IT (which is equally important of course). Many years later, when I heard about the Go programming language in the context of Kubernetes, I
pushed myself to learn that language because the Kubernetes docs were missing/incomplete/outdated. Fast forward, I am a distributed systems engineer
at VMware working on Service Mesh. This personal journey drives me to help
everyone with a similar story and background to not be afraid and learn to code.
Rafael Brito is an Application Platform Architect in the Office of the CTO at VMware, Inc. He has over 25 years of IT experience, including 15+ years of broad-based management in Cloud and Systems Engineering, Client Management & Sales Engineering.

