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KCD SF Bay Area

KCD San Francisco Bay Area

Capacity: 500 (Remaining: 298)
in-person
Event date
September 9, 2025
08:00 AM PDT
Location
Location not provided
About this event

September 9, 2025 at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA

Join us for the inaugural Kubernetes Community Day KCD SF Bay Area event, the ultimate gathering for cloud native enthusiasts! This full-day event, sponsored by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), is packed with insightful cloud native talks and amazing opportunities for community networking with some of our industry's most iconic thought leaders and visionaries, including Solomon Hykes (founder of Docker, and Dagger.io), Jim Bugwadia (founder of Nirmata & Kyverno maintainer), Ramiro Berrelleza (founder of Okteto), Marina Moore (head of Edera Research), Dan Garfield (co-founder of Codefresh & Argo Proj Maintainer), CNCF AI Working Group leads Ron Petty and Madhuri Yechuri, and more. And be sure to catch the opening keynote from Jonathan Bryce, Executive Director of the CNCF!


The event will take place at the historic Computer History Museum in Mountain View, and as an added bonus, the museum will be open during the day to all event attendees as part of your registration package.

Cap off the day with our vibrant evening social hour, perfect for connecting with industry friends, colleagues, and new acquaintances in a relaxed setting. Whether you are here to learn, share ideas, or make new connections, this event is designed to foster collaboration and knowledge-sharing within the Bay Area's thriving cloud native community.

Schedule

Schedule is live at https://schedule.kcdsfbayarea.com

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Header background credit View of the Ferry Building from Pier 1 via Wikimedia Commons Dllu per Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 Original image adapted by cropping to 650 pixels vertical, adding gradient overlay and KCD logo. Kubernetes community photo credit Kubernetes.io Blog. Solomon Hykes presenting credit Business Insider. Computer History Museum credit Mark Richards via ArchDaily.

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