The Pragmatic Engineer

The history of servers, the cloud, and what’s next – with Oxide

142 snips
Dec 17, 2025
Bryan Cantrill, co-founder and CTO of Oxide Computer and a former distinguished engineer at Sun Microsystems, dives into the evolution of servers and cloud computing. He reflects on the innovations that emerged from the Dotcom Bust, highlighting the significance of deeper technical focus. The conversation covers AWS's market impact, Kubernetes' role in cloud neutrality, and the challenges of server updates. Bryan also discusses employing AI in engineering and how Oxide preserves its culture during growth, emphasizing the importance of values and transparency.
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INSIGHT

Creativity Thrives Under Constraint

  • Innovation often accelerates during downturns because constraints force focus and creativity.
  • Bryan Cantrill says Sun produced deeper technical work in the bust than in the boom (ZFS, DTrace, service managerability).
ANECDOTE

The Night The Boom Felt Over

  • Bryan recounts a lavish Sun dinner in September 2000 that felt unsustainable and foreshadowed the crash.
  • The dot‑com traffic dropped from gridlock to near empty in a month, signaling a fast collapse.
INSIGHT

Open Source And x86 Changed The Stack

  • Open source and x86 performance upended the earlier Solaris/Sun dominance.
  • By mid‑2000s, Linux on x86 plus cloud services made custom vendor stacks less central.
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