March 31, 2026

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Architecture: How Kubernetes Works

You have a fleet of containers. They need to run reliably, scale under load, recover from failures, and communicate with each other — all without you manually SSHing into servers at 2am. That's the problem Kubernetes was built to solve. This post walks through how Kubernetes is actually architected: what the pieces are, how they talk to each other, and why they were designed that way. No prior Kubernetes experience needed — just a general com… Read More
by Phee Jay

March 30, 2026

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Explained: STUN Protocol

You're on a video call. The connection is direct — low latency, no relay, no server in the middle eating your bandwidth. Yet both you and the person you're talking to are behind routers, on private networks, with addresses the internet has never heard of. How did your browser find the other person? The answer, almost certainly, involved STUN . It ran silently in the background before the call even connected, took a fraction of a second,… Read More
by Phee Jay

March 30, 2026

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Explained: NAT

Your laptop is sitting on a home network. It has an IP address — something like 192.168.1.42 . But that address means nothing to the rest of the internet. It's a private address, invisible beyond your router. And yet, you can open a browser, load a webpage hosted on a server in another country, and the response comes back to exactly the right device, on exactly the right tab. How? The answer is NAT — Network Address Translation. It's on… Read More
by Phee Jay
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