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At KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2026 in Amsterdam, Alex Kestner, principal product manager for Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS), discussed how Amazon EKS Auto Mode aims to reduce the operational burden of running Kubernetes at scale. While Kubernetes delivers significant power, it also introduces complexity—particularly through repetitive, day-to-day tasks like managing node lifecycles, ensuring security updates, and selecting optimal infrastructure.
Kestner emphasized that much of this “undifferentiated heavy lifting” distracts platform teams from delivering business value. Amazon EKS Auto Mode addresses this by automating infrastructure operations across the full node lifecycle, shifting responsibility for key operational components outside the cluster and into AWS-managed services.
Built in collaboration with the EC2 team and leveraging technologies like Karpenter, Auto Mode dynamically provisions right-sized compute resources based on workload requirements. While it doesn’t eliminate all challenges—such as unpredictable workloads or diverse deployment needs—it provides a more application-focused approach to scaling and cost optimization. Ultimately, Auto Mode represents a meaningful step toward simplifying Kubernetes operations in increasingly complex cloud-native environments.
Learn more from The New Stack about the latest developments around the latest with Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS):
2026 Will Be the Year of Agentic Workloads in Production on Amazon EKS
How Amazon EKS Auto Mode Simplifies Kubernetes Cluster Management (Part 1)
A Deep Dive Into Amazon EKS Auto (Part 2)
Join our community of newsletter subscribers to stay on top of the news and at the top of your game.
By The New Stack4.3
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At KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2026 in Amsterdam, Alex Kestner, principal product manager for Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS), discussed how Amazon EKS Auto Mode aims to reduce the operational burden of running Kubernetes at scale. While Kubernetes delivers significant power, it also introduces complexity—particularly through repetitive, day-to-day tasks like managing node lifecycles, ensuring security updates, and selecting optimal infrastructure.
Kestner emphasized that much of this “undifferentiated heavy lifting” distracts platform teams from delivering business value. Amazon EKS Auto Mode addresses this by automating infrastructure operations across the full node lifecycle, shifting responsibility for key operational components outside the cluster and into AWS-managed services.
Built in collaboration with the EC2 team and leveraging technologies like Karpenter, Auto Mode dynamically provisions right-sized compute resources based on workload requirements. While it doesn’t eliminate all challenges—such as unpredictable workloads or diverse deployment needs—it provides a more application-focused approach to scaling and cost optimization. Ultimately, Auto Mode represents a meaningful step toward simplifying Kubernetes operations in increasingly complex cloud-native environments.
Learn more from The New Stack about the latest developments around the latest with Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS):
2026 Will Be the Year of Agentic Workloads in Production on Amazon EKS
How Amazon EKS Auto Mode Simplifies Kubernetes Cluster Management (Part 1)
A Deep Dive Into Amazon EKS Auto (Part 2)
Join our community of newsletter subscribers to stay on top of the news and at the top of your game.

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