Kinde vs Kubernetes
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Kinde broadens its auth surface to passkeys while building out billing and B2B controls.
Kinde is shipping monthly feature roundups that consistently advance three fronts: authentication breadth, self-serve billing, and enterprise/B2B controls. The latest release adds passkeys (WebAuthn/FIDO2) for passwordless sign-in, the clearest capability jump in the window. Recent months also brought WhatsApp verification, IdP-initiated SAML, invite controls, and an MCP server for AI agents — a developer-focused auth platform widening on every axis.
Kinde is racing to close the feature gap with incumbent auth providers while differentiating on developer experience and built-in monetization. Authentication is going passwordless and omni-channel (passkeys, WhatsApp, SAML), billing is becoming a first-class self-serve product, and the MCP server stakes an early claim on auth for AI agents. The direction is a single platform that handles identity and billing together.
Expect continued enterprise hardening — likely deeper SSO/SCIM and organization-level controls — paired with more billing automation, as Kinde pushes up-market into B2B.
etcd 3.7 lands RangeStream and drops the last of v2store as Headlamp becomes the cluster's UI
The Kubernetes ecosystem is advancing on two fronts at once: the core datastore and the operator-facing UI. etcd 3.7.0 shipped GA with RangeStream, a full switch to v3store-only bootstrap, and a protobuf overhaul that cuts control-plane CPU. In parallel, Headlamp — the sanctioned successor to the now-archived Kubernetes Dashboard — is accumulating a plugin layer (Cluster API, Volcano, Knative) that pulls specialized workflows into one visual interface.
The center of gravity is efficiency in the control plane and consolidation in tooling. etcd's removal of legacy v2store and its feature-gate lifecycle signal a deliberate cleanup that Kubernetes 1.37 will draw on via the EtcdRangeStream gate. Around it, the project is standardizing operator experience on Headlamp rather than a proliferation of one-off dashboards, and formalizing how AI-assisted contributions enter the codebase. This is maintenance-era maturity, not new surface area.
Expect Kubernetes 1.37 to expose RangeStream behind its feature gate and more SIG projects to ship Headlamp plugins as the default visual entry point. The v3.8 line will likely complete the v2store removal by dropping v2 snapshot generation and the --snapshot-count flag.
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