Brandt Keller joins host Rebecca Lively to talk about what it takes to deliver secure, resilient software in disconnected, mission-critical environments. A former Marine turned CNCF ambassador, Brandt shares how his frontline experience fuels his passion for open source and solving tough infrastructure problems. He unpacks the government’s complicated relationship with open source, the risks of being just a consumer, and why designing for air-gapped systems makes everyone’s software better. From Kubernetes contributions to cereal-soup debates, this episode blends real-world insight with a touch of fun.

Defense Unicorns, A Podcast

[email protected] (Robert Slaughter, Michaela Flatau, Rebecca Lively and Luke Shabro)

Why Contributing to Open Source Matters for the Mission

MAY 19, 202559 MIN
Defense Unicorns, A Podcast

Why Contributing to Open Source Matters for the Mission

MAY 19, 202559 MIN

Description

On this episode of The Defense Unicorns Podcast, host Rebecca Lively sits down with Brandt Keller, software engineer and CNCF ambassador, to explore what happens when a former Marine brings his frontline mindset to DevSecOps. Brandt’s story is one of relentless problem-solving, especially in disconnected, air-gapped environments where “cloud-native” has to mean something entirely different.Brandt unpacks how open source can be both a lifeline and a liability in government systems, and why just consuming it isn’t enough—real security means showing up, contributing, and understanding what’s under the hood. He shares his perspective on trust, transparency, and why the U.S. government’s lack of contribution to critical tools like Kubernetes might be the real risk. The conversation also explores the cultural shift required to embrace open ecosystems in highly regulated spaces.From debates over supply chain security and SBOMs to the practical challenges of deploying software in classified settings, this episode offers a grounded, behind-the-scenes look at what it takes to build tools that truly work at the tactical edge. Key Quote:“ When you try to take something that is not airgap friendly and make it airgap friendly, you quickly find out that you made a lot of assumptions about how this thing would be used and where, and kind of the underlying infrastructure and when you try to work back for them that it's, it, it's difficult. It's not something you can't overcome. It's not insurmountable, but it is difficult. But you also find out that there's just a lot of areas for. Resiliency that you didn't also plan for, that applied to connected environments. And so this is where I've kind of been diving into this more and more lately to try and to describe, and build some knowledge to around why this is important for kind of building any application today. It may be a little niche to go to the extreme of air gap, but I believe like there's still some of these underlying cloud native fundamentals that is like, if you start with the ability for knowing how your architecture adapts to varying levels of connectivity, then you're probably building a stronger, more resilient system overall.”Brandt KellerTime Stamps:(03:19) The Defense Sector and Career Path(06:15) Becoming a Cloud Native Computing Foundation Ambassador(09:48) Open Source Contributions and the Challenges(14:14) Government and the lack of Open Source(32:53) Kubernetes and Foreign Contributions(37:24) The Importance of Air Gap in Cloud Native Tools(53:16) Lightning Round Links:Connect with Brandt KellerConnect with Rebecca LivelyLearn More About Defense Unicorns Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.