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Weekly · DevOps & Platform Engineering

Infrastructure has a reading list.
This is it.

It was 2 AM. A Kubernetes migration had gone sideways. Two hundred open tabs, four Slack channels of conflicting advice — and the one article that would have prevented all of it had been buried in a feed nobody reads anymore. Dispatch exists so that never happens to you.

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Issue #52Feb 18, 2026 · 3 links, ~39 min total

This week's three.

Every issue is structured the same: the link, the field note, and why it matters this week specifically. No padding. No sponsored content. No "hot takes."

Dispatch · Vol. 2 Issue #52
The Terraform footguns nobody documents
Feb 18, 2026
01
Kubernetes
learnk8s.io·18 min read

Why your Kubernetes migration will fail in year two, not year one

The initial migration is the easy part. Everyone's motivated, the greenfield work is exciting, and the team is paying attention. The problem is what happens 14 months later when the original champions have moved on and the platform is now maintained by people who weren't in the room.

Field noteRead this before you write the migration RFC. The "year two problem" is real — I've watched it happen at three companies. The section on knowledge transfer debt is worth the whole read.
02
Terraform
blog.gruntwork.io·12 min read

The footguns in Terraform's state that nobody writes about

State drift. Remote state locking failures. The import block that silently succeeds but leaves your plan permanently broken. These aren't edge cases — they're the daily reality of running Terraform at scale, and the official docs treat them like footnotes.

Field noteBookmarked this after a 6-hour incident caused by a state lock that didn't release. The section on `terraform state mv` footguns alone is worth your 12 minutes. Send to whoever owns your IaC.
03
Platform Eng
platformengineering.org·9 min read

Internal Developer Portals are org design problems, not tool problems

Backstage won't fix the fact that your platform team reports to a VP who reports to a different VP than your product teams. The tooling is a 10% problem. The other 90% is whether the people who build the platform have any incentive to talk to the people who use it.

Field noteThis reframes the whole IDP conversation. If your portal adoption is low, ask who owns the roadmap and whether they've done a user interview in the last quarter. The org chart is the product.
That's issue #52. #53 lands next Tuesday.
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The curation process

60 links read.
Three make it through.

The filter is simple: would I have wanted this article six months ago? Would it have changed a decision, prevented an incident, or saved me a week of research? If the answer isn't an immediate yes, it doesn't go in.

Person reading technical articles at a desk with multiple browser tabs open, taking notes in a notebook
Every week, without fail

The reading happens on Sunday mornings.
Not when it's convenient.

Two hours. Coffee. No Slack. The same ritual since issue #1. The consistency is what makes the curation trustworthy — you can't develop taste on a schedule that fits around meetings.

The funnel
140+
Sources monitored weekly
GitHub discussions, CNCF blogs, incident postmortems, SRE team wikis, and the feeds nobody knows exist
~60
Links read per issue
Every candidate link gets read in full, not skimmed
3
Links published per issue
The three that earned their place this week
Issue format
The linkTitle, source, read time
The excerptThe paragraph that earns the click
Field noteWhy it matters this week

No sponsored slots. No affiliate links. The only reason a link appears is because it earned it.

Reader outcomes

What engineers built —
or avoided.

These aren't "great newsletter!" quotes. They're specific outcomes from specific issues. That's the bar.

Incident prevented
"Issue #38 had a link on etcd compaction behavior under high write load. We were three days from a production incident that would have taken us 12+ hours to diagnose. That one article probably saved us a Friday night."
Marcus Webb, professional headshot of a man in his 30s with short dark hair
Marcus Webb
Principal SRE · Lattice
Leadership buy-in secured
"I've been in platform engineering for nine years. Dispatch is the only newsletter where I read every field note and think 'yes, exactly, someone else has been in this room.' The Backstage org design piece changed how I pitched our IDP to leadership."
Priya Sundaram, professional headshot of a woman with dark hair and warm smile
Priya Sundaram
Director of Platform Engineering · Brex
40% faster IaC incident response
"We used the Terraform state migration guide from issue #44 as the basis for our own internal runbook. Cut our IaC incident response time by about 40%. My team reads it every week now."
Tobias Ehrmann, professional headshot of a man with glasses and friendly expression
Tobias Ehrmann
Engineering Manager, Infrastructure · Contentful
2,847
subscribers
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52
issues published
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The archive

Audit the quality.
Then decide.

Three past issues, open for inspection. No paywalls, no registration. If these don't earn your trust, the subscribe button isn't for you.

Full archive →
#50Feb 4, 2026
Most read this quarter

The incident that taught us Kubernetes isn't a database

KubernetesIncident Review
k8s.io — Understanding etcd compaction
incident.io — The postmortem that changed how we alert
platformengineering.org — Observability is not monitoring
Read full issue
#44Dec 10, 2025
Referenced in 3 reader RFCs

Terraform at 100 engineers: the state management crisis

TerraformIaC
gruntwork.io — Terragrunt patterns for large orgs
blog.hashicorp.com — State drift: causes and cures
charity.wtf — The on-call burden of bad IaC
Read full issue
#38Oct 22, 2025
Changed a leadership pitch

Platform teams don't fail at tooling. They fail at trust.

Platform EngOrg Design
martinfowler.com — Team Topologies revisited
lethain.com — Staff engineer as platform advocate
increment.com — The IDP adoption problem
Read full issue

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Issue #53 lands Tuesday.