Kubernetes has some bad organization and some terrible naming due to it's rapid pace of development, but it's getting better and is much nicer than any other existing system that can provide the same functionality.
I think you'd be surprised how quickly you can understand > 80% of it with just an hour spent reading the docs.
Don't pile in on k8s criticism without familiarizing yourself, please.
IMO it's a bit like Java for the cloud, the write once run anywhere bit (same caveats, but the win is still there). It intermediates the differences between cloud platforms. That alone makes it strategically worthwhile even if it was overcomplicated. But I don't think it is. Its core control loop is simple in principle, and the concepts and extension points fall out pretty naturally from it. It is a well-designed system at core and can support improvements over time without accruing cruft indefinitely, for example. Part of that makes it look like a bag of decoupled tools. But that's a strength of the system in the longer term.
I was simply commenting on the “it’s a complex thing so it had to be complex” line of reasoning. It’s faulty, you can make complex thing easier with good design.
One is organized and sensible. The other is a mess.
Just because they are both technically capable of the same things doesn’t mean we shouldn’t hold ourselves to the higher standard.
(Haven’t used Kubernetes, just going with the analogy)