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2026 Will Be the Year of Agentic Workloads in Production on Amazon EKS
Episode 1566

2026 Will Be the Year of Agentic Workloads in Production on Amazon EKS

AWS’s approach to Elastic Kubernetes Service has evolved significantly since its 2018 launch. According to Mike Stefanik, Senior Manager of Product Management for EKS and ECR, today’s users increasingly represent the late majority—teams that want Kubernetes without managing every component themselves. In a conversation on The New Stack Makers, Stefanik described how AI workloads are reshaping Kubernetes operations and why AWS open-sourced an MCP server for EKS. Early feedback showed that meaningful, task-oriented tool names—not simple API mirrors—made MCP servers more effective for LLMs, prompting AWS to design tools focused on troubleshooting, runbooks, and full application workflows. AWS also introduced a hosted knowledge base built from years of support cases to power more capable agents.

The New Stack Podcast · Amazon web services, Mike Stefaniak, The New Stack, Frederic Lardinois

November 28, 202523m 16s

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Show Notes

AWS’s approach to Elastic Kubernetes Service has evolved significantly since its 2018 launch. According to Mike Stefanik, Senior Manager of Product Management for EKS and ECR, today’s users increasingly represent the late majority—teams that want Kubernetes without managing every component themselves. In a conversation onThe New Stack Makers, Stefanik described how AI workloads are reshaping Kubernetes operations and why AWS open-sourced an MCP server for EKS. Early feedback showed that meaningful, task-oriented tool names—not simple API mirrors—made MCP servers more effective for LLMs, prompting AWS to design tools focused on troubleshooting, runbooks, and full application workflows. AWS also introduced a hosted knowledge base built from years of support cases to power more capable agents.

While “agentic AI” gets plenty of buzz, most customers still rely on human-in-the-loop workflows. Stefanik expects that to shift, predicting 2026 as the year agentic workloads move into production. For experimentation, he recommends the open-source Strands SDK. Internally, he has already seen major productivity gains from BI agents that automate complex data analysis tasks.

Learn more from The New Stack about Amazon Web Services’ approach to Elastic Kubernetes Service

How Amazon EKS Auto Mode Simplifies Kubernetes Cluster Management (Part 1)

A Deep Dive Into Amazon EKS Auto (Part 2)

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Topics

software developertech podcastthe new stackai developeramazon web servicestechthe new stack makerssoftware engineermike stefaniakai engineer