Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Tilt auto-rebuilds, redeploys, and streams logs across microservices to a unified dashboard when code changes, giving Kubernetes teams fast local feedback without manual orchestration.
Tilt is a developer platform that dramatically improves the local development experience for engineers building microservices and Kubernetes-native applications. The Tilt CLI watches for code changes across multiple services and automatically rebuilds, redeploys, and streams logs to a unified dashboard, enabling developers to work across many services simultaneously without manually orchestrating Docker builds and Kubernetes applies. The Tilt UI provides a visual overview of the entire local dev environment — every service, its health, logs, and recent changes — replacing scattered terminal windows. Tilt's smart rebuild logic skips unnecessary steps and uses file sync to push changes into running containers without full rebuilds, making the feedback loop fast enough for productive development. Acquired by Docker in 2022, Tilt has become a key component of the Docker desktop developer experience for Kubernetes workflows. It competes with Skaffold and Garden in the Kubernetes local development tooling market and has been adopted by major engineering teams at companies including Shopify, VMware, and Salesforce.
IBM completed $6.4B acquisition of HashiCorp at $35/share in Feb 2025; integrated into IBM's hybrid cloud portfolio;
HashiCorp was founded in 2012 by Mitchell Hashimoto and Armon Dadgar while they were students at the University of Washington, initially releasing Vagrant — a developer tool for managing reproducible local development environments — as an open-source project. The company was built on a philosophy that infrastructure tooling should be codified, version-controlled, and collaborative, extending the principles of software engineering to the management of servers, networks, and security configurations. This "infrastructure as code" philosophy, articulated in Hashimoto's foundational writing on the modern data center, became the conceptual foundation for an entire generation of DevOps tooling and established HashiCorp as one of the most influential companies in cloud infrastructure.\n\nHashiCorp's product suite spans the core challenges of multi-cloud infrastructure management. Terraform is the world's most widely used infrastructure-as-code tool, enabling teams to provision and manage cloud resources across AWS, Azure, GCP, and 3,000+ providers through declarative configuration files. Vault provides secrets management and dynamic credential generation for applications and infrastructure. Consul delivers service discovery and network configuration for microservices. Nomad is a workload orchestrator that complements or competes with Kubernetes for container and non-container workloads. Together, these tools address the provisioning, security, connectivity, and runtime layers of modern infrastructure.\n\nIBM completed the acquisition of HashiCorp in February 2025 for $6.4 billion ($35 per share), integrating the company into IBM's hybrid cloud portfolio alongside Red Hat. The acquisition gave IBM the industry-standard multi-cloud provisioning tool and a direct path to the developer and DevOps communities that have resisted IBM's traditional enterprise software positioning. Prior to acquisition, HashiCorp had raised approximately $350 million in venture funding and gone public in 2021. The company's decision to shift Terraform from MPL to BUSL licensing in 2023 sparked the creation of the OpenTofu fork maintained by the Linux Foundation — a community fracture that preceded the IBM acquisition.
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