A year after dipping its toes into the virtual application container waters, Microsoft has launched a new, curated Container Apps category in the Azure Marketplace. “This is a super simple ‘getting ...
Docker is an important tool for developers and for running apps across networks, and it has many uses for the pro and ...
On the heels of Docker 1.0 being released, Docker has announced the launch of cloud-based platform services for distributed applications, including container image distribution and change management, ...
XDA Developers on MSN
Docker Desktop is convenient, but native containers taught me how Docker actually works
Docker Desktop features a simplified security context that masks many errors and failures behind the veil of a VM. Even ...
Container company Docker has unveiled the services it says represent the most important developments for the open-source technology over the next 12 months. At the DockerCon EU conference in Amsterdam ...
Docker, a startup whose open-source container technology is becoming a popular component in software development, is announcing today that it’s acquired KiteMatic, a three-man startup that built a Mac ...
If you have your ear even slightly to the ground of the software community, you’ll have heard of Docker. Having recently enjoyed a tremendous rise in popularity, it continues to attract users at a ...
After his introductory series, Tom Fenton deploys a database on Docker and integrates it with other apps deployed from other Docker images. In my Introduction to Docker series, I covered the basics of ...
XDA Developers on MSN
This container manager app might finally make me switch from Portainer
However, the problem with Portainer is that it does too much. That's usually a good thing, but in my case, I just want ...
Distributing desktop applications for Linux has long been a headache, in large part because apps have to be repackaged for each Linux distribution. And while an app-containerization technology like ...
A book published in 1981, called Nailing Jelly to a Tree, describes software as “nebulous and difficult to get a firm grip on.” That was true in 1981, and it is no less true four decades later.
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