- Constant CEO turnover? Bringing in a AWS/Oracle Executive? RIP Docker. - It’s a big club of scabs shuffling between the ever diminishing number of umbrella corporations and their subsidiaries, who already own every market and supply chain. - It’s like IT. When they do their job competently you don’t notice much, but when they’re an incompetent narcissist they can insta-destroy everything. 
 
- This sounds bad for Docker if this guy was helping helm Oracle to where it is today. - He didn’t helm Oracle. He ran Oracle Cloud… much worse. 
 
- I have already started switching to podman. 
- The exciting thing about bringing in someone from outside the organization to take on a leading role is that they have no idea how anything fucking works and never really care. 
- So… Is there an alternative to docker? - Podman - The Docker runtime is probably ok as it is a tool instead of a community. The registry has a community aspect and is where we’ll likely see exploitation of vendor lock in. Luckily Docker was grounded well and you can set up your own registry. - Many have moved to or added the GitHub registry. It’s still a corporate controlled registry, but Microsoft are far more likely (and able) to eat the cost for developer goodwill. - I’ve got a registry running on my homelab that I haven’t quite moved fully over to yet. - Agree. They’ll surely to pay the cost and they have a proven track record on handling any potential lock in. 
 
 
 
- Note this also builds oci compatible containers you can run with podman, kubernetes, etc. - It lets you develop on bare metal in an environment the same as the docker container and is reproducible rather than just repeatable. 
 
- I’m never buying those pants again. 
- His music album in the 80’s was straight fire 





