Linux Containers Will Disrupt Virtualization Incumbents
The next wave of virtualization on servers is not going to look like the last one. …
The next wave of virtualization on servers is not going to look like the last one. …
As has been demonstrated, it is relatively easy to launch tens of thousands of containers on a single host. …
It is still early days in the software container revolution, and Microsoft is working as fast as it can to be able to leverage Docker containers and minimalist operating systems to make its Windows Server stack competitive with other platforms. …
Docker is the new kid on the virtualization and containerization block. …
Before there were Internet-based search engines that anybody could use to look for anything, one of the toughest jobs in computing was helping people work through travel agencies to book flights, cars, and hotels when they travel. …
Sometimes the old ideas are the best ones, but they sometimes get ahead of their time. …
Software containers are different from virtual machines and the hypervisers that host them, and they need a very different set of management tools to use them in large scale enterprise, hyperscale, and cloud environments. …
Linux might have a 25 percent share of the server installed base, depending on who you ask, but it is The Next Platform of choice for new kinds of middleware and applications and has a much higher penetration on cloudy infrastructure. …
Technologies that are developed at hyperscale companies that operate applications at the datacenter scale, rather than of the server or the rack, can be tweaked to work for smaller enterprise customers. …
You know what the hardest thing about building an AI system is? …
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