> It feels like Docker (Inc) is becoming less and less "relevant" for each year that passes.
This is underscored for me by the fact that their latest end-user (dev) tools aren't even free software any longer. They started off being unixy as hell, doing one thing and doing it well (and being hackable in the process), and now they ship closed-source spyware under the exact same brand.
This is underscored for me by the fact that their latest end-user (dev) tools aren't even free software any longer. They started off being unixy as hell, doing one thing and doing it well (and being hackable in the process), and now they ship closed-source spyware under the exact same brand.