Re: Oracle 12c RAC in Docker
Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2016 18:30:50 -0400
Message-ID: <d5ac588d-03c0-4745-27a9-8cdfa2eb77bb_at_gmail.com>
On 08/29/2016 06:13 PM, Kellyn Pot'Vin-Gorman wrote:
>
>> On Aug 29, 2016, at 4:02 PM, Mladen Gogala <gogala.mladen_at_gmail.com
>> <mailto:gogala.mladen_at_gmail.com>> wrote:
>>
>> I am not particularly interested in Docker yet. It is still not a
>> mainstream technology.
>
>
> This wasn’t an honest statement.
It was perfectly honest. I meant every word in it.
> I should have stated, “I’m not particularly interested in Docker, so I
> haven’t spent time on it and am unaware that its a mainstream technology.”
Obviously, our definitions of mainstream technology differ. From what I
know, the vast majority of cloud users, regardless of whether it's a
private cloud or Oracle cloud, AWS or Azure, are still using virtual
machines. There aren't many applications which are being distributed
within Docker containers. Yes, Docker is an exciting technology, but it
remains to be seen what kind of a commercial success will it generate.
For now, I am perfectly happy with vSphere 6 and the interface it
provides me. When Docker develops such an interface, be present on as
many a PC as vSphere 6 and be as easy to learn, I will agree that it is
mainstream.
>
> There are 100’s of thousands of shareholders that are happy you aren’t
> making their investment decisions…. :)
As they probably should be. I am a computer geek, not an investment consultant. They should try Dogbert Consulting for the latter. I am sure that Dogbert would happily recommend investing in Docker based technology. I have not heard of Oracle ditching OracleVM in favour of Docker? There aren't many people who know how to easily create and manage containers and very few commercial companies are deploying docker. I haven't had even a single enquiry about protecting Docker containers. So yes, I don't believe that Docker is mainstream yet. It may become. As for "100's of thousands of shareholders", I would advise to be conservative and buy stock which generates dividends, like Johnsons & Johnsons or P&G. Investments based on wet dreams of techno geeks are probably not the best way to make money.
-- Mladen Gogala Oracle DBA Tel: (347) 321-1217 -- http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-lReceived on Tue Aug 30 2016 - 00:30:50 CEST