FoxInCloud falls right in the middle of the 'containers' category ...

Thierry Nivelet
http://foxincloud.com/
Give your VFP app a second life in the cloud

> Le 9 nov. 2014 à 03:18, Bill Arnold <[email protected]> a 
> écrit :
> 
> A few days ago, the WSJ ran an article entitled "Software Firms Scramble to
> Jump Into Containers"
> 
> I read it with great interest because it might relate to solving my Watson
> connection problem - and then I realized it may also help VFP applications
> in general.
> 
> The gist of it, what I'm seeing, is that these containers are going to
> replace the use of VM as we know it today. 
> 
> For VFP<->Watson, this might be a way for a hosting service to add RESTive
> servers to their mix by simply installing a container provided by IBM, and
> then I'll be able to access that container on the web server.  
> 
> For VFP, or any software product, it looks like a way to go smoothly from
> dev to server based production, and possibly containerized distribution to
> end users. 
> 
> The article doesn't get technical enough to answer detailed questions about
> how containers supersede VMs. And it's also possible my wishful thinking is
> reading too much into this. The article does say " Some observers say the
> buzz surrounding containers outstrips their utility", but growth is growth,
> and articles like this are one way to fuel growth "
> 
> Some clips from the article:
> 
> "What makes containers so compelling? The technology encloses a program (or
> a piece of one) in a layer of software that connects seamlessly to the
> operating system and other computing resources it depends on to run. Putting
> a program in a container has a number of benefits, but a crucial advantage
> is 
> that it can be moved quickly and easily from one computer to another-say,
> from a programmer's laptop to a test system to the cloud."
> 
> "The interest level is off the charts," says Dave Bartoletti, an analyst
> with technology research firm Forrester Research Inc."
> 
> "Although containers are redefining the Internet's state of the art, they're
> not entirely new. The idea has been around since the early 2000s, and it has
> been part of the Linux operating system since 2007."
> 
> "Beyond revving up the pace of online development, containers are an
> emerging alternative to the software construct known as a virtual machine,
> or VM, that is a foundation of today's Internet. Containers aren't only
> faster and easier to use than VMs; they also make far more efficient use of
> computing hardware. Engineers say they can run between two and six times as
> many containerized programs as VMs on the same hardware, dramatically
> reducing infrastructure costs."
> 
> "VMware has warned about container technology's limits but also moved to
> embrace it as a complement to its software. The company announced in the
> summer that it is working with Docker and said the best way to use
> containers is with VMware's virtualization software."
> 
> "Pantheon, a Web host that is a heavy user of containers rather than VMs,
> employs two full-time employees to run more than 70,000 websites. Fifty
> technicians would be required to do the same work using VMs, according to
> Pantheon Chief Executive Zack Rosen."
> 
> "[google] announced a product that lets software developers run and manage
> Docker containers on Google's servers."
> 
> I read it in the printed paper, but I see there is a link to it from a
> google search: 
> http://online.wsj.com/articles/software-firms-scramble-to-jump-into-containe
> rs-1415149692
> (I noticed something: if the article is partial and wants you to subscribe
> to read it, use a google search on "wsj containers" and get to the article
> from there, which
> - on my machine with firefox -  now sees the entire article ... interesting)
> 
> 
> Bill
> 
> 
> 
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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