Docker, Inc., an Early Epitaph
Oxide and Friends Twitter Space: September 13th, 2021
Docker, Inc., an Early Epitaph
We’ve been holding a Twitter Space weekly on Mondays at 5p for about an hour. Even though it’s not (yet?) a feature of Twitter Spaces, we have been recording them all; here is the recording for our Twitter Space for September 13th, 2021.
In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, speakers on September 13th included Steve Tuck, Tom Lyon, Dan Cross, Josh Clulow, Ian, Nick Gerace, Aaron Goldman, Drew Vogel, and vint serp. (Did we miss your name and/or get it wrong? Drop a PR!)
Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them:
- Topic: Scott Carey’s article How Docker broke in half
- Andrej Karpathy’s tweet showing InfoWorld.com spamming ads
- Carey talked to:
- Solomon Hykes (Docker cofounder with Sebastien Pahl)
- Ben Golub (Docker CEO 2013-2017)
- Craig McLuckie (Kubernetes cofounder)
- Nick Stinemates (early employee and former VP of Business Development)
- [@5:21](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=321) Akira Kurosawa’s 1950 Rashomon ~90mins. Watch a 2min trailer
- Box office bomb “The Hottie and the Nottie” movie. Other stinkers: Gigli, Gotti
- [@9:31](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=571) Jerry Kaplan’s 1996 book Startup: A Silicon Valley Adventure
- Steve’s take on commercialization > Bryan: There’s no question that they hit on something very big. > We saw a container as an operational vessel, but we failed to see > a container as a development vessel.
- [@14:36](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=876) dotCloud (PaaS) struggles to find a buyer; ultimately open sources as last resort > All of a sudden a company that nobody had heard of, > was a company that everybody had heard of.
They took too much money.
- [@17:40](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=1060) Pitfalls in raising money and scaling sales by imitating big companies
- HBO’s Silicon Valley
- Clip ~1min with Jan the Man, Keith, and Doug (I’m shadowing Keith) > Everybody should be spending time arm in arm with customers understanding > how is this technology going to solve a problem > which they’ll want to pay to have a solution.
- HBO’s Silicon Valley
Tom: Was there actually a business anyways? Or was it just technology?
What if developers are attracted to those things they know cannot be monetized?
There was this belief that if a technology is this ubiquitous, it will be readily monetizable.
- [@27:26](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=1646) Docker Swarm and Kubernetes > Hykes: We didn’t work at Google, we didn’t go to Stanford, > we didn’t have a PhD in computer science.
Stinemates: (The Kubernetes team) had strong opinions about the need for a service level API and Docker technically had its own opinion about a single API from a simplicity standpoint. We couldn’t agree.
- [@36:11](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=2171) Docker coming to market
- Enterprise teams wanted support
- Initial support offerings were expensive and limited (no after hours, no weekends) > Bryan: I floated to Solomon in 2014: run container management as a service.
- Rancher Labs, K3s (lightweight kubernetes)
- People care about GitHub stars (for better or worse)
- [@48:02](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=2882) Monetizing open source technologies
- Triton implementing the Docker API
- The support relationships are the foothold to figure out the product.
- [@54:36](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=3276) Venture capital going into Docker
- Docker acquires Tutum
- Product market fit
- Acquisitions
- [@1:04:42](https://youtu.be/l9LTJdT0sZ8?t=3882) Could the outcome have been materially different?
If we got something wrong or missed something, please file a PR! Our next Twitter space will likely be on Monday at 5p Pacific Time; stay tuned to our Twitter feeds for details. We’d love to have you join us, as we always love to hear from new speakers!