Applying the lessons from Docker with Solomon Hykes

Applying the lessons from Docker with Solomon Hykes

This week on The Business of Open Source, I have the first episode I recorded on-site at KubeCon Salt Lake City (and the only full-length episode), with Solomon Hykes, CEO and co-founder of Dagger, and co-founder of Docker.


One thing Solomon mentions briefly but that is very important is that there are limits to what can be learned from Docker’s story, simply because the situation was so unique. Docker experienced explosive growth, at least some of which was due to having the right technology at the right time. This kind of explosive growth is very rare, though, and it brought it’s own set of challenges. The point being that while most companies will struggle to get enough adoption, Docker struggled to monetize effectively but got so many chances to try again just because it had a massive community.


  • The hypothesis — or actually, lack thereof — behind creating the original Docker open source project.
  • How having a massive community does help — but also doesn’t guarantee you’ll be able to build a financially sustainable company
  • When you build a massively successful technology or standard, you’ll attract competition — and in the case of Docker, the competitors were savvy companies who’d won the previous cloud wars and ultimately were quicker to figure out how to monetize Docker containers than Docker itself
  • What Solomon is doing differently at Dagger compared to Docker, one of which is thinking about monetization much sooner
  • The open source movement was founded on such explicitly anti-commercial principles that companies building in the space would often not be intellectually honest about the fact that they were building both a software to give away for free as well as a business that needed revenue. Docker tried too hard to please everyone, including those who felt that open source should be pure and non-commercial — at Dagger, they’re much more transparent and upfront about the fact that it’s a company with commercial ambitions.
  • Solomon also talked about the difference between components and product, and how designing products requires control, including the ability to just say no without explaining yourself.


###

It was fascinating to hear Solomon talk about the lack of intellectual honesty around who pays for the development and maintenance of a lot of open source projects, because that precise topic was the focus of two panels I moderated at KubeCon, one during the main conference and one during CloudNative StartupFest.


If you’re struggling to articulate how your product and project are different from each other (and others in the ecosystem) and why someone should pay you, you might want to work with me. Reach out!

Jaksot(269)

Discussing the Latest Cloud Trends with Cloud Comrade Co-founder Andy Waroma

Discussing the Latest Cloud Trends with Cloud Comrade Co-founder Andy Waroma

Highlights from this episode include: Key market drivers that are causing Cloud Comrade’s clients to containerize applications — including the role that the global pandemic is playing.  The pitfalls o...

12 Elo 202024min

RVU’s Cloud Native Transformation with Paul Ingles

RVU’s Cloud Native Transformation with Paul Ingles

Some highlights of the show include:The company’s cloud native journey, which accelerated with the acquisition of Uswitch. How the company assessed risk prior to their migration, and why they ultimate...

5 Elo 202037min

Vodafone’s Cloud Native Journey with Tom Kivlin

Vodafone’s Cloud Native Journey with Tom Kivlin

Some of the highlights include: Why Vodafone moved to a cloud native architecture. As Tom explains, the company was struggling to manage operations across more than 20 markets. They also needed to imp...

29 Heinä 202027min

Cloud Costs: A Conversation with Travis Rehl

Cloud Costs: A Conversation with Travis Rehl

This conversation covers: Why many businesses are shifting away from analyzing total cloud spend (CapEX vs. OpEX) and are now forecasting spend based around usage patterns.The difference between cloud...

22 Heinä 202035min

The Power of Aligning Engineering and Operations with Dave Mangot

The Power of Aligning Engineering and Operations with Dave Mangot

Some of the highlights of the show include: The difference between cloud computing and cloud native.Why operations teams often struggle to keep up with development teams, and the problems that this cr...

15 Heinä 202038min

Discussing Cloud Native Security with Abhinav Srivastava

Discussing Cloud Native Security with Abhinav Srivastava

This conversation covers:How Frame.io was faced with the decision to be cloud native or cloud-enabled — and the business and technical reasons why Frame.io chose to be cloud native. How Abhinav succes...

8 Heinä 202030min

Scaling in the Cloud: A Conversation with Jon Tirsen

Scaling in the Cloud: A Conversation with Jon Tirsen

In this episode of the Business Cloud Native, host Emily Omier talks with Jon Tirsen, who is engineering lead for storage at Cash App. This conversation focuses on Cash App’s cloud native journey, and...

1 Heinä 202026min

Exploring 8x8’s Cloud Native Journey with Chief Product Officer Dejan Deklich

Exploring 8x8’s Cloud Native Journey with Chief Product Officer Dejan Deklich

Emily and Dejan cover the following points:8x8’s journey to a leading cloud technology provider.Why 8x8 decided to migrate to Kubernetes, a move that gave them the flexibility to run workloads whereve...

24 Kesä 202027min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
psykopodiaa-podcast
hyva-paha-johtaminen
rss-rahamania
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
herrasmieshakkerit
rss-tarkeista-asioista-2
rss-sami-miettinen-neuvottelija
rahapuhetta
rss-lahtijat
rss-rentotapaus
rss-sisalto-kuntoon
rss-seuraava-potilas
pomojen-suusta
sijoituspodi
rss-muutoksenanatomiaa-podcast
rss-uppoava-vn-laiva
rss-tyoelaman-timantteja