From one point of view, I'm thinking "why did coreos need to be so aggressive?", and "boy, what a gift Solomon Hykes did to coreos by mismanaging this thing so badly", and "man, all of these guys look sort of immature to me".
From the other point of view, I'm respecting docker and coreos even more, as open source projects and as a companies, because it feels like there are real people behind them.
If this is the new wave of enterprise companies, I really like it. These are people like us, that engage with us and sometimes screw up, without hiding it. They are doing great things, and the fact that they are a bit immature is actually great.
I'm an entrepreneur myself, I've done enterprise software my whole life, and I always thought it's a shame that companies in this space are so distant from their users and have such little humanity.
From one point of view, I'm thinking "why did coreos need to be so aggressive?", and "boy, what a gift Solomon Hykes did to coreos by mismanaging this thing so badly", and "man, all of these guys look sort of immature to me".
From the other point of view, I'm respecting docker and coreos even more, as open source projects and as a companies, because it feels like there are real people behind them.
If this is the new wave of enterprise companies, I really like it. These are people like us, that engage with us and sometimes screw up, without hiding it. They are doing great things, and the fact that they are a bit immature is actually great.
I'm an entrepreneur myself, I've done enterprise software my whole life, and I always thought it's a shame that companies in this space are so distant from their users and have such little humanity.
Looks like things are changing.