He does one big mistake: In many environments, container run inside a VM. For instance: A company purchase a dual xeon server with 1 TB RAM, the host on this machine some VM's for Email, AD or a VM for testing. Than, one VM is for all the containers the eventually need. Another use case is to use a VM with some classical application that are to big or to complicate to put them in a container, but the admin decides to also run some containers in the VM to make his live easier, because he found some containers that run very well and don't need much administration. On the other hand, there are companies who sell app accounts like a calendar or blog template. Eventually with 100's of instances of the same base app. Sure, the will run containers on bare metal because here is no room for other stuff. In regard to autoscaling in the cloud, often containers run inside of VM because a VM can be auto provisioned what physical hardware can't.
I liked the slow,crisp pace of the presentation. It is very clear and concise.
Amazing content, perfect presentation. Loved it
One of the best technical videos I have seen, very precise and to the point. Clear agenda with deep explanation and good examples.
By far one of the bests explanations given on the topic. Very detailed and interesting analogies used! Thanks
Excellent presentation and delivery of knowledge. The presenter holds a sound knowledge over virtualization. Wish I could meet him.
Amazing presentation! Simple ideas used to explain complex concepts.
I´ve learned a lot in these 45 minutes.
Thanks for the presentation! Very good walkthru of container, also your presentation is a good example of how techtalk should be done.
very well organized. Brilliant
if you cannot sleep, listening to this video can help you out.
LOL
clear and bullet words
Brilliant session
you are amazing , great explanation
very well presented ..
He does one big mistake:
In many environments, container run inside a VM.
For instance:
A company purchase a dual xeon server with 1 TB RAM, the host on this machine some VM's for Email, AD or a VM for testing. Than, one VM is for all the containers the eventually need.
Another use case is to use a VM with some classical application that are to big or to complicate to put them in a container, but the admin decides to also run some containers in the VM to make his live easier, because he found some containers that run very well and don't need much administration.
On the other hand, there are companies who sell app accounts like a calendar or blog template. Eventually with 100's of instances of the same base app. Sure, the will run containers on bare metal because here is no room for other stuff.
In regard to autoscaling in the cloud, often containers run inside of VM because a VM can be auto provisioned what physical hardware can't.
40:45 - He specifically talks about running containers in a VM.
Check out this in depth technical explanation on the topic
ruclips.net/video/0Xb421-9CTo/видео.html
Thanks
Enough about the toothpaste
Expecting much
Tooth powder.