Podman rocks for me!
I find docker hard to use and full of pitfalls and podman isn't any worse. On the plus side, any company I work for doesn't have to worry about licences. Win win!
Podman rocks for me!
I find docker hard to use and full of pitfalls and podman isn't any worse. On the plus side, any company I work for doesn't have to worry about licences. Win win!
Was this a deal breaker for any company?
I ask because the Docker Desktop paid license requirement is quite reasonable. If you have less than 250 employees and make less than $10 million in annual revenue it's free.
If you have a dev team of 10 people and are extremely profitable to where you need licenses you'd end up paying $9 a year per developer for the license. So $90 / year for everyone, but if you have US developers your all-in payroll is probably going to be over $200,000 per developer or roughly $2 million dollars. In that context $90 is practically nothing. A single lunch for the dev team could cost almost double that.
To me that is a bargain, you're getting an officially supported tool that "just works" on all operating systems.
It doesn't quite change your argument, but where have you seen $9/year/dev?
The only way I see a $9 figure is the $9/month for Docker Pro with a yearly sub, so it's 12*$9=$108/year/dev or $1080/year for your 10 devs team.
Also it should be noted that Docker Pro is intended for individual professionals, so you don't have collaboration features on private repos and you have to manage each licence individually, which, even for only 10 licences, implies a big overhead.
If you want to work as a team you need to take the Docker Team licence, at $15/month/dev on a yearly sub, so now you are at $1800/year for your 10 devs team.
Twenty times more than your initial figure of $90/year. Still, $1800 is not that much in the grand scheme of things, but then you still have to add a usual Atlassian sub, an Office365/GWorkspace sub, an AI sub... You can end-up paying +$200/month/dev just in software licences, without counting the overhead of managing them.