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Microsoft also unveiled the addition of the Docker Trusted Registry VM [virtual machine] image into the Azure Marketplace, an “enterprise-ready Docker repository, behind the firewall, on an ...
Microsoft is building new container technologies into the next Windows Server release, enabling Dockerized applications to run on Windows Server on-premises or on Azure.
Microsoft has made some changes that improve the use of the Microsoft Container Registry with Docker Hub.
As Microsoft notes, the Docker Engine for Windows Server will be developed with the support of the Docker open-source community and Microsoft will participate there as an active community member.
Recently appointed Azure CTO Mark Russinovich spells out Microsoft's espousal of the container cause on its cloud computing platform and his reservations about Docker security.
The news comes after Microsoft launched support for Linux-based Docker containers on Azure earlier this year. The company has been working to make a number of key cloud service partnerships over ...
The latest preview of Windows Server shows a new level of support for Docker and hints at Microsoft's overall ambitions with containers Microsoft developers hungry for their first taste of Windows ...
Microsoft indicated that its container images hosted on Docker Hub weren't compromised by a security breach that was discovered by Docker last week.
Containers were born on Linux, and Microsoft has been working with container technology platform Docker to bring containers to Windows.
With this release, Microsoft is not positioning Windows Server Containers as an outright competitor to the Docker container, but rather as a complementary technology.
The deal with Docker was inked a few months back. Now Microsoft describes how to create a Docker VM that hosts any number of containers for your apps running in Azure.