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Dotcloud Is Shutting Down on February 29

97 points| HardyLeung | 10 years ago |venturebeat.com

15 comments

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0xCMP|10 years ago

Yea to be clear. This article is kind of written horribly and the title is click-bait. Everyone who follows Docker should know that Dotcloud used to be the name of Docker.

However, as the article explained horribly, many like my self didn't know they sold their PaaS service where they originally developed Docker to another company.

The original dotCloud (aka. Docker) is still fine. Is not going bankrupt or shutting down. The owners of the service they originally built is going down.

lukebennett|10 years ago

I take your point, though in fairness many who follow Docker will have noted the sale at the time as it was all over HN etc. Followed not all that long after by the acquisition of Tutum interestingly, getting them right back into the PaaS space again.

acjohnson55|10 years ago

Somewhat sad to hear it. When I was working on my startup, we got our start on Dotcloud. We ended up migrating mid-stream to Heroku, which was more expensive but ultimately better designed and faster at progressing.

But it's been gratifying to see that the original team found a very potent niche in containerization. It's kind of funny that Docker is now probably the hotter of the two companies.

mahtuag|10 years ago

Sort of like when Pantera stopped being Glam Metal. RIP an era which got replaced by something much better!

hardwaresofton|10 years ago

I thought DotCloud renamed itself to Docker, and completely pivoted? I guess not

rajivm|10 years ago

dotCloud did rename itself to Docker, but it sold off its original "dotCloud"-branded PAAS to cloudControl. cloudControl is shutting down the dotCloud service, but former dotCloud company (i.e. Docker) is still alive and well.

rnicholson|10 years ago

They did. It was in the article.

> ... dotCloud the startup pivoted to focus on Docker and changed its name to Docker as well. Then, in August 2014, Docker sold dotCloud to cloudControl.

squid3|10 years ago

[deleted]

helloiamaperson|10 years ago

> One PaaS with developers in mind is https://nodechef.com It would be interesting to see how they do.

Is this your product? All of your comments are about it.

ternaryoperator|10 years ago

It's not about the developers. It's about signing up large customers, as in enterprises. If you don't have them, it doesn't matter how much of anything else you have, you're going to have a hard time surviving in PaaS.

dantillberg|10 years ago

I'm sure I'm not the only person that had to check the year and make sure that there was a February 29th this year, and that this wasn't some sort of early April Fools joke.