That's a great point. It's one reason Docker is so exciting - to be able to replace a running server in a sane and organized way is a killer feature.
For many cloud environments, it'd be costly (in time and energy, not necessarily $) to replace all 1000 virtual servers for an update. With Docker, you can essentially do that in a trivial manner. I'm still learning Docker and my understanding is still a bit weak, but it's an exciting development in this regard.
For many cloud environments, it'd be costly (in time and energy, not necessarily $) to replace all 1000 virtual servers for an update. With Docker, you can essentially do that in a trivial manner. I'm still learning Docker and my understanding is still a bit weak, but it's an exciting development in this regard.