It has a very brief introduction to Docker and Docker Compose, but then it mostly has a lot of FUD that's designed to scare people off of Docker Compose but is not remotely convincing to someone who's actually worked with it. The way they frame that pihole example ("Whew! That’s a lot of stuff!") is just silly.
Looking at their website, I think they started out trying to make self-hosting really easy for a barely-technical user [0], which accounts for their attitude towards docker-compose, but it also means that the post was pretty devoid of useful information for someone who actually wants to self-host with the tech that's already ubiquitous today.
> The way they frame that pihole example ("Whew! That’s a lot of stuff!") is just silly.
Yeah, you're probably right. Originally that line was in there when I had a breakdown of what each line in the docker-compose was doing. My editor thought that was unnecessary - it's unlikely people reading the post would need that kind of breakdown. So I rewrote parts to assume more baseline knowledge. I should have noticed that line and taken it out.
You're right about what we're trying to do, and I agree that the post doesn't really help someone be successful today deploying things. The post is more meant to gauge whether or not I'm alone in having pain deploying a couple dozen services with docker compose on a single box.
I want more people to have the power to host their own services. I think we can do that, but we have to figure out the right thing to build to do it.
Agreed. By default I'm against content marketing. But as a person that has played around a lot in the /r/selfhosted scene, I had to agree with all of the use-case issues mentioned in the article when it comes to managing your self-hosted apps in Docker Compose (and I say this as someone that legitimately enjoys working with Docker).
I'm still not clear from the website what Tealok actually is in terms of a product offering, but I appreciate that the blog post was legit and not just SEO spam.
It has a very brief introduction to Docker and Docker Compose, but then it mostly has a lot of FUD that's designed to scare people off of Docker Compose but is not remotely convincing to someone who's actually worked with it. The way they frame that pihole example ("Whew! That’s a lot of stuff!") is just silly.
Looking at their website, I think they started out trying to make self-hosting really easy for a barely-technical user [0], which accounts for their attitude towards docker-compose, but it also means that the post was pretty devoid of useful information for someone who actually wants to self-host with the tech that's already ubiquitous today.
[0] https://tealok.tech/