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For a very long time I struggled every time I needed a docker image, and then I was forced to craft my own to get around issues in other images. While the process of creating an image is fairly straightforward, finding them is FAR from easy.
As always, keep to what people know so you get more and more users. If you have a familiar interface, then people will instinctively know how to use it. I'd expect to see something like what GitHub or GitLab use in their UX.
When I search Docker.com, I get organizations, and I see a page of text when I click on it. There's no list of images to choose from. With GitHub you see a list of the repos a vendor has when you click on their name, for instance.
I suggest making it easier to find images on there which have the right technologies and operating systems. Yes, Docker has a searchable list of images, but it doesn't let me find ones with the right OS and technologies I need to use it.
Hope this helps.
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For a very long time I struggled every time I needed a docker image, and then I was forced to craft my own to get around issues in other images. While the process of creating an image is fairly straightforward, finding them is FAR from easy.
As always, keep to what people know so you get more and more users. If you have a familiar interface, then people will instinctively know how to use it. I'd expect to see something like what GitHub or GitLab use in their UX.
When I search Docker.com, I get organizations, and I see a page of text when I click on it. There's no list of images to choose from. With GitHub you see a list of the repos a vendor has when you click on their name, for instance.
I suggest making it easier to find images on there which have the right technologies and operating systems. Yes, Docker has a searchable list of images, but it doesn't let me find ones with the right OS and technologies I need to use it.
Hope this helps.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: