Lets be honest. How many people are deploying WebLogic on Docker? How about SAP? How about any large enterprise back office application at all?
You see, Windows Server serves an entirely different market.
The kind of applications being deployed on OS level virtualisation just don't get deployed on Windows anyways.
About as close as you are going to get are Java applications which even then are usually deployed on a point of abstraction like an application server. (At the end of the day RHEL is still much more common for big Java apps)
That is not to say that Windows would not benefit from some sort of OS level virtualisation, only that it means absolutely nothing that they don't have it right now (or even for a few years).
Windows Server will continue to dominate back office deployments ad infinitum.
Lets be honest. How many people are deploying WebLogic on Docker? How about SAP? How about any large enterprise back office application at all?
You see, Windows Server serves an entirely different market. The kind of applications being deployed on OS level virtualisation just don't get deployed on Windows anyways. About as close as you are going to get are Java applications which even then are usually deployed on a point of abstraction like an application server. (At the end of the day RHEL is still much more common for big Java apps)
That is not to say that Windows would not benefit from some sort of OS level virtualisation, only that it means absolutely nothing that they don't have it right now (or even for a few years).
Windows Server will continue to dominate back office deployments ad infinitum.