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Docker, Inc. is an American technology company that develops productivity tools built around Docker, which automates the deployment of code inside software containers. [1] [2] Major commercial products of the company are Docker Hub, a central repository of containers, and Docker Desktop, a GUI application for Windows and Mac to manage containers.
Server-side image maps were first supported in Mosaic (web browser) version 1.1. [1] Server-side image maps enable the web browser to send positional information to the server about where the user clicks within an image. This allows the server to make pixel-by-pixel decisions about what content to return in response (possible methods are to use ...
Google Compute Engine uses KVM as the hypervisor, [4] and supports guest images running Linux and Microsoft Windows which are used to launch virtual machines based on the 64 bit x86 architecture. VMs boot from a persistent disk that has a root filesystem.
Kubernetes is an open-source job control system invented by Google to abstract away the infrastructure so that open-source (e.g. Docker) containerized applications can run on many types of infrastructure, such as Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and others.
Template:Location map; Template:Location map many; Template:Location map+; Template:Location map~ Maps can be searched for at Commons:Category:Location maps by country. Icons can be found at Commons:Category:Map icons. These tricks are sometimes useful: Comment: <!--comment-->
Amazon's elastic IP address feature is similar to static IP address in traditional data centers, with one key difference. A user can programmatically map an elastic IP address to any virtual machine instance without a network administrator's help and without having to wait for DNS to propagate the binding.
lmctfy ("Let Me Contain That For You", pronounced "l-m-c-t-fi" [1]) is an implementation of an operating system–level virtualization, which is based on the Linux kernel's cgroups functionality.
In order to create an interactive map in an article, you need to have one of the below forms of data: coordinates, either supplied or from Wikidata; a Wikidata ID for a shape or linear element; data stored in GeoJSON format in a data file; raw GeoJSON, preferably transcluded from another page