![]() Not to be confused with a valet (essentially a male equivalent of a lady’s maid). Butlers run households and “get stuff done” in a general purpose sort of way. The meaning: Stereotypical name for a butler. CD was retconned into it with plugins that let you write pipelines (which I happen to quite like). A “docker” is an occasional shorthand for someone that works at a dock, with containers. The meaning: Containers are in a dock at some point. ![]() The tool: creates, operates and managers containers. But please do, the stats are a great ego boost. I’ve listed them here, and linked to the explanation, so you don’t need to read the list. In case you ever have the misfortune of having to explain to someone at C-Level (‘C’ as in CEO, not the swear word), why you’re trying to install an octopus. With that in mind, I thought I’d translate them. I don’t know why, but I’d postulate that it’s because the market is completely flooded with tools, and you need yours to stand out, so you can make money - either from the tool itself, or a support package. It’s either got a backstory, a meaning, or it’s Greek. I’ve been working in DevOps for a while now, and I’ve yet to come across a tool that didn’t have something odd about its name.
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