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I'm not the parent poster, but I also like to avoid containers when I can. For instance, if there is a bug in some library or common dependency (think libssl or bash) it's easy to update it in one place rather then make sure a whole bunch of containers get updated. Also, when writing software I find that targeting a container keeps you from thinking about portability (by intrinsically avoiding the "it works on my machine" problem) and results in a more fragile end product.


If you aren't getting the binary from your repo's package manager the "update in one place for bugfixes" thing often no longer applies. At least with a container management system the various not-distro-managed things have something akin to a standard way to version bump them vs "go download this from that ftp, go pull this from that repo, etc."




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