3) The Windows installation tutorial links to another article (https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/podman-windows-wsl2) that is, by today's measurements, _very_ old, because... ? I cannot imagine that things have not changed since then, I refuse to believe it :D
From what I understand, Podman will become an _actually_ easy to use and viable solution to Docker for Desktop once Podman 4.1 has been released, and we have host volume mount support, which is a must-have feature for development.
1) Podman has two documentation entry points (https://docs.podman.io and https://podman.io/getting-started/) because... ? It is confusing to the user at first. It makes more sense to have everything in one place.
2) Podman does not _actually_ offer binary releases (but claims to do so here: https://podman.io/getting-started/installation#windows and https://github.com/containers/podman/blob/main/docs/tutorial...) because... ? They want me to compile it myself?
3) The Windows installation tutorial links to another article (https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/podman-windows-wsl2) that is, by today's measurements, _very_ old, because... ? I cannot imagine that things have not changed since then, I refuse to believe it :D
From what I understand, Podman will become an _actually_ easy to use and viable solution to Docker for Desktop once Podman 4.1 has been released, and we have host volume mount support, which is a must-have feature for development.