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anonymous

Translation bots - Google Talk Help - 0 views

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    Google Talk can help you with quick translations, or even translate your chats in real-time!
anonymous

Jivespace: Jive Talks: XMPP (a.k.a. Jabber) is the future for cloud services - 0 views

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    Cloud services are being talked up as a fundamental shift in web architecture that promises to move us from interconnected silos to a collaborative network of services whose sum is greater than its parts. The problem is that the protocols powering current cloud services; SOAP and a few other assorted HTTP-based protocols are all one way information exchanges. Therefore cloud services aren't real-time, won't scale, and often can't clear the firewall. So, it's time we blow up those barriers and come to Jesus about the protocol that will fuel the SaaS models of tomorrow--that solution is XMPP (also called Jabber) .
Alex MIkhalev

2009: Dynamic Asterisk Scalability with Amazon EC2 - 0 views

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    Absolutely brilliant example. Imagine dynamic scalable VOIP infrastructure.
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    Asterisk, a somewhat resource consuming application is considered not fitting for Amazon EC2 structures. This talk will discuss the various issues related to creating dynamically extending platforms, using Asterisk, Amazon EC2, Amazon S3 and some web mesh-ups.
Alex MIkhalev

Pig Training Available Online (Hadoop and Distributed Computing at Yahoo!) - 0 views

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    Yahoo! and Cloudera have worked together to produce a couple of training videos for Pig. There is Introduction to Pig, a 50 minute talk on Pig, including copious examples of writing Pig Latin scripts, an overview of how Pig works, and a discussion of the advantages of Pig versus other Hadoop interfaces
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    Pig Training Available Online Yahoo! and Cloudera have worked together to produce a couple of training videos for Pig. There is Introduction to Pig, a 50 minute talk on Pig, including copious examples of writing Pig Latin scripts, an overview of how Pig works, and a discussion of the advantages of Pig versus other Hadoop interfaces
digitalhydcsg

Tips on cloud computing on the horizon - The Times of India post by Indiatimes - 0 views

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    A talk programme by Dr Rajkumar Buyya on 'marketing oriented cloud computing and big data applications' will be organized at the department of computer science of Acropolis Technical Campus here on Tuesday.
DJHell .

Amazon Web Services Blog: Announcing Amazon Elastic MapReduce - 0 views

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    Today we are introducing Amazon Elastic MapReduce , our new Hadoop-based processing service. I'll spend a few minutes talking about the generic MapReduce concept and then I'll dive in to the details of this exciting new service.
Rich Hintz

dean-keynote-ladis2009.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 1 views

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    Designs, Lessons and Advice from Building Large Distributed Systems, Jeff Dean, Spanner
Stian Danenbarger

Susan Brenner: "Privacy and the Cloud" - 1 views

  • the 4th Amendment was developed at a time when the only privacy was spatial privacy; for something to be private, I had to keep it IN my home or office (and maybe in a locked chest), which both made it difficult for law enforcement officers to gain access to it and symbolically invoked my right to assume they wouldn’t gain access to it. (In other words, I could assume privacy.)
  • our lives have already moved far beyond spatial privacy; I talked about the 4th Amendment’s application to the contents of emails and what we do online -- arguing that it should apply to both, but noting that courts so far do not tend to agree. I think cloud computing will take this analysis to the next level.
  • My point is that even under current 4th Amendment law, I can make what I think are valid arguments as to why the 4th Amendment should apply to data stored in a cloud (as long as the appropriate conditions exist). I really think, though, that we shouldn’t be using cases that were decided thirty years ago or a hundred and thirty years ago to set the standard for 4th Amendment privacy in an era of advancing technology. As I argued in that law review article, I think we need to move beyond a purely spatial approach to privacy to approaches that encompass both spatial and non-spatial privacy.
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    What about privacy in an era of cloud computing? If I store my data in a cloud, is the data in a "closed container" and therefore private under the 4th Amendment? Or is putting data in a cloud analogous to giving the numbers I dial on my phone to the phone company?
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