Skip to main content

Home/ Cloud Computing/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Rich Hintz

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Rich Hintz

Rich Hintz

Realities of open source cloud computing, Part 2: Developing for the cloud - 0 views

  •  
    Explore the design differences between a cloud application and a traditional N-tier application.
Rich Hintz

mckinsey_clearing_the clouds_final_04142009.ppt.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

  •  
    McKinsey Clearing the air on cloud computing
Rich Hintz

Enterpriser > Know It > Manufacturing > AMD's Opteron EE Processor for Cloud Computing - 0 views

  •  
    x86 processor: full suite of virtualization and power management capabilities so that customers do not have to compromise on feature sets in order to deploy very low power servers.
Rich Hintz

Cloud interoperability: Porting Google App Engine (GAE) applications to IBM middleware - 0 views

  •  
    Porting Google App Engine (GAE) applications to IBM middleware
Rich Hintz

Software as a Service sandbox - 1 views

  •  
    Use the IBM Virtual Loaner Program to help you set up an IBM development environment from a remote location and save valuable development time. Start with our new pre-configured SaaS stack featuring WebSphere Application Server Community Edition and DB2 Express C running on Linux, and use the features and support of the Virtual Loaner Program, including the save and restore capability that allows you to continue testing at a later time.
Rich Hintz

IBM developerWorks : IBM EC2 AMI Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) - 0 views

  •  
    provides clients with access to development and production instances of IBM DB2, Informix Dynamic Server, WebSphere Portal Server, Lotus Web Content Management, WebSphere sMash and Novell's SUSE Linux operating system software in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2)
Rich Hintz

InfoQ: Amazon Web Services: Building Blocks for True Internet Applications - 0 views

  •  
    presentation discusses how Amazon's Web Services can help Web developers solve common but vexing problems, including scaling. The Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) and Simple DB are discussed in detail along with the Simple Queue, Simple Storage, and Flexible Payment Services. Each discussion covers basic concepts, example APIs, and brief introductions of case studies.
Rich Hintz

Cloud Computing Poses E-Discovery, Legal Risks - 0 views

  • Cloud Computing Poses E-Discovery, Legal Risks April 10, 2009By Marty Foltyn ORLANDO, Fla. — Cloud computing was a hot topic at this week's Storage Networking World show, but one attorney sounded a warning note about the rush to the cloud. In a presentation titled "Computing (strike that — Litigation) in the Cloud," Steven Teppler, senior counsel at KamberEdelson in New York, said cloud computing and services are a corporate counsel's nightmare. The 2006 e-discovery amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) changed the legal and corporate information landscape, putting custody and control at top of mind. "Cloud computing means that data may always be in transit," said Teppler, "never anywhere, always somewhere." And that creates a big challenge for corporate counsel. How can they identify "who, when and where" in the cloud? How can organizations handle document retention? And to add another layer of worry, information targeted for the cloud may also be subject to laws requiring privacy and persistent data integrity, and other requirements that the storage manager may not even be aware of. Teppler spelled out the top cloud computing shortcomings: no native security attributes; inadequate or no security provisioning by providers; the lack of understanding of cloud legal issues (a real problem for not only cloud computing providers, but also corporate counsel and IT consultants); and the failure to recognize potential liability from either legal issues or a lack of security. Teppler told the audience that litigation in the cloud is already here. Users of cloud services will need to insist on service level agreement (SLA) terms with their providers to ensure legal and regulatory compliance, searchability, demonstrable customer care (security), provably persistent data integrity and reliability, and demonstrable storage security and integrity for electronically stored information in the cloud.
Rich Hintz

Cloudera Hadoop & Big Data Blog » Blog Archive » Upcoming Functionality in "F... - 0 views

  • Forrest web-based documentation
  •  
    The Fair Scheduler gives each user a configurable share of the cluster when he/she has running jobs, but assigns these resources to other users when the user is inactive.
Rich Hintz

Questions to Ask When Adding a Cloud Computing Component - 0 views

  • Young said IT managers considering a move to the cloud should ask the following questions, for starters: --How portable is the technology and data across international borders? --Who is backing the service provider? --Is the provider certified, and by whom? --Where does the data originate? --How is the identity management process set up? --Who manages physical security at the provider's facilities? --How is change management handled? --What happens to your partnering model?
Rich Hintz

IBM - WebSphere eXtreme Scale - Software - 0 views

  • WebSphere eXtreme Scale processes massive volumes of transactions with extreme efficiency and linear scalability
  •  
    Operates as an in-memory data grid that dynamically caches, partitions, replicates, and manages application data and business logic across multiple servers.
« First ‹ Previous 101 - 120 of 168 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page