New rules for a cloud-based world
IP Telephony is a very good thing. Amazon S3 is a very good thing. Put them together and you have … traction.
IP Telephony is a very good thing. Amazon S3 is a very good thing. Put them together and you have … traction.
Agile move. Open-source O/S with cloud services running on open-source.
Ubuntu trials cloud computing service for file syncing and sharing: “Canonical has begun testing its own Ubuntu One cloud service which will be integrated into October’s launch of Ubuntu 9.10 ‘Karmic Koala’.”
(Via APC – News.)
Velocity Preview – Keeping Twitter Tweeting
If there’s a site that exemplifies explosive growth, it has to be Twitter.
(Via O’Reilly Radar – Insight, analysis, and research about emerging technologies.)
I have nothing to say – AWS speaks for itself and has been around for a while now.
but this is a good summary:
INDUSTRY giant IBM is attempting to seed its own cloud computing platforms – and WE DONT CARE
I’ve committed to use wordpress.com so I’m offloading responsibilities to the cloud (at the risk say, of Microsoft buying out WordPress) and don’t have to concern myself with hosting issues (like, security upgrades). Less work, more time to write.
It’s been a bad few weeks for the Cloud though, mostly at Googlus Cumulus:
Cloud Computing has it’s place and you get what you pay for. I use Google Docs for convenience and to keep my toes wet with Web2.0 experiences but I’m mindful of what I put there. It’s convenient because I regularly hop from one device to another across locations and platforms.
I think subscription-based, managed applications is a better way for those that have the $5 or $50 per month, per user. Buy yourself some assurance.
I’m very interested in Zoho per the above model and would be interested to host a resell solution if I can back it up with appropriate support.