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Posts Tagged ‘elastic’

Manage Amazon EC2 With New Web-Based AWS Management Console

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Amazon released a web based tool, in addition to their ElasticFox Firefox plugin, that allows AWS EC2 Management.  Other consoles will be added soon.

I have been saying for some time that cloud based offerings with great tools will win out.  Making it simple to setup and manage cloud tools, with tools and hopefully APIs to the tools so that these can be aggreated, will win over hosting clients and be a value add for the cloud providers of today Google App Engine, Amazon AWS, Mosso, Joyent, SliceHost etc.

Today we’re announcing the availability of the Web-based AWS Management Console, which in this first release provides management of your Amazon EC2 environment via a point-and-click interface. A number of management tools already exist: for example a popular Firefox extension known as Elasticfox; however as you read more of this post I believe you’ll agree that the new console is compelling–especially when it’s time to log in as a new AWS developer.

Amazon EC2 Officially Live

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Amazon EC2 is officially out of beta, it is about time some of these services actually launched.  It is hard to convince people to use the cloud layer without being out of beta (AppEngine when’s it gonna happen huh?).

Amazon also launches with windows support, SQL Server support and much more.  This is great news in times where budgets are tight and people want to start scalable businesses but want to only pay for what is used.  The cloud layer will be a very attractive option to many.

Learn more about the Elastic Computing Cloud (EC2) at Amazon. There are already lots of great simple toos like ElasticFox (Firefox EC2 Extension) to help manage your AMIs from a browser.  You can start and stop armies of configured servers from a little extension in your browser.

Developers are getting many tools to build great things.  We hope more products are out of beta soon like AppEngine.

The Software and Web Cloud

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

What is the web and software cloud?  

Software and data storage has always evolved, and quite rapidly in technology.  From the old punch cards, to disks, to hard drives and now a new type of storage is emerging, the cloud.

Distributed computing based on the internet, the ultimate self-healing network, is now reaching a level where services that provide distributed data storage are thriving.  I will give you three areas that these types of services are happening and why you see this area of technology is set for leaps and bounds.

  • Media and Digital Asset Storage (who doesn’t use S3 in at least some projects?)
  • Software Configuration Management (SCM) Distributed Source Control (Git, Mercurial, etc)
  • Personal Data

Media and Digital Asset Storage

Streaming media, online TV, youtube, website media servers are all part of the digital asset storage movement into the software and web cloud.  Amazon S3 is a very commonly used service for this where they charge cents on the GB per data used.  This allows only used bandwidth to be charges and a bit of parallelism in your hosting setup.  If one part of your hosting (yoru files) are hosted on Amazon S3 then if your site gets slammed with traffic the largest burden is on Amazon’s Servers that can scale.  The data and content representation can be driven by your servers and purr like a kitten through a digg or reddit front page.

Software Configuration Management (SCM)

Subversion is popular now and it is the 80% source control system of the day (many thanks to Google Code using it).  But a new type of source control management has been in effect in version control systems (VCS) in such source control platforms as Git and Mercurial.  These non centralized systems are unlike Subversion, CVS, VSS which are centralized system. Centralized systems have benefits to management but also fail the distributed and redundancy issues that might arise without a distributed source control system.
Services like gitorious and github are services in the cloud handling your distributed cloud based source control system so you don’t have to manage either.

Personal Data

Email, documents, spreadsheets, photo storage, videos and many other areas of personal data and life are moving online.  Gmail, Google Docs, Zoho, and many others are making online office a reality.  Many people switched in 2007 to online office and you can bet that trend will continue.  Your documents are safer at google than on your local drives.
Data is no longer stored locally for many things.  There are no longer on a specific drive or disk that is physical in your reach.  These are stored on a server somewhere, out there.  Out there becomes the cloud, one ominous, massive collection of data.  The only way to find it is with semantics and authentication to gain access to it.  I believe that the cloud will make personal data much more manageable that matches people’s brain.  Google keyword searching and semantic uris are two key elements that I think mimic the brains behavior to perform more efficient. Storing your data this way is natural.  Have you tried gmail search compared to outlook, see a difference?  

And More

These are just briefly some of the technologies to watch and especially when it comes to infrastructure.  I think the trend is towards more offsite, redundant, cloud based computing and storage not only for cost savings in maintenance and management but also to allow growth to be in line with visitors or usage.  No reason to pay for servers for peak performance all the time.  Some services might only have a once a year spike like maybe taxes or the “The Big Game” with the NFL.  This way costs can be better defined and growth or spikes just increase the cloud capacity for handling them.
Elastic Computing for instance like Amazon EC2 initiative where server capacity is available on demand with the spike in traffic and expands or contracts based on need.  
Amazon is actually quite far ahead in the web services and cloud markets.  They have a strong offering and their stock jump in 2007 may have been warranted.
There are many more facets to the software web cloud that is being constructed and used heavily that will be appearing here so stay tuned.

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