I saw a projection the other day of continued 30% annual market growth for Linux containers, as a function of ever-growing cloud computing installations and use of PaaS in particular. ClusterHQ is one company that is working to seize this opportunity, with the announcement of its open-source Flocker container management program. The company aims to…
Day: August 13, 2014
SUSE releases Icehouse OpenStack cloud
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•SUSE shows that it’s also a player in the OpenStack cloud races with its latest IaaS cloud, SUSE Cloud 4. When you think of Linux companies associated with OpenStack , you probably think of Canonical and Red Hat . Source: Tech
Docker gets a GitHub-like repository from CoreOS
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•Chasing the successful hosting model of GitHub, Linux distributor CoreOS has set up an online repository where organizations can store and share their Docker containers. Source: Tech
@DevOpsSummit | @ClusterHQ Introduces Flocker 0.1 For @Docker [#DevOps]
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•ClusterHQ, The Data People for Docker, on Wednesday announced Flocker 0.1, a solution for running databases, key-value stores and queues inside Docker containers. Source: Tech
PaaS shoot-out: Cloud Foundry vs. OpenShift
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•Cloud Foundry shines with broad application support and stellar ease of use, but OpenShift has the edge in management and automation PaaS occupies an interesting niche in the cloud ecosystem. Source: Tech
Librarian Council, NITDA Train Professionals in Open Source Software Application
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•According to the organizers, the joint workshop with special focus on application of Free and in library operations was aimed at equipping librarians with skills to measure up new challenges in the ICT sector and be able to deploy and apply the knowledge to improve the lot of all information seekers. Source: Tech
Software Defined Data Center, Defined
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•A brief explanation of what a software defined data center means, and what it means to IT. Read more at Enterprise Open Source Toolkit Source: Linux
@ThingsExpo | Trillions for the Internet of Things? [#IoT by @IoT2040]
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•One place you never want to visit is a “zero-billion dollar market.” This is the ironic term used to describe technology trends that never take off, and I’ve seen a few of these over the years. Looks like that won’t be the case with the Internet of Things, which has been touted (again) this week…