Posts Tagged ‘Cloud Hosting’

Terremark Cloud Banners Everywhere

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

I’m pretty sure that you have noticed all the Terremark cloud hosting banners strung across the internet.  Well, if you haven’t… I have.  So I decided to click on it and give Terremark another “Terremark Cloud Hosting Review” to say the least.

Things I like about Terremark cloud hosting:

Terremark vCloud Express Amazon EC2
VMware Based
Compatible Operating Systems More than 450 Less than 10
8-way, 16GB Virtual Machines
Windows 2008 & SQL 2008
Hardware Load Balancing
100% Fiber Attached Persistent Storage

vCloud Express Pricing Overview

The following table shows the billing resources available for vCloud Express.

Resource Price
Servers * See server pricing matrix below
System Storage $0.25/month per GB (billed with virtual machine)
Additional Storage $0.25/month per GB
Public IP Addresses $0.01/hour per IP
Internet Services $0.01/hour per service
Internet Bandwidth $0.17 per transferred GB
Software Subscription * See software subscription matrix below
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Solving Scalability In The Cloud

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

The issue with most of the cloud platform software out there was that it was usually architected around a central master component, like a database server, that orchestrated and controlled how virtual servers where used on a cluster of servers. On a relatively small scale, these could mimic the operation of a large cloud environment, like Amazon Web Services (AWS), but that didn’t translate to tens and hundreds of thousands of nodes.

“We saw there was a focus on functionality, but they didn’t meet our needs on a scale front,” Bryce said of existing open source cloud and automation technologies.  Can their be scalable servers without the central master component of a database cloud server?  So basically what you are saying is it’s a scalable server that’s flexible but still has a master component.

What if we could do away with this and make it real cloud hosting?  What if cloud hosting was a scam?  Do you think cloud hosting is a scam?

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Open-Source Cloud Hosting

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

We all know Rackspace right?  They are one of the largest  hosting companies and a cloud computing service provider on the planet.  They are the 2nd largest cloud hosting company out there.  They are gambeling that big customers will prefer an open, free roaming cloud to one with a proprietary wrapper. On Monday, the company heralded the launch of OpenStack, an open-source take on the underlying technology behind cloud computing services.

Large organizations Dell, Intel, Advanced Micro Devices and NASA have signed on to back the OpenStack idea and think that it will change the future.  Companies like Amazon.com, Microsoft, Google, VMware and I.B.M. often hold discussions around building standards in the cloud computing arena. And  various programs are under way to make it easier to move data from one cloud service to another, so that customers feel as if they have real choice in this market.

Do you think open source cloud hosting is the answer?

My thoughts on open source cloud hosting:
It will help standardize the arena.  I don’t know if a company like Rackspace should be behind it, but I do believe that it will help. Open source software is critical to the growth of both software-as-a-service and cloud computing, and cloud-based computing in turn is making it easier for open source vendors to lower costs.

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