Archive for July, 2010

Cloud Linux’s SecureLVE Will Be Supported By Parallels Panel Products

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Cloud Linux announced that its CloudLinux’s SecureLVE security solution will be supported by Parallels Panel products by the end of the year. Parallels Plesk Panel has thousands of applications that deliver the most complete service for virtual, dedicated, and shared hosting providers. Integrating SecureLVE into the control panel will give hosting providers new security controls previously unavailable.

SecureLVE is based on CloudLinux’s Lightweight Virtual Environment technology and creates a new level of security for shared hosting servers.  It allows the administrator to control usage of the resources on a cloud server.  One of the best things it does: SecureLVE works across shell, CGI, & cronjobs.  Cloud Linux is becoming one of my favorite cloud server solutions because of it helping customers realize reduced operating costs and increased profitability.  They really have figured out to increase density, stability and performance in the Linux operating system (OS).

“Integrating SecureLVE into Parallels Plesk Panel will give hosting providers the tools to create the most secure shared hosting environment available,” states Igor Seletskiy, CEO and Founder of Cloud Linux, Inc. “Security continues to be a concern for hosting providers as well as for the industry at large. We are pleased to continue our strong partnership with Parallels to deliver the tools hosting providers need in meeting the increasingly complex demands for security in the hosting and cloud computing market.”

For more information, visit: http://www.cloudlinux.com

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HostingCon 2010 Final Stop: The Dell Booth

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Yesterday was the final day at HostingCon 2010 in Texas. Above is a photo of us at the Dell booth at HostingCon 2010. We had a wonderful chat with some of the most brilliant minds at Dell.  It’s amazing what Dell has accomplished in the past couple years.  We have established a relationship over the past year as a Certified Dell Vendor and a Dell Storage Enterprise Partner.  In other words, we love Dell.

Andy Rhodes was the keynote on Tuesday.  This was one of our favorite keynotes we have ever been to.  Andy serves as the Director of Global Marketing of Data Center Solutions (DCS) at Dell, Inc. The DCS division is responsible for providing customized infrastructure (server & storage) solutions to the world’s largest scaled out datacenter environments, often referred to as Cloud computing centers. Customers include Microsoft (Azure) and Facebook as well as many Chinese Web2.0 companies. His organization is responsible for strategy, product planning, product management and go to market messaging.

It was a great speech to say the least.  Andy presented a list of lessons Dell has learned over the past few years. “They were buying and deploying devices on a scale never seen before,” Rhodes said, noting that it forced Dell to re-examine some of its ideas on IT services.

One of the main points in his speech was that each business will have a unique TCO model. “Your TCO model will depend on processes,  everyone starts from different starting points,” Rhodes said. Rhodes’ next point is that forward-looking businesses aren’t satisfied with the status quo. “There’s been a massive change in infrastructure” going from large servers to blades, and now we’ve in the age of shared infrastructure and cloud computing, he said. These companies have had to deal with an accelerated pace of change. Not adapting soon enough, and delays in rolling out solutions can, therefore, cost companies dearly. “An enemy of progress is the status quo.”]

His final point I loved: Instead of talking about the term cloud, they should talk to their customers about real pain points and how to solve them. “Get away from that word, it’s not a valuable marketing commodity… customers want to know what it can do for their business.”

GREAT SPEECH, it really hit home with us at Best Cloud Server.  We had a chance to speak with him later and talked about all the unique pain points that Dell is helping cloud hosting providers with.  They help with building unique servers that fit the special requirements that we all have.  They can help build a server specific to your cloud server needs and requirements.

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Cloud Hosting for Ruby Apps

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Heroku says NoSQL is the right technology for cloud servers and is offering a variety of NoSQL systems as add-ons to its platform. Heroku is a cloud front-end system that specializes in launching Ruby applications and running them on Amazon’s EC2 public cloud. Cloud Hosting for Ruby Apps is the way of the future.

According to Heroku’s, their website is currently running 73,000 Ruby applications on Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud Servers. On July 20, they announced that thousands of these customers already use its add-on services for both relational and NoSQL database systems.

“NoSQL datastores are key enabling technologies for this new generation of web apps,” said Byron Sebastian, CEO of Heroku. The NoSQL system designers strive to use data already in server memory rather than unloading from disk. They also make use of the Map/Reduce technique of retrieving data from a server’s disk, then processing it on the same server instead of moving it around the cluster.

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