Archive for September, 2010

Amazon EC2 with Micro Packages

Friday, September 10th, 2010

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AWS announced new EC2 Micro Instances. Micro Instances are geared towards lower traffic sites and low throughput applications. EC2 Micro is available in 32 and 64 bit versions with 613 MB of RAM. And here’s the clincher, the price: $.02 per hour for a Linux/Unix instance and $.03 per hour for Windows.

The Micro Instances can be monitored with CloudWatch to judge the CPU utilization – important because these instances are really not designed for any substantial volume of requests (only about ten requests per minute). But as AWS Evangelist Jeff Barr notes, “at this low a price you could run CloudWatch configured for Auto Scaling with two Micro Instances behind an Elastic Load Balancer for just under the price of one CloudWatch-monitored Standard Small instance.”

It runs a little under $90 per month for Windows and $60 for Linux. For many small businesses with minimal usage, that’s probably more than they’re willing to budget, and Amazon’s Micro Instances may come at a price that makes the move to the cloud more affordable.

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TrackVia Launches Cloud Database Application Platform

Friday, September 10th, 2010

TrackVia, a four-year online supplier of database services, has decided to become a database application development platform. CEO Matt McAdams said Wednesday that his service was expanding into building applications for small and midsize businesses (SMBs) due to the level of supporting services that can be provided today in the cloud.

TrackVia will offer an online application platform with a wizard to import data from and export to Excel spreadsheets and a hosted service for adding data from web-form entries. It will collect data from e-mail and offer an API for users to upload data as a form of self service, according to information posted to TrackVia’s website.

The TrackVia platform will be built atop the open source LAMP stack, with Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the MySQL database, Apache Web server, and Perl language part of its underlying structure. It has built a user interface to the stack and given access control and audit tracking capabilities to the small business user.

McAdams said TrackVia was convinced it could become an application platform after business executives at both Brinks and Honda quickly built needed applications with TrackVia technical support and readily available components that they came up with on their own. “They stood up a business application without involving IT,” noted McAdams. TrackVia added reporting, dashboards, alerting, notification, and analysis and visualization features to the basic database service to build out the platform.

Full Article

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HPC New Dell Cloud Servers

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

Dell announced the PowerEdge C6105 rack-mount server, which can accommodate up to 48 processor cores in a 2U box. The server can create large clusters to run scientific or math applications, and can also scale performance in densely packed cloud-computing environments, company officials said.

The server will run on Advanced Micro Devices’ Opteron 4000-series processors, and includes four two-socket motherboards, with each socket accommodating processors with up to six cores. The server is a complementary offering to Dell’s existing PowerEdge C6100 scale-out rack server, which runs on Intel’s Xeon processors.

That is a lot of cloud hosting power!  Read the full cloud hosting article here.

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