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Posted on February 25, 2009 in Hosting, ReviewNo Comments »

This post was written by Mulah Johnson

Heroku is an online deployment system for Ruby on Rails apps. It’s a completely hosted development environment, so with Heroku your app will be live instantaneously. You can develop Rails apps without getting stymied by the complications of installing dev tools. Sign up today to try it out for yourself. Heroku simplifies Ruby development, fulfilling a much needed niche. Developers can focus on making cool new tools for the public without having to worry about development. It bridges the creation of an idea to its execution.

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Posted on February 19, 2009 in Intel, NewsNo Comments »

This post was written by Mulah Johnson

Intel’s announced that its cloud-computing efforts this year will be centered on a new server that uses upcoming Nehalem technology. Nehalem is Intel’s new chip architecture currently used only in its Core i7 desktop processors. Mega data centers potentially mean mega-growth. The world’s largest chipmaker sees between 20 percent and 25 percent of server shipments going to mega data centers by 2012. Intel’s goal is to optimize this massive mesh of server hardware. Other technologies that Intel will roll out with Nehalem server chips include Virtual Machine Device Queues.

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Posted on February 16, 2009 in ReviewNo Comments »

This post was written by Mulah Johnson

Programming Amazon Web Services book is informative and useful in developing my understanding of AWS. Reviewer liked the organization of the material and the order in which the topics were laid out. The code examples were provided in Ruby, which was an extremely great decision on behalf of O’Reilly. Granted, everything the author wrote at the time the book was published was true about AWS. But several of his complaints have since been handled quite well by Amazon, and they are no longer problems.

 Read the full review here


Posted on February 11, 2009 in ReviewNo Comments »

This post was written by Mulah Johnson

Amazon elastic compute cloud is what you run your computers on top of. Think of it as an enormously large computer where you can run an infinite number of virtual machines. Running your computers here lets you scale the number of machines active at any given time up or down without ever having to own or care about any physical hardware. Never again will you have to think about maintaining BGP sessions, or that hard disk in server 235 that just failed. Best of all, is the EC2 API.

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Posted on February 5, 2009 in ReviewNo Comments »

This post was written by Mulah Johnson

AOL’s Xdrive is one of the best online storage services on the web as far as features and security go and receives the “TopTenREVIEWS Bronze Award.” You are able to view your photos and listen to your music directly from the interface. Xdrive has an intuitive interface that is easy to navigate. There are four main storage areas: Xdrive, Photos, Music and Bookmarks. Within each section, you are able to create and manage your files. The upload, download, new folder and move buttons make organizing your files quick and easy.

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Posted on February 2, 2009 in ReviewNo Comments »

This post was written by Mulah Johnson

Microsoft SkyDrive is a free, Web-based service that is loosely integrated with some Office applications. It lacks control features that even a small business would seek to keep tabs on sensitive data. There are no central management capabilities. Collaboration and Interoperability are the two areas where SkyDrive is impressive. Bottom line, not only does the Test Center decline to recommend SkyDrive, it might actually be advisable for VARs to suggest their clients block network access to SkyDrive through content filters.

Read the full review here