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Discover how athenahealth, a healthcare technology leader, accelerates hybrid cloud deployment using Amazon EKS, AWS Local Zones, and AWS Outposts. Explore their innovative digital transformation strategy empowering developers to leverage cloud benefits across diverse environments.
An Assessment of Key 5G-IoT Alliance Developments Including Dell Nokia P5G Use Case Focus, Intel Enlisting P5G Partners, and Vonage AWS Network API Push In this episode of The 5G Factor, our series that focuses on all things 5G, the IoT, and the ecosystem as a whole, we look at the major 5G ecosystem moves and what's going on that caught my eye in the lead up to Mobile World Congress 2024. Key alliance developments include Dell and Nokia teaming up to advance private 5G network use cases and network cloud transformation, Intel enlisting an array of major partners, such as Cisco, NTT Data, AWS, Ericsson, and , to accelerated private 5G network adoption by businesses, and Ericsson's Vonage and AWS bringing together Vonage's platform - based on communications Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) and network APIs - Ericsson's 5G network capabilities and AWS services to catalyze the availability of new solutions to millions of AWS developers through AWS Marketplace. My analytical review highlighted: Dell and Nokia Commit to Advancing Network Cloud Transformation and P5G Use Cases. Dell Technologies and Nokia announced the extension of a strategic partnership to use each company's expertise and solutions, including infrastructure solutions from Dell and private wireless connectivity from Nokia, to advance open network architectures in the telecom ecosystem and private 5G use cases among businesses. As part of the agreement, Nokia will adopt Dell as its preferred infrastructure partner for existing Nokia AirFrame customers, offering Dell's technology as the infrastructure of choice for telecom cloud deployments. I delve into why the extend alliance is a sales and marketing boost for both companies as Dell gains valuable mind share and presence during the early stages of private 5G adoption and Nokia taps into Dell's extensive hybrid cloud channels as Nokia Digital Automation Cloud private wireless solution becomes Dell's preferred private wireless platform for enterprise customers' edge use cases. Intel Ready to Power Private 5G with Partners. Intel is teaming with partners to further enable and grow the private network market. Intel-powered private 5G solutions are deployed globally with major partners such as Cisco, NTT Data, AWS, Ericsson, and Nokia. Key partnerships include Cisco and NTT Data collaborating to transform RAI Amsterdam into the first smart venue in Europe, Aramco Digital, part of the world's largest energy company Aramco, in collaboration with Intel, is developing private 5G for the industrial sector, powered by Intel-based open RAN technology, and the addition of Amdocs as a system integrator for the Integrated Private Wireless (IPW) on AWS program. Through the program, AWS customers can access Amdocs Mobile Private Network (MPN) services, and the infrastructure, built on AWS Outposts servers, which is powered by Intel Xeon processors. I examine why Private 5G networks are in high demand in 2024 and how Intel and partners are well-positioned as enterprises look for scalable compute solutions to power the next wave of AI applications running at the edge that drive their digital transformation missions and improvement of business outcomes. Ericsson and AWS Ready to Unleash Communications and Network APIs. The collaboration between Ericsson-owned Vonage and Amazon Web Services (AWS) will bring together Vonage's platform - based on communications APIs and network APIs - Ericsson's 5G network capabilities and AWS services. The collaboration aims to accelerate the availability of new solutions to millions of AWS developers through AWS Marketplace. I assess why network APIs are essential for exposing new capabilities from within the 5G network that have never been available before, allowing existing applications to be enhanced with network information and enabling the development of a new class of applications. The alliance also aligns with the recently released Ericsson Mobility Report Business Review 2024 that cites programmable networks (network APIs) as integral to driving innovation and ecosystem growth by offering access to new value opportunities, allowing application developers to innovate on a large scale.
Steve Tuck, Co-Founder & CEO of Oxide Computer Company, joins Corey on Screaming in the Cloud to discuss his work to make modern computers cloud-friendly. Steve describes what it was like going through early investment rounds, and the difficult but important decision he and his co-founder made to build their own switch. Corey and Steve discuss the demand for on-prem computers that are built for cloud capability, and Steve reveals how Oxide approaches their product builds to ensure the masses can adopt their technology wherever they are. About SteveSteve is the Co-founder & CEO of Oxide Computer Company. He previously was President & COO of Joyent, a cloud computing company acquired by Samsung. Before that, he spent 10 years at Dell in a number of different roles. Links Referenced: Oxide Computer Company: https://oxide.computer/ On The Metal Podcast: https://oxide.computer/podcasts/on-the-metal TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is brought to us in part by our friends at RedHat. As your organization grows, so does the complexity of your IT resources. You need a flexible solution that lets you deploy, manage, and scale workloads throughout your entire ecosystem. The Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform simplifies the management of applications and services across your hybrid infrastructure with one platform. Look for it on the AWS Marketplace.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. You know, I often say it—but not usually on the show—that Screaming in the Cloud is a podcast about the business of cloud, which is intentionally overbroad so that I can talk about basically whatever the hell I want to with whoever the hell I'd like. Today's guest is, in some ways of thinking, about as far in the opposite direction from Cloud as it's possible to go and still be involved in the digital world. Steve Tuck is the CEO at Oxide Computer Company. You know, computers, the things we all pretend aren't underpinning those clouds out there that we all use and pay by the hour, gigabyte, second-month-pound or whatever it works out to. Steve, thank you for agreeing to come back on the show after a couple years, and once again suffer my slings and arrows.Steve: Much appreciated. Great to be here. It has been a while. I was looking back, I think three years. This was like, pre-pandemic, pre-interest rates, pre… Twitter going totally sideways.Corey: And I have to ask to start with that, it feels, on some level, like toward the start of the pandemic, when everything was flying high and we'd had low interest rates for a decade, that there was a lot of… well, lunacy lurking around in the industry, my own business saw it, too. It turns out that not giving a shit about the AWS bill is in fact a zero interest rate phenomenon. And with all that money or concentrated capital sloshing around, people decided to do ridiculous things with it. I would have thought, on some level, that, “We're going to start a computer company in the Bay Area making computers,” would have been one of those, but given that we are a year into the correction, and things seem to be heading up into the right for you folks, that take was wrong. How'd I get it wrong?Steve: Well, I mean, first of all, you got part of it right, which is there were just a litany of ridiculous companies and projects and money being thrown in all directions at that time.Corey: An NFT of a computer. We're going to have one of those. That's what you're selling, right? Then you had to actually hard pivot to making the real thing.Steve: That's it. So, we might as well cut right to it, you know. This is—we went through the crypto phase. But you know, our—when we started the company, it was yes, a computer company. It's on the tin. It's definitely kind of the foundation of what we're building. But you know, we think about what a modern computer looks like through the lens of cloud.I was at a cloud computing company for ten years prior to us founding Oxide, so was Bryan Cantrill, CTO, co-founder. And, you know, we are huge, huge fans of cloud computing, which was an interesting kind of dichotomy. Instead of conversations when we were raising for Oxide—because of course, Sand Hill is terrified of hardware. And when we think about what modern computers need to look like, they need to be in support of the characteristics of cloud, and cloud computing being not that you're renting someone else's computers, but that you have fully programmable infrastructure that allows you to slice and dice, you know, compute and storage and networking however software needs. And so, what we set out to go build was a way for the companies that are running on-premises infrastructure—which, by the way, is almost everyone and will continue to be so for a very long time—access to the benefits of cloud computing. And to do that, you need to build a different kind of computing infrastructure and architecture, and you need to plumb the whole thing with software.Corey: There are a number of different ways to view cloud computing. And I think that a lot of the, shall we say, incumbent vendors over in the computer manufacturing world tend to sound kind of like dinosaurs, on some level, where they're always talking in terms of, you're a giant company and you already have a whole bunch of data centers out there. But one of the magical pieces of cloud is you can have a ridiculous idea at nine o'clock tonight and by morning, you'll have a prototype, if you're of that bent. And if it turns out it doesn't work, you're out, you know, 27 cents. And if it does work, you can keep going and not have to stop and rebuild on something enterprise-grade.So, for the small-scale stuff and rapid iteration, cloud providers are terrific. Conversely, when you wind up in the giant fleets of millions of computers, in some cases, there begin to be economic factors that weigh in, and for some on workloads—yes, I know it's true—going to a data center is the economical choice. But my question is, is starting a new company in the direction of building these things, is it purely about economics or is there a capability story tied in there somewhere, too?Steve: Yeah, it's actually economics ends up being a distant third, fourth, in the list of needs and priorities from the companies that we're working with. When we talk about—and just to be clear we're—our demographic, that kind of the part of the market that we are focused on are large enterprises, like, folks that are spending, you know, half a billion, billion dollars a year in IT infrastructure, they, over the last five years, have moved a lot of the use cases that are great for public cloud out to the public cloud, and who still have this very, very large need, be it for latency reasons or cost reasons, security reasons, regulatory reasons, where they need on-premises infrastructure in their own data centers and colo facilities, et cetera. And it is for those workloads in that part of their infrastructure that they are forced to live with enterprise technologies that are 10, 20, 30 years old, you know, that haven't evolved much since I left Dell in 2009. And, you know, when you think about, like, what are the capabilities that are so compelling about cloud computing, one of them is yes, what you mentioned, which is you have an idea at nine o'clock at night and swipe a credit card, and you're off and running. And that is not the case for an idea that someone has who is going to use the on-premises infrastructure of their company. And this is where you get shadow IT and 16 digits to freedom and all the like.Corey: Yeah, everyone with a corporate credit card winds up being a shadow IT source in many cases. If your processes as a company don't make it easier to proceed rather than doing it the wrong way, people are going to be fighting against you every step of the way. Sometimes the only stick you've got is that of regulation, which in some industries, great, but in other cases, no, you get to play Whack-a-Mole. I've talked to too many companies that have specific scanners built into their mail system every month looking for things that look like AWS invoices.Steve: [laugh]. Right, exactly. And so, you know, but if you flip it around, and you say, well, what if the experience for all of my infrastructure that I am running, or that I want to provide to my software development teams, be it rented through AWS, GCP, Azure, or owned for economic reasons or latency reasons, I had a similar set of characteristics where my development team could hit an API endpoint and provision instances in a matter of seconds when they had an idea and only pay for what they use, back to kind of corporate IT. And what if they were able to use the same kind of developer tools they've become accustomed to using, be it Terraform scripts and the kinds of access that they are accustomed to using? How do you make those developers just as productive across the business, instead of just through public cloud infrastructure?At that point, then you are in a much stronger position where you can say, you know, for a portion of things that are, as you pointed out, you know, more unpredictable, and where I want to leverage a bunch of additional services that a particular cloud provider has, I can rent that. And where I've got more persistent workloads or where I want a different economic profile or I need to have something in a very low latency manner to another set of services, I can own it. And that's where I think the real chasm is because today, you just don't—we take for granted the basic plumbing of cloud computing, you know? Elastic Compute, Elastic Storage, you know, networking and security services. And us in the cloud industry end up wanting to talk a lot more about exotic services and, sort of, higher-up stack capabilities. None of that basic plumbing is accessible on-prem.Corey: I also am curious as to where exactly Oxide lives in the stack because I used to build computers for myself in 2000, and it seems like having gone down that path a bit recently, yeah, that process hasn't really improved all that much. The same off-the-shelf components still exist and that's great. We always used to disparagingly call spinning hard drives as spinning rust in racks. You named the company Oxide; you're talking an awful lot about the Rust programming language in public a fair bit of the time, and I'm starting to wonder if maybe words don't mean what I thought they meant anymore. Where do you folks start and stop, exactly?Steve: Yeah, that's a good question. And when we started, we sort of thought the scope of what we were going to do and then what we were going to leverage was smaller than it has turned out to be. And by that I mean, man, over the last three years, we have hit a bunch of forks in the road where we had questions about do we take something off the shelf or do we build it ourselves. And we did not try to build everything ourselves. So, to give you a sense of kind of where the dotted line is, around the Oxide product, what we're delivering to customers is a rack-level computer. So, the minimum size comes in rack form. And I think your listeners are probably pretty familiar with this. But, you know, a rack is—Corey: You would be surprised. It's basically, what are they about seven feet tall?Steve: Yeah, about eight feet tall.Corey: Yeah, yeah. Seven, eight feet, weighs a couple 1000 pounds, you know, make an insulting joke about—Steve: Two feet wide.Corey: —NBA players here. Yeah, all kinds of these things.Steve: Yeah. And big hunk of metal. And in the cases of on-premises infrastructure, it's kind of a big hunk of metal hole, and then a bunch of 1U and 2U boxes crammed into it. What the hyperscalers have done is something very different. They started looking at, you know, at the rack level, how can you get much more dense, power-efficient designs, doing things like using a DC bus bar down the back, instead of having 64 power supplies with cables hanging all over the place in a rack, which I'm sure is what you're more familiar with.Corey: Tremendous amount of weight as well because you have the metal chassis for all of those 1U things, which in some cases, you wind up with, what, 46U in a rack, assuming you can even handle the cooling needs of all that.Steve: That's right.Corey: You have so much duplication, and so much of the weight is just metal separating one thing from the next thing down below it. And there are opportunities for massive improvement, but you need to be at a certain point of scale to get there.Steve: You do. You do. And you also have to be taking on the entire problem. You can't pick at parts of these things. And that's really what we found. So, we started at this sort of—the rack level as sort of the design principle for the product itself and found that that gave us the ability to get to the right geometry, to get as much CPU horsepower and storage and throughput and networking into that kind of chassis for the least amount of wattage required, kind of the most power-efficient design possible.So, it ships at the rack level and it ships complete with both our server sled systems in Oxide, a pair of Oxide switches. This is—when I talk about, like, design decisions, you know, do we build our own switch, it was a big, big, big question early on. We were fortunate even though we were leaning towards thinking we needed to go do that, we had this prospective early investor who was early at AWS and he had asked a very tough question that none of our other investors had asked to this point, which is, “What are you going to do about the switch?”And we knew that the right answer to an investor is like, “No. We're already taking on too much.” We're redesigning a server from scratch in, kind of, the mold of what some of the hyperscalers have learned, doing our own Root of Trust, we're doing our own operating system, hypervisor control plane, et cetera. Taking on the switch could be seen as too much, but we told them, you know, we think that to be able to pull through all of the value of the security benefits and the performance and observability benefits, we can't have then this [laugh], like, obscure third-party switch rammed into this rack.Corey: It's one of those things that people don't think about, but it's the magic of cloud with AWS's network, for example, it's magic. You can get line rate—or damn near it—between any two points, sustained.Steve: That's right.Corey: Try that in the data center, you wind into massive congestion with top-of-rack switches, where, okay, we're going to parallelize this stuff out over, you know, two dozen racks and we're all going to have them seamlessly transfer information between each other at line rate. It's like, “[laugh] no, you're not because those top-of-rack switches will melt and become side-of-rack switches, and then bottom-puddle-of-rack switches. It doesn't work that way.”Steve: That's right.Corey: And you have to put a lot of thought and planning into it. That is something that I've not heard a traditional networking vendor addressing because everyone loves to hand-wave over it.Steve: Well so, and this particular prospective investor, we told him, “We think we have to go build our own switch.” And he said, “Great.” And we said, “You know, we think we're going to lose you as an investor as a result, but this is what we're doing.” And he said, “If you're building your own switch, I want to invest.” And his comment really stuck with us, which is AWS did not stand on their own two feet until they threw out their proprietary switch vendor and built their own.And that really unlocked, like you've just mentioned, like, their ability, both in hardware and software to tune and optimize to deliver that kind of line rate capability. And that is one of the big findings for us as we got into it. Yes, it was really, really hard, but based on a couple of design decisions, P4 being the programming language that we are using as the surround for our silicon, tons of opportunities opened up for us to be able to do similar kinds of optimization and observability. And that has been a big, big win.But to your question of, like, where does it stop? So, we are delivering this complete with a baked-in operating system, hypervisor, control plane. And so, the endpoint of the system, where the customer meets is either hitting an API or a CLI or a console that delivers and kind of gives you the ability to spin up projects. And, you know, if one is familiar with EC2 and EBS and VPC, that VM level of abstraction is where we stop.Corey: That, I think, is a fair way of thinking about it. And a lot of cloud folks are going to pooh-pooh it as far as saying, “Oh well, just virtual machines. That's old cloud. That just treats the cloud like a data center.” And in many cases, yes, it does because there are ways to build modern architectures that are event-driven on top of things like Lambda, and API Gateway, and the rest, but you take a look at what my customers are doing and what drives the spend, it is invariably virtual machines that are largely persistent.Sometimes they scale up, sometimes they scale down, but there's always a baseline level of load that people like to hand-wave away the fact that what they're fundamentally doing in a lot of these cases, is paying the cloud provider to handle the care and feeding of those systems, which can be expensive, yes, but also delivers significant innovation beyond what almost any company is going to be able to deliver in-house. There is no way around it. AWS is better than you are—whoever you happen to—be at replacing failed hard drives. That is a simple fact. They have teams of people who are the best in the world of replacing failed hard drives. You generally do not. They are going to be better at that than you. But that's not the only axis. There's not one calculus that leads to, is cloud a scam or is cloud a great value proposition for us? The answer is always a deeply nuanced, “It depends.”Steve: Yeah, I mean, I think cloud is a great value proposition for most and a growing amount of software that's being developed and deployed and operated. And I think, you know, one of the myths that is out there is, hey, turn over your IT to AWS because we have or you know, a cloud provider—because we have such higher caliber personnel that are really good at swapping hard drives and dealing with networks and operationally keeping this thing running in a highly available manner that delivers good performance. That is certainly true, but a lot of the operational value in an AWS is been delivered via software, the automation, the observability, and not actual people putting hands on things. And it's an important point because that's been a big part of what we're building into the product. You know, just because you're running infrastructure in your own data center, it does not mean that you should have to spend, you know, 1000 hours a month across a big team to maintain and operate it. And so, part of that, kind of, cloud, hyperscaler innovation that we're baking into this product is so that it is easier to operate with much, much, much lower overhead in a highly available, resilient manner.Corey: So, I've worked in a number of data center facilities, but the companies I was working with, were always at a scale where these were co-locations, where they would, in some cases, rent out a rack or two, in other cases, they'd rent out a cage and fill it with their own racks. They didn't own the facilities themselves. Those were always handled by other companies. So, my question for you is, if I want to get a pile of Oxide racks into my environment in a data center, what has to change? What are the expectations?I mean, yes, there's obviously going to be power and requirements at the data center colocation is very conversant with, but Open Compute, for example, had very specific requirements—to my understanding—around things like the airflow construction of the environment that they're placed within. How prescriptive is what you've built, in terms of doing a building retrofit to start using you folks?Steve: Yeah, definitely not. And this was one of the tensions that we had to balance as we were designing the product. For all of the benefits of hyperscaler computing, some of the design center for you know, the kinds of racks that run in Google and Amazon and elsewhere are hyperscaler-focused, which is unlimited power, in some cases, data centers designed around the equipment itself. And where we were headed, which was basically making hyperscaler infrastructure available to, kind of, the masses, the rest of the market, these folks don't have unlimited power and they aren't going to go be able to go redesign data centers. And so no, the experience should be—with exceptions for folks maybe that have very, very limited access to power—that you roll this rack into your existing data center. It's on standard floor tile, that you give it power, and give it networking and go.And we've spent a lot of time thinking about how we can operate in the wide-ranging environmental characteristics that are commonplace in data centers that focus on themselves, colo facilities, and the like. So, that's really on us so that the customer is not having to go to much work at all to kind of prepare and be ready for it.Corey: One of the challenges I have is how to think about what you've done because you are rack-sized. But what that means is that my own experimentation at home recently with on-prem stuff for smart home stuff involves a bunch of Raspberries Pi and a [unintelligible 00:19:42], but I tend to more or less categorize you the same way that I do AWS Outposts, as well as mythical creatures, like unicorns or giraffes, where I don't believe that all these things actually exist because I haven't seen them. And in fact, to get them in my house, all four of those things would theoretically require a loading dock if they existed, and that's a hard thing to fake on a demo signup form, as it turns out. How vaporware is what you've built? Is this all on paper and you're telling amazing stories or do they exist in the wild?Steve: So, last time we were on, it was all vaporware. It was a couple of napkin drawings and a seed round of funding.Corey: I do recall you not using that description at the time, for what it's worth. Good job.Steve: [laugh]. Yeah, well, at least we were transparent where we were going through the race. We had some napkin drawings and we had some good ideas—we thought—and—Corey: You formalize those and that's called Microsoft PowerPoint.Steve: That's it. A hundred percent.Corey: The next generative AI play is take the scrunched-up, stained napkin drawing, take a picture of it, and convert it to a slide.Steve: Google Docs, you know, one of those. But no, it's got a lot of scars from the build and it is real. In fact, next week, we are going to be shipping our first commercial systems. So, we have got a line of racks out in our manufacturing facility in lovely Rochester, Minnesota. Fun fact: Rochester, Minnesota, is where the IBM AS/400s were built.Corey: I used to work in that market, of all things.Steve: Really?Corey: Selling tape drives in the AS/400. I mean, I still maintain there's no real mainframe migration to the cloud play because there's no AWS/400. A joke that tends to sail over an awful lot of people's heads because, you know, most people aren't as miserable in their career choices as I am.Steve: Okay, that reminds me. So, when we were originally pitching Oxide and we were fundraising, we [laugh]—in a particular investor meeting, they asked, you know, “What would be a good comp? Like how should we think about what you are doing?” And fortunately, we had about 20 investor meetings to go through, so burning one on this was probably okay, but we may have used the AS/400 as a comp, talking about how [laugh] mainframe systems did such a good job of building hardware and software together. And as you can imagine, there were some blank stares in that room.But you know, there are some good analogs to historically in the computing industry, when you know, the industry, the major players in the industry, were thinking about how to deliver holistic systems to support end customers. And, you know, we see this in the what Apple has done with the iPhone, and you're seeing this as a lot of stuff in the automotive industry is being pulled in-house. I was listening to a good podcast. Jim Farley from Ford was talking about how the automotive industry historically outsourced all of the software that controls cars, right? So, like, Bosch would write the software for the controls for your seats.And they had all these suppliers that were writing the software, and what it meant was that innovation was not possible because you'd have to go out to suppliers to get software changes for any little change you wanted to make. And in the computing industry, in the 80s, you saw this blow apart where, like, firmware got outsourced. In the IBM and the clones, kind of, race, everyone started outsourcing firmware and outsourcing software. Microsoft started taking over operating systems. And then VMware emerged and was doing a virtualization layer.And this, kind of, fragmented ecosystem is the landscape today that every single on-premises infrastructure operator has to struggle with. It's a kit car. And so, pulling it back together, designing things in a vertically integrated manner is what the hyperscalers have done. And so, you mentioned Outposts. And, like, it's a good example of—I mean, the most public cloud of public cloud companies created a way for folks to get their system on-prem.I mean, if you need anything to underscore the draw and the demand for cloud computing-like, infrastructure on-prem, just the fact that that emerged at all tells you that there is this big need. Because you've got, you know, I don't know, a trillion dollars worth of IT infrastructure out there and you have maybe 10% of it in the public cloud. And that's up from 5% when Jassy was on stage in '21, talking about 95% of stuff living outside of AWS, but there's going to be a giant market of customers that need to own and operate infrastructure. And again, things have not improved much in the last 10 or 20 years for them.Corey: They have taken a tone onstage about how, “Oh, those workloads that aren't in the cloud, yet, yeah, those people are legacy idiots.” And I don't buy that for a second because believe it or not—I know that this cuts against what people commonly believe in public—but company execs are generally not morons, and they make decisions with context and constraints that we don't see. Things are the way they are for a reason. And I promise that 90% of corporate IT workloads that still live on-prem are not being managed or run by people who've never heard of the cloud. There was a decision made when some other things were migrating of, do we move this thing to the cloud or don't we? And the answer at the time was no, we're going to keep this thing on-prem where it is now for a variety of reasons of varying validity. But I don't view that as a bug. I also, frankly, don't want to live in a world where all the computers are basically run by three different companies.Steve: You're spot on, which is, like, it does a total disservice to these smart and forward-thinking teams in every one of the Fortune 1000-plus companies who are taking the constraints that they have—and some of those constraints are not monetary or entirely workload-based. If you want to flip it around, we were talking to a large cloud SaaS company and their reason for wanting to extend it beyond the public cloud is because they want to improve latency for their e-commerce platform. And navigating their way through the complex layers of the networking stack at GCP to get to where the customer assets are that are in colo facilities, adds lag time on the platform that can cost them hundreds of millions of dollars. And so, we need to think behind this notion of, like, “Oh, well, the dark ages are for software that can't run in the cloud, and that's on-prem. And it's just a matter of time until everything moves to the cloud.”In the forward-thinking models of public cloud, it should be both. I mean, you should have a consistent experience, from a certain level of the stack down, everywhere. And then it's like, do I want to rent or do I want to own for this particular use case? In my vast set of infrastructure needs, do I want this to run in a data center that Amazon runs or do I want this to run in a facility that is close to this other provider of mine? And I think that's best for all. And then it's not this kind of false dichotomy of quality infrastructure or ownership.Corey: I find that there are also workloads where people will come to me and say, “Well, we don't think this is going to be economical in the cloud”—because again, I focus on AWS bills. That is the lens I view things through, and—“The AWS sales rep says it will be. What do you think?” And I look at what they're doing and especially if involves high volumes of data transfer, I laugh a good hearty laugh and say, “Yeah, keep that thing in the data center where it is right now. You will thank me for it later.”It's, “Well, can we run this in an economical way in AWS?” As long as you're okay with economical meaning six times what you're paying a year right now for the same thing, yeah, you can. I wouldn't recommend it. And the numbers sort of speak for themselves. But it's not just an economic play.There's also the story of, does this increase their capability? Does it let them move faster toward their business goals? And in a lot of cases, the answer is no, it doesn't. It's one of those business process things that has to exist for a variety of reasons. You don't get to reimagine it for funsies and even if you did, it doesn't advance the company in what they're trying to do any, so focus on something that differentiates as opposed to this thing that you're stuck on.Steve: That's right. And what we see today is, it is easy to be in that mindset of running things on-premises is kind of backwards-facing because the experience of it is today still very, very difficult. I mean, talking to folks and they're sharing with us that it takes a hundred days from the time all the different boxes land in their warehouse to actually having usable infrastructure that developers can use. And our goal and what we intend to go hit with Oxide as you can roll in this complete rack-level system, plug it in, within an hour, you have developers that are accessing cloud-like services out of the infrastructure. And that—God, countless stories of firmware bugs that would send all the fans in the data center nonlinear and soak up 100 kW of power.Corey: Oh, God. And the problems that you had with the out-of-band management systems. For a long time, I thought Drax stood for, “Dell, RMA Another Computer.” It was awful having to deal with those things. There was so much room for innovation in that space, which no one really grabbed onto.Steve: There was a really, really interesting talk at DEFCON that we just stumbled upon yesterday. The NVIDIA folks are giving a talk on BMC exploits… and like, a very, very serious BMC exploit. And again, it's what most people don't know is, like, first of all, the BMC, the Baseboard Management Controller, is like the brainstem of the computer. It has access to—it's a backdoor into all of your infrastructure. It's a computer inside a computer and it's got software and hardware that your server OEM didn't build and doesn't understand very well.And firmware is even worse because you know, firmware written by you know, an American Megatrends or other is a big blob of software that gets loaded into these systems that is very hard to audit and very hard to ascertain what's happening. And it's no surprise when, you know, back when we were running all the data centers at a cloud computing company, that you'd run into these issues, and you'd go to the server OEM and they'd kind of throw their hands up. Well, first they'd gaslight you and say, “We've never seen this problem before,” but when you thought you've root-caused something down to firmware, it was anyone's guess. And this is kind of the current condition today. And back to, like, the journey to get here, we kind of realized that you had to blow away that old extant firmware layer, and we rewrote our own firmware in Rust. Yes [laugh], I've done a lot in Rust.Corey: No, it was in Rust, but, on some level, that's what Nitro is, as best I can tell, on the AWS side. But it turns out that you don't tend to have the same resources as a one-and-a-quarter—at the moment—trillion-dollar company. That keeps [valuing 00:30:53]. At one point, they lost a comma and that was sad and broke all my logic for that and I haven't fixed it since. Unfortunate stuff.Steve: Totally. I think that was another, kind of, question early on from certainly a lot of investors was like, “Hey, how are you going to pull this off with a smaller team and there's a lot of surface area here?” Certainly a reasonable question. Definitely was hard. The one advantage—among others—is, when you are designing something kind of in a vertical holistic manner, those design integration points are narrowed down to just your equipment.And when someone's writing firmware, when AMI is writing firmware, they're trying to do it to cover hundreds and hundreds of components across dozens and dozens of vendors. And we have the advantage of having this, like, purpose-built system, kind of, end-to-end from the lowest level from first boot instruction, all the way up through the control plane and from rack to switch to server. That definitely helped narrow the scope.Corey: This episode has been fake sponsored by our friends at AWS with the following message: Graviton Graviton, Graviton, Graviton, Graviton, Graviton, Graviton, Graviton, Graviton. Thank you for your l-, lack of support for this show. Now, AWS has been talking about Graviton an awful lot, which is their custom in-house ARM processor. Apple moved over to ARM and instead of talking about benchmarks they won't publish and marketing campaigns with words that don't mean anything, they've let the results speak for themselves. In time, I found that almost all of my workloads have moved over to ARM architecture for a variety of reason, and my laptop now gets 15 hours of battery life when all is said and done. You're building these things on top of x86. What is the deal there? I do not accept that if that you hadn't heard of ARM until just now because, as mentioned, Graviton, Graviton, Graviton.Steve: That's right. Well, so why x86, to start? And I say to start because we have just launched our first generation products. And our first-generation or second-generation products that we are now underway working on are going to be x86 as well. We've built this system on AMD Milan silicon; we are going to be launching a Genoa sled.But when you're thinking about what silicon to use, obviously, there's a bunch of parts that go into the decision. You're looking at the kind of applicability to workload, performance, power management, for sure, and if you carve up what you are trying to achieve, x86 is still a terrific fit for the broadest set of workloads that our customers are trying to solve for. And choosing which x86 architecture was certainly an easier choice, come 2019. At this point, AMD had made a bunch of improvements in performance and energy efficiency in the chip itself. We've looked at other architectures and I think as we are incorporating those in the future roadmap, it's just going to be a question of what are you trying to solve for.You mentioned power management, and that is kind of commonly been a, you know, low power systems is where folks have gone beyond x86. Is we're looking forward to hardware acceleration products and future products, we'll certainly look beyond x86, but x86 has a long, long road to go. It still is kind of the foundation for what, again, is a general-purpose cloud infrastructure for being able to slice and dice for a variety of workloads.Corey: True. I have to look around my environment and realize that Intel is not going anywhere. And that's not just an insult to their lack of progress on committed roadmaps that they consistently miss. But—Steve: [sigh].Corey: Enough on that particular topic because we want to keep this, you know, polite.Steve: Intel has definitely had some struggles for sure. They're very public ones, I think. We were really excited and continue to be very excited about their Tofino silicon line. And this came by way of the Barefoot networks acquisition. I don't know how much you had paid attention to Tofino, but what was really, really compelling about Tofino is the focus on both hardware and software and programmability.So, great chip. And P4 is the programming language that surrounds that. And we have gotten very, very deep on P4, and that is some of the best tech to come out of Intel lately. But from a core silicon perspective for the rack, we went with AMD. And again, that was a pretty straightforward decision at the time. And we're planning on having this anchored around AMD silicon for a while now.Corey: One last question I have before we wind up calling it an episode, it seems—at least as of this recording, it's still embargoed, but we're not releasing this until that winds up changing—you folks have just raised another round, which means that your napkin doodles have apparently drawn more folks in, and now that you're shipping, you're also not just bringing in customers, but also additional investor money. Tell me about that.Steve: Yes, we just completed our Series A. So, when we last spoke three years ago, we had just raised our seed and had raised $20 million at the time, and we had expected that it was going to take about that to be able to build the team and build the product and be able to get to market, and [unintelligible 00:36:14] tons of technical risk along the way. I mean, there was technical risk up and down the stack around this [De Novo 00:36:21] server design, this the switch design. And software is still the kind of disproportionate majority of what this product is, from hypervisor up through kind of control plane, the cloud services, et cetera. So—Corey: We just view it as software with a really, really confusing hardware dongle.Steve: [laugh]. Yeah. Yes.Corey: Super heavy. We're talking enterprise and government-grade here.Steve: That's right. There's a lot of software to write. And so, we had a bunch of milestones that as we got through them, one of the big ones was getting Milan silicon booting on our firmware. It was funny it was—this was the thing that clearly, like, the industry was most suspicious of, us doing our own firmware, and you could see it when we demonstrated booting this, like, a year-and-a-half ago, and AMD all of a sudden just lit up, from kind of arm's length to, like, “How can we help? This is amazing.” You know? And they could start to see the benefits of when you can tie low-level silicon intelligence up through a hypervisor there's just—Corey: No I love the existing firmware I have. Looks like it was written in 1984 and winds up having terrible user ergonomics that hasn't been updated at all, and every time something comes through, it's a 50/50 shot as whether it fries the box or not. Yeah. No, I want that.Steve: That's right. And you look at these hyperscale data centers, and it's like, no. I mean, you've got intelligence from that first boot instruction through a Root of Trust, up through the software of the hyperscaler, and up to the user level. And so, as we were going through and kind of knocking down each one of these layers of the stack, doing our own firmware, doing our own hardware Root of Trust, getting that all the way plumbed up into the hypervisor and the control plane, number one on the customer side, folks moved from, “This is really interesting. We need to figure out how we can bring cloud capabilities to our data centers. Talk to us when you have something,” to, “Okay. We actually”—back to the earlier question on vaporware, you know, it was great having customers out here to Emeryville where they can put their hands on the rack and they can, you know, put your hands on software, but being able to, like, look at real running software and that end cloud experience.And that led to getting our first couple of commercial contracts. So, we've got some great first customers, including a large department of the government, of the federal government, and a leading firm on Wall Street that we're going to be shipping systems to in a matter of weeks. And as you can imagine, along with that, that drew a bunch of renewed interest from the investor community. Certainly, a different climate today than it was back in 2019, but what was great to see is, you still have great investors that understand the importance of making bets in the hard tech space and in companies that are looking to reinvent certain industries. And so, we added—our existing investors all participated. We added a bunch of terrific new investors, both strategic and institutional.And you know, this capital is going to be super important now that we are headed into market and we are beginning to scale up the business and make sure that we have a long road to go. And of course, maybe as importantly, this was a real confidence boost for our customers. They're excited to see that Oxide is going to be around for a long time and that they can invest in this technology as an important part of their infrastructure strategy.Corey: I really want to thank you for taking the time to speak with me about, well, how far you've come in a few years. If people want to learn more and have the requisite loading dock, where should they go to find you?Steve: So, we try to put everything up on the site. So, oxidecomputer.com or oxide.computer. We also, if you remember, we did [On the Metal 00:40:07]. So, we had a Tales from the Hardware-Software Interface podcast that we did when we started. We have shifted that to Oxide and Friends, which the shift there is we're spending a little bit more time talking about the guts of what we built and why. So, if folks are interested in, like, why the heck did you build a switch and what does it look like to build a switch, we actually go to depth on that. And you know, what does bring-up on a new server motherboard look like? And it's got some episodes out there that might be worth checking out.Corey: We will definitely include a link to that in the [show notes 00:40:36]. Thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it.Steve: Yeah, Corey. Thanks for having me on.Corey: Steve Tuck, CEO at Oxide Computer Company. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this episode, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, along with an angry ranting comment because you are in fact a zoology major, and you're telling me that some animals do in fact exist. But I'm pretty sure of the two of them, it's the unicorn.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.
On this episode of The Cloud Pod, the team discusses the upcoming 2023 in-person Google Cloud conference, the accessibility of AWS CloudTrail Lake for non-AWS activity events, the new updates from Azure Chaos studio, and the comparison between Oracle Cloud service and other Cloud providers. They also highlight the application and importance of VPCs in CCOE. A big thanks to this week's sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week's highlights
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast, we speak with Jan Hofmeyr, a VP within Amazon Web Services (AWS). This show was recorded at AWS re:Invent 2022 in Las Vegas, and we discuss EC2 at the edge, AWS Outposts and how local zones work, connecting Outposts to the AWS cloud, and more.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast, we speak with Jan Hofmeyr, a VP within Amazon Web Services (AWS). This show was recorded at AWS re:Invent 2022 in Las Vegas, and we discuss EC2 at the edge, AWS Outposts and how local zones work, connecting Outposts to the AWS cloud, and more. The post Day Two Cloud 180: Understanding AWS EC2 At The Edge appeared first on Packet Pushers.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast, we speak with Jan Hofmeyr, a VP within Amazon Web Services (AWS). This show was recorded at AWS re:Invent 2022 in Las Vegas, and we discuss EC2 at the edge, AWS Outposts and how local zones work, connecting Outposts to the AWS cloud, and more. The post Day Two Cloud 180: Understanding AWS EC2 At The Edge appeared first on Packet Pushers.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast, we speak with Jan Hofmeyr, a VP within Amazon Web Services (AWS). This show was recorded at AWS re:Invent 2022 in Las Vegas, and we discuss EC2 at the edge, AWS Outposts and how local zones work, connecting Outposts to the AWS cloud, and more.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast, we speak with Jan Hofmeyr, a VP within Amazon Web Services (AWS). This show was recorded at AWS re:Invent 2022 in Las Vegas, and we discuss EC2 at the edge, AWS Outposts and how local zones work, connecting Outposts to the AWS cloud, and more. The post Day Two Cloud 180: Understanding AWS EC2 At The Edge appeared first on Packet Pushers.
On today's Day Two Cloud podcast, we speak with Jan Hofmeyr, a VP within Amazon Web Services (AWS). This show was recorded at AWS re:Invent 2022 in Las Vegas, and we discuss EC2 at the edge, AWS Outposts and how local zones work, connecting Outposts to the AWS cloud, and more.
AWS Outpost - полностью управляемое решение, которое позволяет пользователям вынести инфраструктуру AWS, включая сервисы, API и инструменты в собственный центр обработки данных. И теперь AWS Outposts можно заказать в Казахстан, Viktor Vedmich совместно с Rinat Uzbekov и Igor Sharfmesser - рассказали что за зверь такой AWS Outposts, для каких целей он потребуется, какие сервисы будут доступны на нем. Какой процесс доставки оплаты, все это и не только в нашем подкасте. Полезные ссылки Видео подкаст: Что такое AWS Outpost и как заказать его в Казахстане? Блог пост: Что такое AWS Outposts и как заказать его в Казахстане AWS Outposts: Ordering and Installation Overview Если у вас есть вопросы, предложения или темы для будущих подборок, пишите мне в Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/vedmich/ или телеграмм https://t.me/VictorVedmich
On The Cloud Pod this week, AWS announces an update to IAM role trust policy behavior, Easily Collect Vehicle Data and Send to the Cloud with new AWS IoT FleetWise, now generally available, Get a head start with no-cost learning challenges before Google Next ‘22. Thank you to our sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides top notch cloud and DevOps engineers to the world's most innovative companies. Initiatives stalled because you're having trouble hiring? Foghorn can be burning down your DevOps and Cloud backlogs as soon as next week. Episode Highlights ⏰ AWS announces an update to IAM role trust policy behavior. ⏰ Easily Collect Vehicle Data and Send to the Cloud with new AWS IoT FleetWise, now generally available. ⏰ Get a head start with no-cost learning challenges before Google Next ‘22. General News:
On The Cloud Pod this week, AWS Enterprise Support adds incident detection and response, the announcement of Google Cloud Spanner, and Oracle expands to Spain. Thank you to our sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides top notch cloud and DevOps engineers to the world's most innovative companies. Initiatives stalled because you're having trouble hiring? Foghorn can be burning down your DevOps and Cloud backlogs as soon as next week. Episode Highlights ⏰ AWS Enterprise Support adds incident detection and response ⏰ You can now get a 90-day free trial of Google Cloud Spanner ⏰ Oracle opens its newest cloud infrastructure region in Spain Top Quote
On The Cloud Pod this week, the team discusses data sovereignty for future space-customers. Plus: There's a global cloud shortage, Google announces Apigee advanced API security, and GKE Autopilot gets new networking features. A big thanks to this week's sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week's highlights
On The Cloud Pod this week, Peter's been suspended without pay for two weeks for not filing his vacation requests in triplicate. Plus it's earnings season once again, there's a major Google and SWIFT collaboration afoot, and MSK Serverless is now generally available, making Kafka management fairly hassle-free. A big thanks to this week's sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week's highlights
J'étais à Londres cette semaine pour le Summit AWS et j'ai croisé un Solution Architect AWS, spécialiste du monde du commerce de détail. Comment le cloud AWS aide les commercants, en ligne et traditionnels, à innover ? Dans cet épisode, après avoir parlé des challenges traditionnels de disponibilité, de passage à l'échelle ou déploiement international, nous parlons de technologies AIML de personalisation ou de prévision. Nous parlons aussi de Just Walk Out, cette technologie créée et vendue par Amazon pour permettre de supprimer le passage à la caisse dans les magasins physiques. Nous terminons avec les services Edge, tels que AWS Outposts, pour mettre un bout du cloud dans votre magasin.
J'étais à Londres cette semaine pour le Summit AWS et j'ai croisé un Solution Architect AWS, spécialiste du monde du commerce de détail. Comment le cloud AWS aide les commercants, en ligne et traditionnels, à innover ? Dans cet épisode, après avoir parlé des challenges traditionnels de disponibilité, de passage à l'échelle ou déploiement international, nous parlons de technologies AIML de personalisation ou de prévision. Nous parlons aussi de Just Walk Out, cette technologie créée et vendue par Amazon pour permettre de supprimer le passage à la caisse dans les magasins physiques. Nous terminons avec les services Edge, tels que AWS Outposts, pour mettre un bout du cloud dans votre magasin.
Google Biglake takes the feature of the week with the ability to federate data from multiple data lakes. On The Cloud Pod this week, the team discusses the most expensive way to run a VM (Oracle wins). Plus some exciting developments, an AWS OpenSearch 1.2 update with several new features, and Azure's having a party, so bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). A big thanks to this week's sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week's highlights
Come si è evoluta l'infrastruttura fisica di AWS dal 2006 fino ad oggi? Quali nuovi componenti si sono uniti ai concetti di Region e Availability Zone negli ultimi anni? In questo episodio ospito Diego Natali, Sr. Solutions Architect di AWS Italia, per parlare dei nuovi concetti infrastrutturali come AWS Local Zones, AWS Outposts e AWS Wavelength - di quali casi d'uso abilitano, quali sono le differenze principali e come si interfacciano con le AWS Region. Link: AWS Outposts. Link: AWS Local Zones. Link: AWS Wavelength.
En este episodio, Mauricio Zajbert y Richard Hechenbichler de AWS, hablan con Juan Mestre sobre cómo AWS Outposts es ideal para cargas de trabajo que requieren acceso de baja latencia a sistemas locales, procesamiento de datos locales, residencia de datos y migración de aplicaciones con interdependencias a sistemas locales. En este episodio, profundizaremos en la comparación entre AWS Outposts y la infraestructura local tradicional. Además, hablaremos de los beneficios de trabajar en una solución de nube híbrida, tanto para las áreas de TI de clientes asi como para los socios. Material Adicional: https://aws.amazon.com/es/outposts/?nc1=h_ls
Pull your podcast player out of instant retrieval, because we're discussing re:Invent 2021 as well as the weeks before it. Lots of announcements; big, small, weird, awesome, and anything in between. We had fun with this episode and hope you do too. Find us at melb.awsug.org.au or as @AWSMelb on Twitter. News Finally in Sydney AWS Snowcone SSD is now available in the US East (Ohio), US West (San Francisco), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney) and AWS Asia Pacific (Tokyo) regions Amazon EC2 M6i instances are now available in 5 additional regions Serverless Introducing Amazon EMR Serverless in preview Announcing Amazon Kinesis Data Streams On-Demand Announcing Amazon Redshift Serverless (Preview) Introducing Amazon MSK Serverless in public preview Introducing Amazon SageMaker Serverless Inference (preview) Simplify CI/CD Configuration for AWS Serverless Applications and your favorite CI/CD system – General Availability Amazon AppStream 2.0 launches Elastic fleets, a serverless fleet type AWS Chatbot now supports management of AWS resources in Slack (Preview) Lambda AWS Lambda now supports partial batch response for SQS as an event source AWS Lambda now supports cross-account container image pulling from Amazon Elastic Container Registry AWS Lambda now supports mTLS Authentication for Amazon MSK as an event source AWS Lambda now logs Hyperplane Elastic Network Interface (ENI) ID in AWS CloudTrail data events Step Functions AWS Step Functions Synchronous Express Workflows now supports AWS PrivateLink Amplify Introducing AWS Amplify Studio AWS Amplify announces the ability to override Amplify-generated resources using CDK AWS Amplify announces the ability to add custom AWS resources to Amplify-created backends using CDK and CloudFormation AWS Amplify UI launches new Authenticator component for React, Angular, and Vue AWS Amplify announces the ability to export Amplify backends as CDK stacks to integrate into CDK-based pipelines AWS Amplify expands its Notifications category to include in-app messaging (Developer Preview) AWS Amplify announces a redesigned, more extensible GraphQL Transformer for creating app backends quickly Containers Fargate Announcing AWS Fargate for Amazon ECS Powered by AWS Graviton2 Processors ECS Amazon ECS now adds container instance health information Amazon ECS has improved Capacity Providers to deliver faster Cluster Auto Scaling Amazon ECS-optimized AMI is now available as an open-source project Amazon ECS announces a new integration with AWS Distro for OpenTelemetry EKS Amazon EKS on AWS Fargate now Supports the Fluent Bit Kubernetes Filter Amazon EKS adds support for additional cluster configuration options using AWS CloudFormation Visualize all your Kubernetes clusters in one place with Amazon EKS Connector, now generally available AWS Karpenter v0.5 Now Generally Available AWS customers can now find, subscribe to, and deploy third-party applications that run in any Kubernetes environment from AWS Marketplace Other Amazon ECR announces pull through cache repositories AWS App Mesh now supports ARM64-based Envoy Images EC2 & VPC Instances New – EC2 Instances (G5) with NVIDIA A10G Tensor Core GPUs | AWS News Blog Announcing new Amazon EC2 G5g instances powered by AWS Graviton2 processors Introducing Amazon EC2 R6i instances Introducing two new Amazon EC2 bare metal instances Amazon EC2 Mac Instances now support hot attach and detach of EBS volumes Amazon EC2 Mac Instances now support macOS Monterey Announcing Amazon EC2 M1 Mac instances for macOS Announcing preview of Amazon Linux 2022 Elastic Beanstalk supports AWS Graviton-based Amazon EC2 instance types Announcing preview of Amazon EC2 Trn1 instances Announcing new Amazon EC2 C7g instances powered by AWS Graviton3 processors Announcing new Amazon EC2 Im4gn and Is4gen instances powered by AWS Graviton2 processors Introducing the AWS Graviton Ready Program Introducing Amazon EC2 M6a instances AWS Compute Optimizer now offers enhanced infrastructure metrics, a new feature for EC2 recommendations AWS Compute Optimizer now offers resource efficiency metrics Networking AWS price reduction for data transfers out to the internet Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) customers can now create IPv6-only subnets and EC2 instances Application Load Balancer and Network Load Balancer end-to-end IPv6 support AWS Transit Gateway introduces intra-region peering for simplified cloud operations and network connectivity Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) announces IP Address Manager (IPAM) to help simplify IP address management on AWS Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) announces Network Access Analyzer to help you easily identify unintended network access Introducing AWS Cloud WAN Preview Introducing AWS Direct Connect SiteLink Other Recover from accidental deletions of your snapshots using Recycle Bin Amazon EBS Snapshots introduces a new tier, Amazon EBS Snapshots Archive, to reduce the cost of long-term retention of EBS Snapshots by up to 75% Amazon CloudFront now supports configurable CORS, security, and custom HTTP response headers Amazon EC2 now supports access to Red Hat Knowledgebase Amazon EC2 Fleet and Spot Fleet now support automatic instance termination with Capacity Rebalancing AWS announces a new capability to switch license types for Windows Server and SQL Server applications on Amazon EC2 AWS Batch introduces fair-share scheduling Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling Now Supports Predictive Scaling with Custom Metrics Dev & Ops New services Measure and Improve Your Application Resilience with AWS Resilience Hub | AWS News Blog Scalable, Cost-Effective Disaster Recovery in the Cloud | AWS News Blog Announcing general availability of AWS Elastic Disaster Recovery AWS announces the launch of AWS AppConfig Feature Flags in preview Announcing Amazon DevOps Guru for RDS, an ML-powered capability that automatically detects and diagnoses performance and operational issues within Amazon Aurora Introducing Amazon CloudWatch Metrics Insights (Preview) Introducing Amazon CloudWatch RUM for monitoring applications' client-side performance IaC AWS announces Construct Hub general availability AWS Cloud Development Kit (AWS CDK) v2 is now generally available You can now import your AWS CloudFormation stacks into a CloudFormation stack set You can now submit multiple operations for simultaneous execution with AWS CloudFormation StackSets AWS CDK releases v1.126.0 - v1.130.0 with high-level APIs for AWS App Runner and hotswap support for Amazon ECS and AWS Step Functions SDKs AWS SDK for Swift (Developer Preview) AWS SDK for Kotlin (Developer Preview) AWS SDK for Rust (Developer Preview) CICD AWS Proton now supports Terraform Open Source for infrastructure provisioning AWS Proton introduces Git management of infrastructure as code templates AWS App2Container now supports Jenkins for setting up a CI/CD pipeline Other Amazon CodeGuru Reviewer now detects hardcoded secrets in Java and Python repositories EC2 Image Builder enables sharing Amazon Machine Images (AMIs) with AWS Organizations and Organization Units Amazon Corretto 17 Support Roadmap Announced Amazon DevOps Guru now Supports Multi-Account Insight Aggregation with AWS Organizations AWS Toolkits for Cloud9, JetBrains and VS Code now support interaction with over 200 new resource types AWS Fault Injection Simulator now supports Amazon CloudWatch Alarms and AWS Systems Manager Automation Runbooks. AWS Device Farm announces support for testing web applications hosted in an Amazon VPC Amazon CloudWatch now supports anomaly detection on metric math expressions Introducing Amazon CloudWatch Evidently for feature experimentation and safer launches New – Amazon CloudWatch Evidently – Experiments and Feature Management | AWS News Blog Introducing AWS Microservice Extractor for .NET Security AWS Secrets Manager increases secrets limit to 500K per account AWS CloudTrail announces ErrorRate Insights AWS announces the new Amazon Inspector for continual vulnerability management Amazon SQS Announces Server-Side Encryption with Amazon SQS-managed encryption keys (SSE-SQS) AWS WAF adds support for Captcha AWS Shield Advanced introduces automatic application-layer DDoS mitigation Security Hub AWS Security Hub adds support for AWS PrivateLink for private access to Security Hub APIs AWS Security Hub adds three new FSBP controls and three new partners SSO Manage Access Centrally for CyberArk Users with AWS Single Sign-On Manage Access Centrally for JumpCloud Users with AWS Single Sign-On AWS Single Sign-On now provides one-click login to Amazon EC2 instances running Microsoft Windows AWS Single Sign-On is now in scope for AWS SOC reporting Control Tower AWS Control Tower now supports concurrent operations for detective guardrails AWS Control Tower now supports nested organizational units AWS Control Tower now provides controls to meet data residency requirements Deny services and operations for AWS Regions of your choice with AWS Control Tower AWS Control Tower introduces Terraform account provisioning and customization Data Storage & Processing Databases Relational databases Announcing Amazon RDS Custom for SQL Server New Multi-AZ deployment option for Amazon RDS for PostgreSQL and for MySQL; increased read capacity, lower and more consistent write transaction latency, and shorter failover time (Preview) Amazon RDS now supports cross account KMS keys for exporting RDS Snapshots Amazon Aurora supports MySQL 8.0 Amazon RDS on AWS Outposts now supports backups on AWS Outposts Athena Amazon Athena adds cost details to query execution plans Amazon Athena announces cross-account federated query New and improved Amazon Athena console is now generally available Amazon Athena now supports new Lake Formation fine-grained security and reliable table features Announcing Amazon Athena ACID transactions, powered by Apache Iceberg (Preview) Redshift Announcing preview for write queries with Amazon Redshift Concurrency Scaling Amazon Redshift announces native support for SQLAlchemy and Apache Airflow open-source frameworks Amazon Redshift simplifies the use of other AWS services by introducing the default IAM role Announcing Amazon Redshift cross-region data sharing (preview) Announcing preview of SQL Notebooks support in Amazon Redshift Query Editor V2 Neptune Announcing AWS Graviton2-based instances for Amazon Neptune AWS releases open source JDBC driver to connect to Amazon Neptune MemoryDB Amazon MemoryDB for Redis now supports AWS Graviton2-based T4g instances and a 2-month Free Trial Database Migration Service AWS Database Migration Service now supports parallel load for partitioned data to S3 AWS Database Migration Service now supports Kafka multi-topic AWS Database Migration Service now supports Azure SQL Managed Instance as a source AWS Database Migration Service now supports Google Cloud SQL for MySQL as a source Introducing AWS DMS Fleet Advisor for automated discovery and analysis of database and analytics workloads (Preview) AWS Database Migration Service now offers a new console experience, AWS DMS Studio AWS Database Migration Service now supports Time Travel, an improved logging mechanism Other Database Activity Streams now supports Graviton2-based instances Amazon Timestream now offers faster and more cost-effective time series data processing through scheduled queries, multi-measure records, and magnetic storage writes Amazon DynamoDB announces the new Amazon DynamoDB Standard-Infrequent Access table class, which helps you reduce your DynamoDB costs by up to 60 percent Achieve up to 30% better performance with Amazon DocumentDB (with MongoDB compatibility) using new Graviton2 instances S3 Amazon S3 on Outposts now delivers strong consistency automatically for all applications Amazon S3 Lifecycle further optimizes storage cost savings with new actions and filters Announcing the new Amazon S3 Glacier Instant Retrieval storage class - the lowest cost archive storage with milliseconds retrieval Amazon S3 Object Ownership can now disable access control lists to simplify access management for data in S3 Amazon S3 Glacier storage class is now Amazon S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval; storage price reduced by 10% and bulk retrievals are now free Announcing the new S3 Intelligent-Tiering Archive Instant Access tier - Automatically save up to 68% on storage costs Amazon S3 Event Notifications with Amazon EventBridge help you build advanced serverless applications faster Amazon S3 console now reports security warnings, errors, and suggestions from IAM Access Analyzer as you author your S3 policies Amazon S3 adds new S3 Event Notifications for S3 Lifecycle, S3 Intelligent-Tiering, object tags, and object access control lists Glue AWS Glue DataBrew announces native console integration with Amazon AppFlow AWS Glue DataBrew now supports custom SQL statements to retrieve data from Amazon Redshift and Snowflake AWS Glue DataBrew now allows customers to create data quality rules to define and validate their business requirements FSx Introducing Amazon FSx for OpenZFS Amazon FSx for Lustre now supports linking multiple Amazon S3 buckets to a file system Amazon FSx for Lustre can now automatically update file system contents as data is deleted and moved in Amazon S3 Announcing the next generation of Amazon FSx for Lustre file systems Backup Announcing preview of AWS Backup for Amazon S3 AWS Backup adds support for Amazon Neptune AWS Backup adds support for Amazon DocumentDB (with MongoDB compatibility) AWS Backup provides new resource assignment rules for your data protection policies AWS Backup adds support for VMware workloads Other AWS Lake Formation now supports AWS PrivateLink AWS Transfer Family adds identity provider options and enhanced monitoring capabilities Introducing ability to connect to EMR clusters in different subnets in EMR Studio AWS Snow Family now supports external NTP server configuration Announcing data tiering for Amazon ElastiCache for Redis Now execute python files and notebooks from another notebook in EMR Studio AWS Snow Family launches offline tape data migration capability AI & ML SageMaker Introducing Amazon SageMaker Canvas - a visual, no-code interface to build accurate machine learning models Announcing Fully Managed RStudio on Amazon SageMaker for Data Scientists | AWS News Blog Amazon SageMaker now supports inference testing with custom domains and headers from SageMaker Studio Amazon SageMaker Pipelines now supports retry policies and resume Announcing new deployment guardrails for Amazon SageMaker Inference endpoints Amazon announces new NVIDIA Triton Inference Server on Amazon SageMaker Amazon SageMaker Pipelines now integrates with SageMaker Model Monitor and SageMaker Clarify Amazon SageMaker now supports cross-account lineage tracking and multi-hop lineage querying Introducing Amazon SageMaker Inference Recommender Introducing Amazon SageMaker Ground Truth Plus: Create high-quality training datasets without having to build labeling applications or manage the labeling workforce on your own Amazon SageMaker Studio Lab (currently in preview), a free, no-configuration ML service Amazon SageMaker Studio now enables interactive data preparation and machine learning at scale within a single universal notebook through built-in integration with Amazon EMR Other General Availability of Syne Tune, an open-source library for distributed hyperparameter and neural architecture optimization Amazon Translate now supports AWS KMS Encryption Amazon Kendra releases AWS Single Sign-On integration for secure search Amazon Transcribe now supports automatic language identification for streaming transcriptions AWS AI for data analytics (AIDA) partner solutions Introducing Amazon Lex Automated Chatbot Designer (Preview) Amazon Kendra launches Experience Builder, Search Analytics Dashboard, and Custom Document Enrichment Other Cool Stuff In The Works – AWS Canada West (Calgary) Region | AWS News Blog Unified Search in the AWS Management Console now includes blogs, knowledge articles, events, and tutorials AWS DeepRacer introduces multi-user account management Amazon Pinpoint launches in-app messaging as a new communications channel Amazon AppStream 2.0 Introduces Linux Application Streaming Amazon SNS now supports publishing batches of up to 10 messages in a single API request Announcing usability improvements in the navigation bar of the AWS Management Console Announcing General Availability of Enterprise On-Ramp Announcing preview of AWS Private 5G AWS Outposts is Now Available in Two Smaller Form Factors Introducing AWS Mainframe Modernization - Preview Introducing the AWS Migration and Modernization Competency Announcing AWS Data Exchange for APIs Amazon WorkSpaces introduces Amazon WorkSpaces Web Amazon SQS Enhances Dead-letter Queue Management Experience For Standard Queues Introducing AWS re:Post, a new, community-driven, questions-and-answers service AWS Resource Access Manager enables support for global resource types AWS Ground Station launches expanded support for Software Defined Radios in Preview Announcing Amazon Braket Hybrid Jobs for running hybrid quantum-classical workloads on Amazon Braket Introducing AWS Migration Hub Refactor Spaces - Preview Well-Architected Framework Customize your AWS Well-Architected Review using Custom Lenses New Sustainability Pillar for the AWS Well-Architected Framework IoT Announcing AWS IoT RoboRunner, Now Available in Preview AWS IoT Greengrass now supports Microsoft Windows devices AWS IoT Core now supports Multi-Account Registration certificates on IoT Credential Provider endpoint Announcing AWS IoT FleetWise (Preview), a new service for transferring vehicle data to the cloud more efficiently Announcing AWS IoT TwinMaker (Preview), a service that makes it easier to build digital twins AWS IoT SiteWise now supports hot and cold storage tiers for industrial data New connectivity software, AWS IoT ExpressLink, accelerates IoT development (Preview) AWS IoT Device Management Fleet Indexing now supports two additional data sources (Preview) Connect Amazon Connect now enables you to create and orchestrate tasks directly from Flows Amazon Connect launches scheduled tasks Amazon Connect launches Contact APIs to fetch and update contact details programmatically Amazon Connect launches API to configure security profiles programmatically Amazon Connect launches APIs to archive and delete contact flows Amazon Connect now supports contact flow modules to simplify repeatable logic Sponsors CMD Solutions Silver Sponsors Cevo Versent
AWS Outposts es un servicio completamente administrado que ofrece la misma infraestructura, servicios, APIs y herramientas de AWS a prácticamente cualquier centro de datos, espacio de colocación o instalación local para lograr una experiencia híbrida verdaderamente consistente. AWS Outposts es ideal para cargas de trabajo que requieren acceso de baja latencia a los sistemas, procesamiento de datos locales, residencia de datos y migración de aplicaciones con dependencias de sistemas locales.
Edge computing es algo super interesante, pero no se significa una sola cosa. En este episodio hablamos de eso. Qué es? Qué servicios son? Hablamos de CDK, de diferentes opciones de infraestructura de AWS que podes usar y también alquilar. También hablamos de software y servicios.Este es el episodio #2.21 del Podcast de Charlas Técnicas de AWS.00:00 - Introduccion01:57 - Qué es edge computing?10:46 - Amazon Cloudfront18:53 - Snow family25:07 - AWS Outposts29:48 - Local Zones32:58 - Wavelength38:07 - EKS Distro y EKS Anywhere46:23 - Cómo empezar?
On The Cloud Pod this week, the team's collective brain power got a boost from guest hosts Rob Martin of the FinOps Foundation and Ben Garrison of JumpCloud. Also, AWS releases Data Exchange, Google automates Cloud DLP, and Azure Synapse Analytics is available for pre-purchase. A big thanks to this week's sponsors: Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. JumpCloud, which offers a complete platform for identity, access, and device management — no matter where your users and devices are located. This week's highlights
On The Cloud Pod this week, the team is running at half-duplex without Peter and Ryan. Plus Cloudflare R2 is here, Facebook died for a day, and AWS releases Cloud Control Plane. A big thanks to this week's sponsors: Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. JumpCloud, which offers a complete platform for identity, access, and device management — no matter where your users and devices are located. This week's highlights
Want to know some key insights around API testing. Why did Facebook go down for almost a whole day? And did you hear about the huge Twitch hack? Find out the answers to these and all other full-stack end-to-end automation performance security in DevOps testing topics. In this episode of the Test Guild news show for the week of October 10th. So grab your favorite cup of coffee or tea, and let's do this. Exclusive Sponsor This episode of the TestGuild News Show is sponsored by the folks at Applitools. Applitools is a next-generation test automation platform powered by Visual AI. Increase quality, accelerate delivery, and reduce cost with the world's most intelligent test automation platform. Seeing is believing, so create your free account now! Links to News Mentioned in this Episode *** Applitools free account: https://rcl.ink/xroZw *** https://applitools.info/jgu https://www.selenium.dev/blog/2021/selenium-4-rc-2/ https://www.abc12.com/2021/10/06/japanese-startup-autify-raises-10m-series-advance-software-testing-automation-through-no-code-solution/ https://www.ontestautomation.com/on-codeless-automation-or-rather-on-abstraction-layers/ https://www.linkedin.com/posts/menesklou_testing-automation-testautomation-activity-6850724889448484864-U3fJ https://smartbear.com/news/news-releases/smartbear-releases-results-of-2021-state-of-softwa/ https://link.medium.com/HrqlswQh8jb https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/VMWARE-INC-58476/news/VMware-Announcing-availability-of-VMware-Cloud-on-AWS-Outposts-36600466/ https://www.thousandeyes.com/blog/facebook-outage-analysis https://www.linkedin.com/posts/tammybutow_facebookdown-outages-sre-activity-6851556660675137536-RGbJ https://www.linkedin.com/posts/nvanderhoeven_testing-in-public-how-to-plan-a-load-test-activity-6851624350391574528-LNLt https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2021/10/06/2309760/0/en/Fluent-Project-Creat%5B%E2%80%A6%5Dirst-Mile-Data-Observability-Platform-for-Enterprises.html https://jobs.apple.com/en-us/details/200295220/site-reliability-engineer-sre-apple-cloud-services?team=SFTWR https://www.pcgamer.com/security-experts-aghast-at-the-scale-of-twitch-hack-this-is-as-bad-as-it-could-possibly-be/
Announcing VMware Cloud on AWS Outposts Availability- Bringing VMware Cloud's agility and innovation to your data center. In this episode, VMware experts will talk about what is this service, key use cases, what are key differentiators as compared to other options, what's under the hood, order flow process and much more. For further questions, reach out to: vmc_outposts@vmware.com Check out: - Announcement blog: https://blogs.vmware.com/cloud/2021/10/05/announcing-availability-of-vmware-cloud-on-aws-outposts/ - Website: https://www.vmware.com/products/vmc-on-aws/outposts.html - Order flow demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bhzmTsQzD7c - Watch VMworld sessions: i. Overview session: MCL3222: https://myevents.vmware.com/widget/vmware/vmworld2021/catalog?search=MCL3222 11. Technical deep dive session: VI1396: https://myevents.vmware.com/widget/vmware/vmworld2021/catalog?search=VI1396
Links: Cloud Security Basics CIOs and CTOs Should Know: https://www.informationweek.com/cloud/cloud-security-basics-cios-and-ctos-should-know/a/d-id/1341578? Spring 2021 PCI DSS report now available with nine services added in scope: https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/spring-2021-pci-dss-report-now-available-with-nine-services-added-in-scope/ Top 5 Benefits of Cloud Infrastructure Security: https://www.kratikal.com/blog/top-5-benefits-of-cloud-infrastructure-security/ The three most important AWS WAF rate-based rules: https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/three-most-important-aws-waf-rate-based-rules/ Researchers Call for ‘CVE' Approach for Cloud Vulnerabilities: https://www.darkreading.com/cloud/researchers-call-for-cve-approach-for-cloud-vulnerabilities Managed Private Cloud: It's all About Simplification: https://www.computerworld.com/article/3623118/managed-private-cloud-its-all-about-simplification.html 100 percent of companies experience public cloud security incidents: https://betanews.com/2021/08/04/100-percent-public-cloud-security-incidents/ Why cloud security is the key to unlocking value from hybrid working: https://www.welivesecurity.com/2021/08/05/why-cloud-security-key-unlocking-value-hybrid-working/ Organizations Still Struggle to Hire & Retain Infosec Employees: Report: https://www.darkreading.com/careers-and-people/organizations-still-struggle-to-hire-retain-infosec-employees-report NSA, CISA release Kubernetes Hardening Guidance: https://www.nsa.gov/News-Features/Feature-Stories/Article-View/Article/2716980/nsa-cisa-release-kubernetes-hardening-guidance/ HTTP/2 Implementation Errors Exposing Websites to Serious Risks: https://www.darkreading.com/application-security/http-2-implementation-errors-exposing-websites-to-serious-risks Ransomware Gangs and the Name Game Distraction: https://krebsonsecurity.com/2021/08/ransomware-gangs-and-the-name-game-distraction/ Using versioning in S3 buckets: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/Versioning.html TranscriptJesse: Welcome to Meanwhile in Security where I, your host Jesse Trucks, guides you to better security in the cloud.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by Thinkst. This is going to take a minute to explain, so bear with me. I linked against an early version of their tool, canarytokens.org, in the very early days of my newsletter, and what it does is relatively simple and straightforward. It winds up embedding credentials, files, that sort of thing in various parts of your environment, wherever you want to; it gives you fake AWS API credentials, for example. And the only thing that these things do is alert you whenever someone attempts to use those things. It's an awesome approach. I've used something similar for years. Check them out. But wait, there's more. They also have an enterprise option that you should be very much aware of: canary.tools. You can take a look at this, but what it does is it provides an enterprise approach to drive these things throughout your entire environment. You can get a physical device that hangs out on your network and impersonates whatever you want to. When it gets Nmap scanned, or someone attempts to log into it, or access files on it, you get instant alerts. It's awesome. If you don't do something like this, you're likely to find out that you've gotten breached, the hard way. Take a look at this. It's one of those few things that I look at and say, “Wow, that is an amazing idea. I love it.” That's canarytokens.org and canary.tools. The first one is free. The second one is enterprise-y. Take a look. I'm a big fan of this. More from them in the coming weeks.Jesse: The general theme in security news and trends show us that perimeter defense has a whole new meaning. There is no large perimeter anymore. Nearly every device is on a public or otherwise hostile network, from servers to phones to laptops. Every device needs scanning, protecting, monitoring, and analyzing. None of these devices can be viewed in a vacuum, as separate entities without the context of behavior of systems and services accessed from across a network.This is why zero trust and cloud native applications and services go so well in these hard times. If you can't trust anything without checking on current events, then you have to authenticate and analyze in real-time to determine if something is safe to allow. In the ancient days of yore, everything was default allow and you stopped things you knew were bad. Then along came default deny, where you allowed only those things you white listed. But that was a full-time allowance of bad things to happen when an account was compromised.Ditch the white list and just implement real-time contextual security. If you do this, does it really matter if someone gets a hostile device on your network? Nope. If you treat everything, including owned and managed assets, as hostile, some new unmanaged device or service doesn't change your operations or exposure much if at all.Meanwhile in the news. Cloud Security Basics CIOs and CTOs Should Know. Some of the critical things non-cybersecurity execs ought to know: moving to the cloud isn't a security easy button, cybersecurity insurance generally sucks, and moving to the cloud takes a lot more work than people think to get operationally secure.Spring 2021 PCI DSS report now available with nine services added in scope. When you do compliance and use cloud infrastructures and SaaS services, you need to prove your services support compliance requirements. This AWS report can help. Also, review the new services added to see if you can improve your service delivery and applications supporting PCI.Top 5 Benefits of Cloud Infrastructure Security. Using the cloud doesn't make you more secure, but there are advantages that can make security more manageable in the cloud than it is in legacy data centers.The three most important AWS WAF rate-based rules. Sometimes ya just got to geek out. Also, your security person won't always be there to set up things like Web Application Firewalls with DDOS mitigation and other nifty security and compliance tools.Researchers Call for ‘CVE' Approach for Cloud Vulnerabilities. If there is a vulnerability in cloud service provider services, they should get a CVE like anyone else, right? After all, it's just software, which is what the CVE is supposed to track.I understand shining light on the problems to force cloud companies to fix them, but that is partly what the CVE system is for. If there are configurations that open gaping security holes, they need to be in CVE. Why do they want to make a new thing to replace a perfectly good thing?Announcer: If you have several PostgreSQL databases running behind NAT, check out Teleport, an open-source identity-aware access proxy. Teleport provides secure access to anything running behind NAT, such as SSH servers or Kubernetes clusters and—new in this release—PostgreSQL instances, including AWS RDS. Teleport gives users superpowers like authenticating via SSO with multi-factor, listing and seeing all database instances, getting instant access to them using popular CLI tools or web UIs. Teleport ensures best security practices like role-based access, preventing data exfiltration, providing visibility, and ensuring compliance. Download Teleport at goteleport.com. That's goteleport.com.Jesse: Managed Private Cloud: It's all About Simplification. So, let's see if I understand this. Several article sources talk about the benefits of using private cloud citing the exact same benefits as using a public cloud service, except claiming it's more secure for finance and medical verticals. Hello folks, AWS Outposts anyone? The only difference is the shared responsibility model, except that now you have an outside agency managing everything. Neither are more or less secure than the other. They are different approaches to risk acceptance and mitigation.100 percent of companies experience public cloud security incidents. Despite the sensationally alluring feel of the headline, the real news from this is that moving to cloud operations exposes the horrible lack of processes around custom development and production management that most organizations have. Don't blame being in the cloud for your poor operations, just don't be stupid.Why cloud security is the key to unlocking value from hybrid working. [sigh]. Hybrid cloud, hybrid cars, hybrid corn, and now hybrid work. I haven't understood why it's so hard to understand that there are additional security concerns and either increased or displaced risk pushing workloads and data to the cloud. The only common answer I can think of is that security in general is full of theater and drama. Of course, there's more risk. Obfuscated risk is dangerous.Organizations Still Struggle to Hire & Retain Infosec Employees: Report. The extreme lack of trained and/or experienced cybersecurity talent underscores the importance of all of us knowing security well enough to mitigate most risks. Sure, having someone dedicated to the work is far superior to having security tacked onto the duties of others, but without the ability to fill those dedicated roles, someone has to keep the script kiddies and APTs out.NSA, CISA release Kubernetes Hardening Guidance. This is pure IT security gold. The spooks often hold secrets most of us haven't figured out, partially due to the immense resources they throw at cybersecurity. This report is 52 pages of great advice. Also, now everyone knows security issues in Kubernetes environments. Don't be stupid. Go read this now.HTTP/2 Implementation Errors Exposing Websites to Serious Risks. Black hat and other security conferences are famous for gloom and doom pronouncements that are just theoretical attacks that likely won't ever be practical in real-world production systems. However, this one may have some legs.Ransomware Gangs and the Name Game Distraction. With ransomware groups regularly getting international media attention, they're retreating to the shadows when the heat turns up on them. They will vanish from headlines, but they will simply rebrand and move forward as if they were a new group. This is why following Indicators Of Compromise, or IOCs, is more important than worrying about the exact behavior profile or name of a group.And now for the tip of the week. Don't lose overwritten file data. Use S3 versioning. Enabling versioning on your S3 buckets allows disaster recovery and an audit trail for changes in your data objects. The docs are fairly straightforward, as well. Check out the AWS doc section called: Using versioning in S3 buckets. And that's it for the week, folks. Securely yours, Jesse Trucks.Jesse: Thanks for listening. Please subscribe and rate us on Apple and Google Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
There was an interesting article from The Next Platform that looked at data from IDC and other sources on the sales of cloud outpost hardware. What is this cloud outpost thing? In this episode, I'll give you some background on AWS Outposts and Azure Stack and why they matter for the cloud outpost tsunami. The Next Platform post: https://www.nextplatform.com/2021/07/30/spending-on-cloud-outposts-is-climbing-the-hockey-stick/ Architecting IT post on HCI: https://www.architecting.it/blog/hci-market-segment ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/nedinthecloud Website: https://nedinthecloud.com Pluralsight: https://app.pluralsight.com/profile/author/edward-bellavance GitHub: https://github.com/ned1313
最新情報を "ながら" でキャッチアップ! ラジオ感覚放送 「毎日AWS」 おはようございます、金曜日担当パーソナリティの菅谷です。 今日は 06/24 に出たアップデートをピックアップしてご紹介。 感想は Twitter にて「#サバワ」をつけて投稿してください! ■ トークスクリプト 【AWSアプデ 06/24】AWS Lambda から Amazon Elastic File System にアクセスする機能が大阪リージョンに登場 他9件【#毎日AWS #224 】 ■ UPDATE PICKUP AWS Lambda から Amazon Elastic File System にアクセスする機能が大阪リージョンに登場 AWS Outposts が大阪リージョンに登場 Amazon RDS for Oracleで r5インスタンスクラスのvCPU数を調整できるように AWS Managed Services がセルフサービスレポートを提供開始 AWS Control Tower のコンソールおよび、全体的なサービスパフォーマンスが改善 Amazon Lookout for Metrics が CloudWatch とシームレスに統合、収集したメトリクスから異常検知できるように AWS Marketplace と AWS Data Exchange において香港、カタールのソフトウェアベンダーからソフトウェアおよびデータ製品を調達できるように AWS ClientVPNが desktop client for Linux を提供開始し、Linuxデスクトップに対応 Amazon Translate が XLIFF ドキュメントの翻訳をサポート Amazon Textract のフォーム抽出機能が精度向上し、より正確にドキュメントを解析できるように ■ サーバーワークスSNS Twitter / Facebook ■ サーバーワークスブログ サーバーワークスエンジニアブログ ■ 関連ブログ AWS Lambda から Amazon Elastic File System にアクセスできるようになりました!!!
This week on The Cloud Pod, Ryan is stuck somewhere in a tent under a broken-down motorcycle but is apparently still having fun. A big thanks to this week's sponsors: Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week's highlights Amazon went back to school to become a detective. Google was voted prom queen at the virtual homecoming. Oracle shocks everyone with its new look. General News: Great Partners Hashicorp has partnered with AWS to launch support for predictive scaling policy in the Terraform AWS provider. This will be hugely popular for people new to the cloud. Amazon Web Services: Dropping Stories For No Reason AWS Lambda Extensions are now generally available with new performance improvements. This has pretty limited regional availability, though. Amazon releases the AWS Shield threat landscape 2020 year in review. One of our favourite blogs. AWS EKS Add-Ons now supports CoreDNS and kube-proxy. This is neat! Introducing the AWS Application Cost Profiler — there have been a few complaints about this on Twitter. AWS Compute Optimizer launches updates to its EC2 instance type recommendations. This is awesome. AWS Outposts launches support for EC2 Capacity Reservations. Being able to use the same tool regardless of where you are is a good thing! An AWS Region in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is in the works. Great! Google Cloud Platform: Prom Queen 2021 Google VM Manager with OS configuration management is now in Preview. This is basically patch and agent management. Forrester names Google Cloud a leader in Unstructured Data Security Platforms. Good job, Google! Google has released a better way to manage firewall rules with Firewall Insights. We just want a firewall manager that does everything for us. Google announces new BigQuery user-friendly SQL launches. Thanks but no thanks. Azure: Selling No-Code To Developers Azure gains 100th compliance offering — protecting data with EU Cloud Code of Conduct. Now we know why France was so happy last week. Azure announces preview capabilities of Azure Application Services to run on K8 anywhere. We're really surprised by how quickly the cloud providers have embraced hybrid infrastructure. Azure releases several new features to empower developers to innovate with Azure Database services. We need to bring the tumbleweed sound effect back. Accenture, GitHub, Microsoft and ThoughtWorks launch the Green Software Foundation with the Linux Foundation. So they're anti-Bitcoin mining? Microsoft uses GPT-3 to add AI features to Power Apps. For developers who don't code. Microsoft's new research lab studies developer productivity and well-being. We'll see what happens. Oracle: One We're Actually Excited About Introducing Arm on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. The free tier is amazing! TCP Lightning Round Justin really appreciates Jonathan for handing him an easy win and takes this week's point, leaving scores at Justin (9), Ryan (4), Jonathan (7). Other headlines mentioned: Amazon Forecast now supports generating predictions for 5X more items using 3X more historic data points Amazon Elastic File System now supports longer resource identifiers AWS X-Ray now supports VPC endpoints Announcing enhancements to Amazon Rekognition text detection — support for more words, higher accuracy and lower latency Amazon CloudWatch Application Insights now supports container monitoring Customizations for AWS Control Tower v2.1 adds more scaling optimizations and improves compatibility with AWS CodeBuild Amazon EventBridge now supports sharing events between event buses in the same account and Region Amazon SageMaker Pipelines is now integrated with Amazon SageMaker Experiments Amazon Braket introduces quantum circuit noise simulator, DM1 AWS Transfer Family now supports Microsoft Active Directory Amazon EMR now supports Amazon EC2 On-Demand Capacity Reservations The Microsoft Build of OpenJDK is now generally available Public preview: Azure Confidential Ledger Google now allows you to Test Dataflow pipelines with the Cloud Spanner emulator Things Coming Up Announcing Google Cloud 2021 Summits [frequently updated] Harness Unscripted Conference — June 16–17 Google Cloud Next — Not announced yet (one site says Moscone is reserved June 28–30) Amazon re:Inforce — August 24-25 — Houston TX Google Cloud Next 2021 — October 12–14, 2021 AWS re:Invent — November 29–December 3 — Las Vegas
AWS Outposts is a fully managed service that offers the same AWS infrastructure, AWS services, APIs, and tools to virtually any datacenter, co-location space, or on-premises facility for a truly consistent hybrid experience. AWS Outposts is ideal for workloads that require low latency access to on-premises systems, local data processing, data residency, and migration of The post AWS Outpost Engineering with Joshua Burgin appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
AWS Outposts is a fully managed service that offers the same AWS infrastructure, AWS services, APIs, and tools to virtually any datacenter, co-location space, or on-premises facility for a truly consistent hybrid experience. AWS Outposts is ideal for workloads that require low latency access to on-premises systems, local data processing, data residency, and migration of
AWS Outposts is a fully managed service that offers the same AWS infrastructure, AWS services, APIs, and tools to virtually any datacenter, co-location space, or on-premises facility for a truly consistent hybrid experience. AWS Outposts is ideal for workloads that require low latency access to on-premises systems, local data processing, data residency, and migration of The post AWS Outpost Engineering with Joshua Burgin appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
AWS Outposts is a fully managed service that offers the same AWS infrastructure, AWS services, APIs, and tools to virtually any datacenter, co-location space, or on-premises facility for a truly consistent hybrid experience. AWS Outposts is ideal for workloads that require low latency access to on-premises systems, local data processing, data residency, and migration of The post AWS Outpost Engineering with Joshua Burgin appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.
This week on The Cloud Pod, Justin is away so the rest of the team has taken the opportunity to throw him under the bus. A big thanks to this week's sponsors: Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week's highlights The Pentagon has had enough of the kids fighting so no one gets the toy. Amazon has given developers the happy ending they've always wanted. Google is playing with fire and hopes no one gets burnt. JEDI: Play Nice Pentagon officials are considering pulling the plug on the star-crossed JEDI cloud-computing project. Reminds us of when we were kids and our parents took toys away when we couldn't play nice together. Amazon Web Services: We've Made All the Money AWS announces a price reduction for Amazon Managed Service for Prometheus. That's an awful lot of samples. Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) announces pricing change for VPC Peering. Just get rid of the ridiculous data transfer fees! AWS Organizations launches a new console experience. We're excited to try this out! AWS announces IAM Access Control for Apache Kafka on Amazon MSK. This is great. AWS Systems Manager now includes Incident Manager to resolve IT incidents faster. This might initially fall short of some of the other offerings on the market. AWS Local Zones are now open in Boston, Miami and Houston. They're continuing on the Oracle model of racks in random garages. Amazon now lets you create Microsoft SQL Server Instances of Amazon RDS on AWS Outposts. A big hooray for people using Outposts. Google Cloud Platform: Smells A Bit Google announces Agent Assist for Chat is now in Preview. Hopefully this is better than predictive text, which is often highly inappropriate. Google releases a handy new Google Cloud, AWS and Azure product map. This press release has an Oracle smell about it. Browse and query Google Cloud Spanner databases from Visual Studio Code. We can see this being welcomed by developers. Azure: So Pretty Azure releases a new logo. We think it kind of looks like a Google icon. Multiple new features for Azure VPN Gateway are now generally available. Really great features! Enabling Azure Site Recovery while creating Azure Virtual Machines is now generally available. Something about this feels clunky. The next installment of the low code development series is now available. Spoiler alert: it's not that riveting. TCP Lightning Round Ryan blatantly stole Justin's jokes but still takes this week's point, leaving scores at Justin (7), Ryan (4), Jonathan (7). Other headlines mentioned: Amazon QuickSight Launches Threshold Alerts Amazon DevOps Guru now generally available with additional capabilities Amazon Pinpoint Announces Journey Pause and Resume Azure Backup: Operational backup for Azure Blobs is now generally available Append blob support in Azure Data Lake Storage is now generally available Amazon SageMaker Automatic Model Tuning now supports up to 10x faster tuning and enables exploring up to 20X more models Amazon CloudWatch Synthetics supports cron expression for scheduling Amazon CloudFront announces price cuts in India and Asia Pacific regions Amazon Elasticsearch Service now offers AWS Graviton2 (M6g, C6g, R6g, and R6gd) instances3 Amazon Athena drivers now support Azure AD and PingFederate authentication Migration Evaluator announces a faster way to project AWS cloud costs with Quick Insights Amazon EKS managed node groups adds support for Kubernetes node taints Things Coming Up Announcing Google Cloud 2021 Summits [frequently updated] Save the date: AWS Containers events in May AWS Regional Summits — May 10–19 Microsoft Build — May 19–21 (Digital) Google Financial Services Summit — May 27th Harness Unscripted Conference — June 16–17 Google Cloud Next — Not announced yet (one site says Moscone is reserved June 28–30) Google Cloud Next 2021 — October 12–14, 2021 AWS re:Invent — November 29–December 3 — Las Vegas Oracle Open World (no details yet)
SDxCentral 2-Minute Weekly Wrap for April 9, 2021 Plus, VMware injects Knative into Tanzu, and AT&T adds Cisco's TeleworkerVerizon's 5G edge plan taps AWS' Outposts; VMware Tanzu gains Knative support; and AT&T pops Cisco's Telework into its SD-WAN. Verizon Adds AWS Outposts to 5G Edge Plan VMware Taps Knative for Tanzu Kubernetes Abstraction AT&T Adds Cisco Teleworker Into Its SD-WAN Soup Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Show Notes Buffer Overflow: The Other Chris Episode 190 2020 Predictions Roundup Hosts Ned Bellavance https://www.linkedin.com/in/ned-bellavance-ba68a52 @Ned1313 Chris Hayner, Delivery Manager https://www.linkedin.com/in/chrismhayner Kimberly DeFilippi, Project Manager, Business Analyst https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimberly-defilippi-77b3986/ Brenda Heisler, ISG Operations https://www.linkedin.com/in/brenda-heisler-b5431989/ Hank Yee, Delivery Manager https://www.linkedin.com/in/hankyee/ Longer Topics Ned’s Predictions Financial and IPOs (wrong!) Browser war (wrong!) Apple Glasses (wrong!) Google Pixel watch (wrong!) Microsoft Android phone (right!) AWS Outposts runaway hit (wrong!) Cryptocurrency slides into irrelevance (right!) Brenda’s Predictions At least one streaming service would go belly up (right!) 5G will remain a parlor trick (right!) Marketing got wwaaaayyy ahead of reality Kim’s Predictions Privacy becomes a hotter topic (maybe?) Deepfakes will be a big deal in the elections (wrong!) Hank’s Prediction Facebook will begin to tank, and Zuck will be shown the door in 2021 (right!) Chris’ Predictions Coal would descend into complete irrelevance (wrong!) IPv6 will make great strides forward (wrong!) Music Credits Intro: Jason Shaw - Tech Talk Outro: Jason Shaw – Feels Good 2 B
AWS et son besoin de conquête nous amène à avoir cette discussion aujourd'hui, dans ce podcast et avec nos super invités du jour... On se pose la question tous ensemble sur la raison et la stratégie de AWS de venir "grignoter" le marché du on-premise. Et en plus ils ne sont pas les seuls ! Azure, GCP et OVH aussi ont leur mot à dire et on en cause... Venez écouter nos invités du jour, tous passionnés dans leur domaine. Dans la bonne humeur et le sérieux nous tentons d'évoquer et de décrypter certaines composantes de ce sujet. Les intervenants : Nicolas Groh - Field CTO EMEA @Rubrik Christophe Lambert - Directeur SE EMEA @Cohesity Mathias Robichon - Directeur SE France @NetApp
By next year, up to 90% of enterprises worldwide will build their IT strategies around a mix of on-premises private clouds, public clouds, and existing platforms to handle a growing set of requirements for modern applications. Hear from AWS Outposts PM Rob Czarnecki, and Pure's AWS Alliance Manager Matt Blythe about the synergy of FlashBlade with AWS Outposts, enabling AWS customers to leverage a low-latency, high-performance unified fast file and object platform with native Amazon Amazon S3 capabilities in tandem with AWS hybrid-cloud services. FlashBlade recently achieved the AWS Outposts Ready designation, the latest step in extending how Pure and AWS work together to serve customers' modern data needs. For more information on how to leverage the benefits of FlashBlade through the AWS Outposts Service Ready program, visit: https://www.purestorage.com/docs.html?item=/type/pdf/subtype/doc/path/content/dam/pdf/en/solution-briefs/sb-flashblade-aws-outposts.pdf
Microsoft faces legal challenges with their recent moves on naming Dataflex, AC and CJ discuss if the new Surface Duo is a device they see themselves getting and they chat about some new Azure Stack options coming. News Microsoft Sued over Dataflex Pro Announcing data import from PDF documents Brian Jones, Head of Product, Excel The new Surface Duo Microsoft readies its AWS Outposts hybrid competitor: Azure Stack ‘Fiji’ Reimagining how NBA fans and teams experience the game of basketball with Together mode in Microsoft Teams Microsoft Ignite 2020: Empowering the technical community to help customers innovate and rebuild in a changing world Picks AC’s Picks Fear the Sky (The Fear Saga) (Volume 1) The Last Dance CJ’s Picks How Vulnerable Is G.P.S.? Boeing 747s still get critical updates via floppy disks
Preorder Surface Duo Now! Plus, Minecraft Education Edition on Chromebooks.Microsoft announces Surface DuoSurface Duo will cost $1400 and is available for pre-order; ships on September 10 Windows 10One 20H2 build with just fixes. Nothing to see here.Today, a new Dev Channel build with a new "post-feature update" welcome experience An interesting Windows-related reorg last week, which gave Pumped Panos more POWERLots of mindless corporate drivel-speak in the internal memos. Microsoft 365Microsoft Ignite 2020 is now a two-part showOffice and cloud services are booming. But so is Windows. Lucky M365 is one, big happy family! Cloud Microsoft reuses another codename: Fiji is now an AWS Outposts hybrid competitor Could Twitter steal TikTok away from Microsoft? (No.) But one can hope! Xbox + gamesXbox Series X is coming in November ... But Microsoft delays Halo InfiniteAntitrust: Apple's war on cloud gaming is impacting Microsoft, needs to be stoppedCloud Gaming comes to mobile in beta ahead of September launchLeak reveals that Xbox Series S DOES existMinecraft Education Edition is now available on Chromebooks Tips and picksTip of the week: Make the move to YouTube Music. A lot of people are down on YouTube Music because it's not just like Google Play Music. But it has one major advantage that makes it the single best music service available.App pick of the week: Parallels Desktop 16. PD 16 arrives with better perf and macOS Big Sur support.Codename pick of the week: Deschutes. Microsoft's coming CloudPC service has a codename: Deschutes. It *might* be named for the brewery which makes the excellent Fresh Squeezed IPA and Black Butte porter. Or maybe (and more likely) it's named for the place/river in Oregon.Codename pick 2 of the week: Oakdale. Oh, Dynamics 365/Power Platform team... how did this happen? You seemingly infringed on another company's branded trademark. But at least we have Project Oakdale, the version of the soon-to-be-renamed Dataflex for Teams. Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tailorstore.com/twit offer code TWIT adobe.com/businessmoves Melissa.com/twit
Preorder Surface Duo Now! Plus, Minecraft Education Edition on Chromebooks.Microsoft announces Surface DuoSurface Duo will cost $1400 and is available for pre-order; ships on September 10 Windows 10One 20H2 build with just fixes. Nothing to see here.Today, a new Dev Channel build with a new "post-feature update" welcome experience An interesting Windows-related reorg last week, which gave Pumped Panos more POWERLots of mindless corporate drivel-speak in the internal memos. Microsoft 365Microsoft Ignite 2020 is now a two-part showOffice and cloud services are booming. But so is Windows. Lucky M365 is one, big happy family! Cloud Microsoft reuses another codename: Fiji is now an AWS Outposts hybrid competitor Could Twitter steal TikTok away from Microsoft? (No.) But one can hope! Xbox + gamesXbox Series X is coming in November ... But Microsoft delays Halo InfiniteAntitrust: Apple's war on cloud gaming is impacting Microsoft, needs to be stoppedCloud Gaming comes to mobile in beta ahead of September launchLeak reveals that Xbox Series S DOES existMinecraft Education Edition is now available on Chromebooks Tips and picksTip of the week: Make the move to YouTube Music. A lot of people are down on YouTube Music because it's not just like Google Play Music. But it has one major advantage that makes it the single best music service available.App pick of the week: Parallels Desktop 16. PD 16 arrives with better perf and macOS Big Sur support.Codename pick of the week: Deschutes. Microsoft's coming CloudPC service has a codename: Deschutes. It *might* be named for the brewery which makes the excellent Fresh Squeezed IPA and Black Butte porter. Or maybe (and more likely) it's named for the place/river in Oregon.Codename pick 2 of the week: Oakdale. Oh, Dynamics 365/Power Platform team... how did this happen? You seemingly infringed on another company's branded trademark. But at least we have Project Oakdale, the version of the soon-to-be-renamed Dataflex for Teams. Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tailorstore.com/twit offer code TWIT adobe.com/businessmoves Melissa.com/twit
Preorder Surface Duo Now! Plus, Minecraft Education Edition on Chromebooks.Microsoft announces Surface DuoSurface Duo will cost $1400 and is available for pre-order; ships on September 10 Windows 10One 20H2 build with just fixes. Nothing to see here.Today, a new Dev Channel build with a new "post-feature update" welcome experience An interesting Windows-related reorg last week, which gave Pumped Panos more POWERLots of mindless corporate drivel-speak in the internal memos. Microsoft 365Microsoft Ignite 2020 is now a two-part showOffice and cloud services are booming. But so is Windows. Lucky M365 is one, big happy family! Cloud Microsoft reuses another codename: Fiji is now an AWS Outposts hybrid competitor Could Twitter steal TikTok away from Microsoft? (No.) But one can hope! Xbox + gamesXbox Series X is coming in November ... But Microsoft delays Halo InfiniteAntitrust: Apple's war on cloud gaming is impacting Microsoft, needs to be stoppedCloud Gaming comes to mobile in beta ahead of September launchLeak reveals that Xbox Series S DOES existMinecraft Education Edition is now available on Chromebooks Tips and picksTip of the week: Make the move to YouTube Music. A lot of people are down on YouTube Music because it's not just like Google Play Music. But it has one major advantage that makes it the single best music service available.App pick of the week: Parallels Desktop 16. PD 16 arrives with better perf and macOS Big Sur support.Codename pick of the week: Deschutes. Microsoft's coming CloudPC service has a codename: Deschutes. It *might* be named for the brewery which makes the excellent Fresh Squeezed IPA and Black Butte porter. Or maybe (and more likely) it's named for the place/river in Oregon.Codename pick 2 of the week: Oakdale. Oh, Dynamics 365/Power Platform team... how did this happen? You seemingly infringed on another company's branded trademark. But at least we have Project Oakdale, the version of the soon-to-be-renamed Dataflex for Teams. Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tailorstore.com/twit offer code TWIT adobe.com/businessmoves Melissa.com/twit
Preorder Surface Duo Now! Plus, Minecraft Education Edition on Chromebooks.Microsoft announces Surface DuoSurface Duo will cost $1400 and is available for pre-order; ships on September 10 Windows 10One 20H2 build with just fixes. Nothing to see here.Today, a new Dev Channel build with a new "post-feature update" welcome experience An interesting Windows-related reorg last week, which gave Pumped Panos more POWERLots of mindless corporate drivel-speak in the internal memos. Microsoft 365Microsoft Ignite 2020 is now a two-part showOffice and cloud services are booming. But so is Windows. Lucky M365 is one, big happy family! Cloud Microsoft reuses another codename: Fiji is now an AWS Outposts hybrid competitor Could Twitter steal TikTok away from Microsoft? (No.) But one can hope! Xbox + gamesXbox Series X is coming in November ... But Microsoft delays Halo InfiniteAntitrust: Apple's war on cloud gaming is impacting Microsoft, needs to be stoppedCloud Gaming comes to mobile in beta ahead of September launchLeak reveals that Xbox Series S DOES existMinecraft Education Edition is now available on Chromebooks Tips and picksTip of the week: Make the move to YouTube Music. A lot of people are down on YouTube Music because it's not just like Google Play Music. But it has one major advantage that makes it the single best music service available.App pick of the week: Parallels Desktop 16. PD 16 arrives with better perf and macOS Big Sur support.Codename pick of the week: Deschutes. Microsoft's coming CloudPC service has a codename: Deschutes. It *might* be named for the brewery which makes the excellent Fresh Squeezed IPA and Black Butte porter. Or maybe (and more likely) it's named for the place/river in Oregon.Codename pick 2 of the week: Oakdale. Oh, Dynamics 365/Power Platform team... how did this happen? You seemingly infringed on another company's branded trademark. But at least we have Project Oakdale, the version of the soon-to-be-renamed Dataflex for Teams. Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tailorstore.com/twit offer code TWIT adobe.com/businessmoves Melissa.com/twit
Preorder Surface Duo Now! Plus, Minecraft Education Edition on Chromebooks.Microsoft announces Surface DuoSurface Duo will cost $1400 and is available for pre-order; ships on September 10 Windows 10One 20H2 build with just fixes. Nothing to see here.Today, a new Dev Channel build with a new "post-feature update" welcome experience An interesting Windows-related reorg last week, which gave Pumped Panos more POWERLots of mindless corporate drivel-speak in the internal memos. Microsoft 365Microsoft Ignite 2020 is now a two-part showOffice and cloud services are booming. But so is Windows. Lucky M365 is one, big happy family! Cloud Microsoft reuses another codename: Fiji is now an AWS Outposts hybrid competitor Could Twitter steal TikTok away from Microsoft? (No.) But one can hope! Xbox + gamesXbox Series X is coming in November ... But Microsoft delays Halo InfiniteAntitrust: Apple's war on cloud gaming is impacting Microsoft, needs to be stoppedCloud Gaming comes to mobile in beta ahead of September launchLeak reveals that Xbox Series S DOES existMinecraft Education Edition is now available on Chromebooks Tips and picksTip of the week: Make the move to YouTube Music. A lot of people are down on YouTube Music because it's not just like Google Play Music. But it has one major advantage that makes it the single best music service available.App pick of the week: Parallels Desktop 16. PD 16 arrives with better perf and macOS Big Sur support.Codename pick of the week: Deschutes. Microsoft's coming CloudPC service has a codename: Deschutes. It *might* be named for the brewery which makes the excellent Fresh Squeezed IPA and Black Butte porter. Or maybe (and more likely) it's named for the place/river in Oregon.Codename pick 2 of the week: Oakdale. Oh, Dynamics 365/Power Platform team... how did this happen? You seemingly infringed on another company's branded trademark. But at least we have Project Oakdale, the version of the soon-to-be-renamed Dataflex for Teams. Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tailorstore.com/twit offer code TWIT adobe.com/businessmoves Melissa.com/twit
For this week's episode of the Futurum Tech Webcast, Futurum's Daniel Newman and Sarah Wallace discuss major cloud announcements by vendors such as HPE, Oracle, AWS, Microsoft, and IBM that have been made in the last few weeks. These announcements confirm that there is continued momentum in cloud, especially during the time of the COVID-19 pandemic when companies have had shift to accelerate their digital transformation. This webcast covered announcements from: HPE's virtual Discover event and the unveiling of its new Ezmeral software platform, as well as the acquisition of Silver Peak. Oracle's announcements around its Dedication Region Cloud@Customer and others Microsoft's announcements from its Inspire event, including updates to Dynamics 365 and Power Platform AWS announcements of its Low Code/No Code with new Honeycode, its launch of Relational Database Service for AWS Outposts, and the availability of AWS IoT SiteWise for industrial customers IBM and Adobe's partnership to digitally transform regulated industries IBM, Red Hat and SAP helping customers who want to run SAP Cloud Platform on-prem Disclaimer: This show is for information and entertainment purposes only. While we will discuss publicly traded companies on this show, the contents of this show should not be taken as investment advice.
最新情報を "ながら" でキャッチアップ! ラジオ感覚放送 「毎日AWS!」 おはようございます、サーバーワークスの加藤です。 今日は 7/6 に出た 5件のアップデートをご紹介。 感想は Twitter にて「#サバワ」をつけて投稿してください! ■ UPDATE ラインナップ Amazon RDS on AWS Outposts が一般利用可能に AWS Transit Gateway がより詳細な CloudWatch Metrics をサポート Amazon RDS for MariaDB が マイナーバージョン 10.3.23 および 10.4.13 をサポート EC2 Image Builder が 暗号化された AMI の作成・配信に対応 Amazon ECS のサービス割り当て制限を増加 ■ サーバーワークスSNS Twitter / Facebook ■ サーバーワークスブログ サーバーワークスエンジニアブログ
AWS had a number of big and small announcements in June again, and Arjen is joined by Jean-Manuel and Guy to talk about these. They'll cover it all from codeless programming tools to busting charts. The News Finally in Sydney ANZ Find your most expensive lines of code and improve code quality with Amazon CodeGuru - now generally available Announcing availability of AWS Outposts in nine additional countries in Africa, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and Middle East Serverless AWS Lambda support for Amazon Elastic File System now generally available Amazon API Gateway allows subprotocols on a WebSocket API connection AWS Amplify Console now supports deploying and hosting web apps managed in monorepos Swift Lambda support (Apple supported through WWDC sessions) Amplify Console adds support for automatically creating and deleting custom sub-domains for every branch deployment Containers Amazon EKS now Supports EC2 Inf1 Instances AWS App Mesh introduces timeout configuration support Amazon ECS Capacity Providers Now Support Delete Functionality Amazon Corretto for Alpine Linux now in preview AWS App Mesh controller for Kubernetes is now generally available EC2 & VPC AWS Direct Connect enables Failover Testing Now Available, Amazon EC2 C5a instances featuring 2nd Generation AMD EPYC Processors Announcing the General Availability of Amazon EC2 G4dn Bare Metal Instances - GPU instances with up to 8 NVIDIA T4 GPUs Amazon EC2 C6g and R6g instances powered by AWS Graviton2 processors are now generally available Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling now supports Instance Refresh within Auto Scaling Groups ELB lifecycle events now available with Amazon ECS services registered with multiple target groups AWS Elastic Beanstalk Announces .NET Core on Linux Platform Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) customers can now use their own Prefix Lists to simplify the configuration of security groups and route tables Kernel Live Patching for Amazon Linux 2 is now generally available Security AWS Config Supports 9 New Managed Rules AWS Shield Advanced now supports proactive response to events Amazon Aurora Snapshots can be managed via AWS Backup AWS Transfer Family enables Source IP as a factor for authorization AWS Certificate Manager Extends Automation of Certificate Issuance Via CloudFormation AWS Backup and AWS Organizations bring cross-account data protection management and monitoring Dev & Ops Software Package Management with AWS CodeArtifact | AWS News Blog Announcing Amazon Honeycode Introducing AWS CloudFormation Guard (Preview) – a new open-source CLI for infrastructure compliance AWS CloudFormation Resource Import now supports CloudFormation Registry types EC2 Image Builder now supports connectivity through AWS PrivateLink AWS CodeCommit now supports Emoji Reactions to Comments AWS CodePipeline Supports AWS AppConfig as a New Deploy Action type Databases Amazon Aurora Global Database supports read replica write forwarding AWS Data Migration Service now supports copying graph data from relational sources to Amazon Neptune Announcing Amazon Aurora Serverless with MySQL 5.7 compatibility Amazon FSx for Windows File Server now enables you to grow storage and to scale performance on your file systems Announcing storage controls for schemas in Amazon Redshift Database Activity Streams now available for Aurora with MySQL compatibility Amazon Aurora with PostgreSQL Compatibility Supports T3.large Instances Amazon Redshift now supports writing to external tables in Amazon S3 CloudWatch Application Insights adds support for SQL Server High Availability configurations Amazon RDS on VMware Adds Support for Read Replica Amazon Redshift materialized views support external tables Announcing Amazon Aurora Serverless with MySQL 5.7 compatibility AI & ML DeepComposer Chartbusters challenge Amazon SageMaker Components for Kubeflow Pipelines AWS DeepComposer adds a new generative AI algorithm that allows developers to generate music in the style of Bach Now Install Custom Kernels and Data Science Libraries on EMR clusters directly from EMR Notebooks Amazon Augmented AI enables quality control via metadata for customers using a private workforce Introducing Recommendation Filters in Amazon Personalize Amazon Lex announces built-in search intent to enable Amazon Kendra integration Other Cool Stuff AWS announces AWS Snowcone - a small, portable, rugged, and secure edge computing and data transfer device Amazon Route 53 Launches New API Action to list Private Hosted Zones associated with your Amazon VPCs Real-time anomaly detection support in Amazon Elasticsearch Service Amazon Connect adds filtering by channel to the ‘Get queue metrics' block Amazon CloudFront enables configurable origin connection attempts and origin connection timeouts Amazon SES can now send notifications when the delivery of an email is delayed Enable WebRTC simulcast to improve video performance for applications built with the Amazon Chime SDK Amazon Connect now supports higher-quality, natural-sounding Text-to-Speech voices Amazon Polly launches a child US English NTTS Voice Sponsors Gold Sponsor Innablr Silver Sponsors AC3 CMD Solutions DoiT International
Dans cet épisode, nous découvrons AWS Outposts, ces racks d'équipement qui permettent d'étendre le cloud dans vos centres de données. Nous détaillons les cas d'utilisation, les procédures de contrôle et de gestion, les APIs que vous pouvez utiliser pour utiliser l'infrastructure AWS au sein de vos équippements actuels.
Dans cet épisode, nous découvrons AWS Outposts, ces racks d'équippement qui permettent d'étendre le cloud dans vos centres de données. Nous détaillons les cas d'utilisation, les procédures de contrôle et de gestion, les APIs que vous pouvez utiliser pour utiliser l'infrastructure AWS au sein de vos équippements actuels.
Dans cet épisode, nous découvrons AWS Outposts, ces racks d'équipement qui permettent d'étendre le cloud dans vos centres de données. Nous détaillons les cas d'utilisation, les procédures de contrôle et de gestion, les APIs que vous pouvez utiliser pour utiliser l'infrastructure AWS au sein de vos équippements actuels.
스탠다드아웃 71번째 로그에서는 팟캐스트 녹음 환경, 아마존닷컴 반품 경험, gRPC 로드 밸런싱 대한 이야기를 나눴습니다. 참가자: @nacyo_t, @raccoonyy, @seapy, @ecleya 정기 후원 - stdout.fm are creating 프로그래머들의 팟캐스트 | Patreon 녹화 환경 소개 α6400 E-mount camera with APS-C Sensor | ILCE-6400 / ILCE-6400L / ILCE-6400M | Sony US FE 16–35 mm G Master Wide-Angle Zoom Lens | SEL1635GM | Sony US DSC-RX100 III Compact Digital Camera | Cyber-shot Pocket Camera | Sony US 4K HDR Camcorder with Fast Hybrid AF | 4K Handycam FDR-AX700 | Sony US FDR-AX60 | デジタルビデオカメラ Handycam ハンディカム | ソニー 홍진경 더 만두 리뷰를 빙자한 a6400 + SEL1635FE + MixPre-3 II + Shure SM57 - YouTube Good genes: Samsung NX500 review posted: Digital Photography Review 인사이트 번역가 모집 도서출판 인사이트 - BPF Performance Tools: Linux System and Application Observability 역자 모집(마감) 시스템 성능 분석과 최적화 - YES24 DTrace - Wikipedia Berkeley Packet Filter - Wikipedia Brendan Gregg’s Homepage 도서출판 인사이트 - Rust in Action 역자 모집(마감) 알라딘: 클린 아키텍처 알라딘: 클린 코드 Clean Code 기계는 어떻게 생각하는가? - YES24 ODK는 구인중 ODK Media HackerRank 유튜브 익스플로어 지원 중단 3월부터 인터넷 익스플로러로 유튜브 못 본다 : IT : 경제 : 뉴스 : 한겨레 WebP - Wikipedia VP9 - Wikipedia 오라클 신한은행 라이센스 분쟁 오라클 “신한은행, 수백억 내놔라” : 클리앙 AWS Outposts 개요 페이지 데이터 베이스 관리 시스템 | MySQL | Amazon Web Services Amazon Aurora 서버리스 - 온디맨드 Auto-scaling 관계형 데이터베이스 - AWS 판교 낙생지구 남판교에 1만가구 주거타운 뜬다…대장동 이어 낙생지구 개발 - 땅집고 > 투자리포트 아마존 반품 이야기 Dart: The World’s Smallest Laptop Adapter by FINsix — Kickstarter Wireless intrusion prevention system - Wikipedia 속도내는 스마트폰 열풍 구글 넥서스원 국내 첫 개통자나와 | 한경닷컴 아이패드 사용 불법이라더니..장관은 예외? - Chosunbiz > 테크 > ICT/미디어 해외 직구 되팔기 ‘불법’이라는 정부… 직구족들 “현실과 괴리” 불만 - 중앙일보 키크론 Keychron – 맥도 윈도우도 문제없다. 신고 안한 샤넬백, 공항서 걸릴 확률은? Smart Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 | Bose Alibaba.com: Manufacturers, Suppliers, Exporters & Importers from the world’s largest online B2B marketplace gRPC 로드밸런싱 gRPC 웹 서버 로드 밸런싱 | 서버 로드 밸런싱 | Amazon Web Services Envoy Proxy - Home Cloud Map – 클라우드 리소스를 위한 서비스 검색 AWS 라이트세일 Amazon Lightsail, 이제 EC2 업그레이드 경로 제공 DigitalOcean – The developer cloud Amazon EC2 Instance Comparison AWS Batch – 쉽고 효율적인 배치 컴퓨팅 기능 – AWS
פרק מספר 384 של רברס עם פלטפורמה - קרבורטור מספר 28: אורי ורן מקריבים צפייה בגמר הכוכב הבא לאירוויזיון ומארחים בכרכור את נתי שלום (Cloudify) לשיחה השנתית על תחזיות לשנת 2020 (ה-10 וחצי חודשים שנותרו). מצמידים לכל דבר הסתברות ומקסימום מתקנים ב-1 באפריל.נתי מתמקד בענייני Infrastructure ו-Cloud, אז צפו שפחות נתמקד ב-iPhone הבא וכו’.מבוסס על מקרה אמיתיחלק ראשון (ולא בהכרח טריויואלי למי שמגיע מעולמות ה-Enterprise) - עד כמה רחוק ארגונים יילכו עם Public Clouds?אורי בטח יזדהה עם תיאוריית ה”זה לא הולך לקרות כל כך מהר” (הקרבורטור הקודם על k8s and multi-cloud), אבל מכל הארגונים שאני (נתי) מדבר איתם זה על האג’נדה - והשאלה היא רק “כמה מהר?”וכן - אנחנו מדברים על ארגונים ”מסורתיים” - פיננסיים וכו’ - עם “רגולציה מפה ועד להודעה חדשה” והמון סיבות למה לא לעבור.עכשיו הם פתאום נמדדים על עד כמה מהר הם עוברים. זה עדיין לא קל להם, אבל השיחה היא רק על איך עוזרים להם לעבור, כי אין כבר משהו אחר.במקביל - מבחינת שחקני ה-Private Cloud בעולם הזה (בעיקר OpenStack) - נראה שהקרב כבר הוכרעמדהים איך בתוך 10 שנים הטכנולגיה הגיע ל-Peek מאוד גבוה ואז כמעט ונעלמה במושגים של טרנדים טכנולוגיים, לפחות בהיקפים האלה.באופן מפתיע, VMWare שכולם כבר הספידו מקבלים עוד כמה שנים של Graceזה תמיד נראה זמני ושה-Public Clouds מתישהו ינגסו גם בהם, אבל בינתיים הם מנסים “להיות חברים”גם זה שינוי מאוד משמעותי עבורם - כולל כמה רכישות משמעותיות וניסיון ללכת All-in על Kubernetes. (רן) אתמול הייתי בכנס שבו אחד המרצים היה איש Heptio לשעבר שעכשיו עובד ב-VMWare (אחת הרכישות המוקדמות שלהם בתחום).יש גם את ההשקה של AWS סביב VMWare - היכולת להריץ VMWare API על תשתיות של AWS, מה שפונה ללקוחות שכבר משתמשים ב- VMWare וכבר יש להם את ה-Skill-set והידע ולא רוצים “לאבד” אותו במעבר לענן הציבורי - ובכך “להרחיק את המעבר” ולשמר את הלקוחותבינתיים זה עובד להם לא רעחלק מזה נובע מכך ש-OpenStack נשלט על ידי RedHat - שבכלל רוצים לקדם את OpenShift ו-Kubernetes ו-OpenStack פחות מעניין אותם, מה שדי תורם למוות האיטי שלו.(אורי) אז מה באמת הבשורה ארוכת הטווח של VMWare?אין להם לדעתי (נתי), לפחות כרגע.הם קונים זמן, אבל האסטרטגיה שלהם היא סביב Kubernetes - ההנחה היא שארגונים, גם כשיעברו ל-Public Clouds, עדיין זקוקים לעזרה עם התשתית, ואנחנו (VMWare) נותנים פתרון שמקל על Enterprise להשתמש בתשתיות של Public Clouds, על ידי מעטפת ו-Dumbing-Down של התשתיות - לקחו את התשתיות המורכבות וייצרו שכבה “שמנרמלת את הסיבוכיות”.זה היה המהלך שלהם בעבר והם טוענים (במידה רבה של צדק) שהצורך הזה קיים גם (ואולי אפילו יותר) בעולם ה-Public Cloud.עוד שאלה לנקודת הזמן שבין 2019 ל - 2020: האם בראייה שלך הגענו ל-Game-Over: האם Kubernetes ניצח את עולם ה-Virtual Machines?המשפט שיוצא ממני הכי הרבה הוא “The only constant is change” . . . אין דבר כזה “Game Over” ואין דבר כזה ש”Kubernetes יכבוש את העולם”כולנו בוגרי Docker ובוגרי Ruby on Rails ועוד הרבה טכנולוגיות, והדינמיקה הזו (של לימוד טכנולוגיות חדשות כל הזמן) אפילו מתעצמת בעולם של Public Clouds, כך שיהיו עוד דברים.היום Docker הוא עדיין יחסית מסובך (ביחס לערך שהוא נותן) - ויהיו עוד אלטרנטיבות, שמישהו כנראה כבר עובד עליהן באיזושהי צורה.סביר להניח ש-AWS פחות אוהבים את זה ש-Docker הפך לסטנדרט כי זה קצת מייתר אותם והם ינסו לדחוף . . .למה?כיוון שהיתרון של AWS לעומת GCP למשל הוא שהם פיתחו הרבה מאוד IP סביב ה-Hypervisor של KVM, בעוד Google שהגיעו למצב ש-90% מה-Workload שלהם רץ על Containers ואז אין צורך בכלל ב-Hypervisor - ובכך הם “קפצו מעל” העולם של ה-Virtual Machines.בשלב הזה AWS יצאו עם הכרזה על Serverless - מעיין Pivot מחדש לעולם של containers ושל Kubernetes.שעוד לא לגמרי תפס . . .אם מסתכלים על Containers - זה כבר תפס; אם מסתכלים על Kubernetes, הוא יחסית במקום לא רע בכלל (במדדי Adoption), גם מבחינת כמות התורמים, גם מבחינת איכות הקוד ובכלל איכות הפרויקט; ב-Enterprises הוא במקום לא רע בכלל.ועדיין - יש סימן שאלה לא קטן סביב השאלה של כמה זמן זה יחזיק.כמו כל דבר - אימפריות נופלות בסוף (לאט?)בזמן האחרון דווקא די מהר . . . אם היינו עורכים את השיחה הזו לפני 2-3 שנים על Docker ועל Swarm למי שעוד מכיר, היינו מדברים על למה זה יותר גדול מ-Kubernetes.בדיעבד Swarm הצליח קצת פחות ו-Kubernetes די ניצח את הקרב. היו סימנים, ועדיין.אחנו עוסקים בתחזיות ועדיין מעניין לשמוע - אתה אומר שכל ה-Enterprises הגדולים עובדים לענן וזו כבר לא תחזית אלא משהו שכבר קורה. למה? כסף?שאלה חשובה, ואולי למי שבא מעולם הסטארט-אפים היא טריוויאלית, ועדיין - רובם פשוט נכשלו בניסיון להקים Private Cloud.בנו תוכניות מאוד אגרסיביות - ולא הצליחו, מכל מיני סיבות (אין Skill-set, אין את -DNA, . . .)ומה לגבי חברות שכבר יש להן?אף אחד לא באמת מרוצה, בלשון המעטה . . . גם ברמת העלויות (הגבוהות מהמצופה) וגם ברמת היחידות העסקיות והתוצרים שמצופה מהן להביא לשוק - הם תקועים עם תשתית מאוד לא אג’ילית וכשהם רואים את ה-Public Clouds ואת המהירות שבא הם מאפשרים להביא מוצרים לשוק עם ה-IT שלהם הם מתוסכלים.בשלב הזה הארגון, ברמת ה-Business, עומד מול השאלה של האם לתת ליחידה העסקית להשיק מוצר מהר או מכתיב להם “לחיות” עם ה-IT שיש - ואז זה האינטרס הפנימי של לחיות עם ה-IT הקיים אל מול Delivery מהיר?הרי ברור שברמת השורה התחתונה העסקית יותר חשוב להביא את הפתרון מהר לשוק.כאן נכנסת גם “חרב הרגולציה”, שעדיין מחזיקה את הארגונים האלה על Private Cloud.גם כאן וה-Public Clouds עשו הרבה מאוד עבודה בתחום הזה ויצרו פתרונות כמו GovCloud כדי להפוך גם את הנקודה הזו ללא רלוונטית.וחוץ מזה יש גם פתרונות Private Cloud - כמו AWS Outposts ואת Azure Stack.כמעט כל הסיבות שהיו לשימוש ב-Private Cloud הפכו ללא רלוונטיות, והמעבר ל-Public Cloud הפך לכמעט “לא בעיה”.אז גם Enterprises רוצים לעבור ל - Private Cloud. מה התחזית ל-2020?בהקשר הזה יש הרבה מאוד שיח לגבי Multi-Cloud - כבר לא Public Cloud כן או לא אלא שיחות (גם אם רובן הן ציניות) לגבי “למה צריך Multi-Cloud?” ו”הרבה יותר טוב לעבוד עם Cloud אחד שיפתור לך את כל הבעיות בעולם”.גם כאן חשוב לציין שיש הבדל בין Multi-Cloud (כמה Public Clouds) לבין Hybrid Cloud (בהקשר של Private & Public).כאן הטענה שלי היא שזה לא שארגון יושב ובוחר “אני הולך להיות Multi-Cloud” - אלא דומה יותר לבחירה “בעולם הקודם” בין Unix ל-Windows - היו ארגונים שהחליטו שהם Windows-only, והמציאות הכתיבה להם להיות גם Linux, בין אם זה בדלת האחורית או בדלת הקדמית (רכישות וכו’, היה בפרק על Multi-Cloud גם כן).בדיוק באותו אופן זה קורה עם Public Clouds - יש ספקי ענן ויש שירותים של ספקי ענן, לדגומא BigQuery שאנשים אוהבים ורוצים - אז גם אם אני עובד עם Azure, אני עדיין רוצה לעשות את ה-Analytics עם GCP.באופן דומה יש את Windows שרץ יפה עם Azure ונתמך ע”י מיקרוסופט ויש לזה Affinity מסויים.כמו בשיחה על Outbrain , אין לנו ספק אחד שטוב בהכל.(אורי) בוא נודה על האמת - ארגונים גדלים גם ברכישות . . .נכון. סיבה אחת היא שלא כולם שווים, והשנייה היא אכן רכישות.בשני המקרים זו מציאות שנכפית - זה לא שמישהו מחליט ללכת על Multi-Cloud אלא זו מציאות שארגונים מתגלגלים אליה, ואתה מוצא את עצמך בעולם של Multi-Cloud.לכן אני חושב שזו מציאות שאם לא תתכנן שלשם אתה הולך, בין אם תרצה או לא תרצה - תמצא את עצמך בכאוס שבו יש הרבה מאוד דברים לא עקביים (Consistent) ותגדל לתוך מציאות שאין לך עבורה פתרון.(אורי) ואז האם האמירה היא לא שהמציאות של Multi Cloud זה דבר שקורה (וגם בין Private ל-Hybrid), או כי רכשתי חברה או כי אני עושה פרוייקטים בטכנולוגיות חדשות כשעדיין
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“What choice do we have?” At the end of the year, we answer listener questions. From middle-names, to athletes, to advice to startups. Also, we talk open source in 2020 predictions, that NYTimes story on Amazon, and Twinkies. Mood board: As they say “a dot w dot s.” Twinkies are better after the Apocalypse Does he know something we don’t know? They could have been the paper of record on “A.M.I.” Judgemental open source. The Three C’s. “CTO Edge.” CTOs don’t go to DevOps Days I try to show up to most conferences I’m speaking at. “I love the way they’re kicking that ball.” They didn’t consider “Motel 6” for Matt’s middle name. It’s safe to watch The Watchmen. Relevant to your interests Amazon is Launching a Home Internet Service - Here is Everything You Need to Know About It (https://www.cordcuttersnews.com/amazon-is-launching-a-home-internet-service-here-is-everything-you-need-to-know-about-it/). 8 of the worst open source innovations of the decade (https://www.techrepublic.com/article/8-of-the-worst-open-source-innovations-of-the-decade/). Russian police raid NGINX Moscow office (https://www.zdnet.com/article/russian-police-raid-nginx-moscow-office/). Larry Ellison sets the Catz among the pigeons: Safra officially sole Oracle CEO (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/12/13/oracle_q2_fy2020/). Google makes moving data to its cloud easier (https://techcrunch.com/2019/12/12/google-makes-moving-data-to-its-cloud-easier/). Atlassian launches new serverless cloud development platform (https://techcrunch.com/2019/12/12/atlassian-launches-new-serverless-cloud-development-platform/). Costco Earnings Beat But Revenue Falls Short; Costco Stock Falls Late (https://www.investors.com/news/costco-earnings-q1-2020-cost-stock-buy-point/). AWS Outposts by the numbers (https://medium.com/@ahl/aws-outposts-68e78592c7f8). Prime Leverage: How Amazon Wields Power in the Technology World (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/15/technology/prime-leverage-amazon-power-cloud-aws.html). Ask SDT What are your thoughts on the big data industry and technologies like Spark? from Jay via Slack ~~~~2. ~~As industry vets, what advice do you have for the new school IAM/monitoring startups? (other than: integrate with AD for ent clients) from Ryan via Slack~~ What is the best conference swag you've ever given away or received? My personal best was a power brick that could also charge up apple's airpods for some reason. from Tim from Slack ~~What tech conferences are worth going to that we haven't heard of? Are there interesting things that are smaller scale than the reinvents / dreamforce / et al, that provide great information and attract a really interesting set of speakers?from Tim from Slack~~ ~~Why do you think we don’t see more celebrity athletes featured in tech advertisements? Granted I knew the writing was on the wall at one company I was at when we hired Mike Tyson for our CES booth, but uh why hasn’t that worked out yet? from Ryan from Slack~~ ~~~~ 1. ~~Tangentially: https://twitter.com/edsbs/status/1206589810439274496~~ ~~Related: https://twitter.com/TylerIAm/status/1045495019325587456~~ Is a startup aspiring to be acquired by a foundation like the CNCF a legit business model? from Ryan from Slack For the expats: what's your favorite and least favorite thing(s) about your new regions? from Nathan from Slack ~~What would you say ya do here? from Noe via Slack~~ ~~Matt, what is your middle name? from Jordy via Slack~~ Sponsors Arrested DevOps Podcast: What are you waiting for you can subscribe today by searching for “Arrested DevOps” in you favorite podcast app or by visiting (https://www.arresteddevops.com/)https://www.arresteddevops.com/ (https://www.arresteddevops.com/). Conferences, et. al. NO-SSH-JJ wants you go to DeliveryConf (https://www.deliveryconf.com/) in Seattle on Jan 21st & 22nd (https://www.deliveryconf.com/), Use promo code: SDT10 to get 10% off. JJ wants you to read about Delivery Conf Format too (https://www.deliveryconf.com/format). June 1-4: ChefConf 2020 (https://chefconf.chef.io/) Jordi wants you to go to GitLab Commit (https://about.gitlab.com/events/commit/) Jan. 14th SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop stickers! Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/) Listen to the Software Defined Interviews Podcast (https://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/). Check out the back catalog (http://cote.coffee/howtotech/). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Use the code SDT to get $20 off Coté’s book, (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt) Digital WTF (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt), so $5 total. Recommendations Matt: The Peripheral (https://amzn.to/2PSibru) & The Dark Forest (https://amzn.to/2PSibru). Brandon: The Watchmen (https://www.hbo.com/video/watchmen/videos/trailer)on HBO (Matt’s eventual recommendation) Coté: Use hotel notepads at home.
W. Curtis Preston & Prasanna Malaiyandi discuss the announcements of re:Invent 2019, and how Curtis fought zombies and lost.
In this Breaking Analysis Dave Vellante does a post mortem on AWS re:Invent 2019. He touches on some high level themes from the event and uses spending data from Enterprise Technology Research (ETR) to put demand for AWS services in context. Stu Miniman joins Vellante to talk about the trends in multi-cloud and AWS' posture toward on-prem/hybrid cloud. The two also discuss the AWS Outposts announcements as well as the company's edge strategy.
Barracuda launches Cloud Security Guardian integration with Amazon Detective, Booz Allen Hamilton announces support for AWS Outposts, 10 Notable Cybersecurity Acquisitions of 2019, Part 2, Sophos launches new cloud-based threat intelligence and analysis platform, and much more! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ESWEpisode165
Barracuda launches Cloud Security Guardian integration with Amazon Detective, Booz Allen Hamilton announces support for AWS Outposts, 10 Notable Cybersecurity Acquisitions of 2019, Part 2, Sophos launches new cloud-based threat intelligence and analysis platform, and much more! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ESWEpisode165
Catch up on all the big announcements from AWS re:Invent 2019 with Pluralsight author Ryan Lewis. Get the latest on Braket, Lambda, SageMaker Studio, Kendra, AWS Outposts and much more. *** If you enjoy this episode, please consider leaving a review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. Please send any questions or comments to podcast@pluralsight.com.
stdout.fm 61번째 로그에서는 라스베가스에서 re:Invent 2019 소식을 전합니다. 참가자: @nacyo_t, @raccoonyy, @seapy 게스트: @chiyodad, @res_tin @developerhenry 주제별 바로 듣기 00:00 stdout.fm 공개방송 03:53 re:Invent 2019 참가 19:45 re:Invent 2019 앤디 제시(Andy Jassy) 메인 키노트 53:55 re:Invent 2019 이모저모(Expo, 4k/8k, re:Play, 데이터독 인터뷰 등) stdout.fm 공개방송 stdout.fm: 개발자 팟캐스트 on Twitter: “AWS 리인벤트 둘째 날인 12월 3일, 현지에 계신 분들을 stdout 공개 방송에 초대합니다. - Twitter MixPre-3 II - Sound Devices Blue - Yeti Nano re:Invent 2019 참가 Thanksgiving travel weather as a winter storm hits Northeast, and Atmospheric River affects the West - The Washington Post Fly smart. Land happy. Find cheap airline tickets and more - book today | Alaska Airlines First Class seating | Alaska Airlines 모하비 국립 보호구역 | Visit California Sound Devices MixPre-II Field Mixer/ Recorder w/ Timecode – Stickman Sound AWS re:Invent 2019 Registration 앤디 제시(Andy Jassy) 메인 키노트 Run Serverless Kubernetes Pods Using Amazon EKS and AWS Fargate Amazon S3 Access Points makes it simple to manage access at scale for applications using shared data sets on S3 Introducing Contact Lens for Amazon Connect (Preview) AWS launches Fargate Spot, save up to 70% for fault tolerant applications Announcing General Availability of AWS Outposts AWS Snowball | Physically migrate petabyte-scale data sets | Amazon Web Services Amazon Redshift introduces RA3 nodes with managed storage enabling independent compute and storage scaling Amazon Redshift introduces support for federated querying (preview) 44bits - Twitch AWS announces Amazon CodeGuru for automated code reviews and application performance recommendations Home | TabNine Introducing Amazon Fraud Detector - Now in Preview Introducing Amazon Detective Introducing AWS Step Functions Express Workflows AWS Lambda announces Provisioned Concurrency AWS News Blog Announcing Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra Service – Now in Preview AWS announces UltraWarm (preview) for Amazon Elasticsearch Service re:Invent 2019 이모저모(Expo, 4k/8k, re:Play, 데이터독 인터뷰 등) Amazon DocumentDB(MongoDB 호환) David Solomon (@DavidSolomon) / Twitter Andy Jassy (@ajassy) / Twitter AWS re:Invent 2019 - Play (4k/8k Run) AWSKRUG- AWS한국사용자모임 Werner Vogels (@Werner) / Twitter AWS re:Invent 2019 - Play (re:Play) MARTIN GARRIX (@MartinGarrix) / Twitter The Venetian® Resort Las Vegas | Luxury Hotels in Las Vegas AWS re:Invent 2019 - Campus Overview Cloud Monitoring as a Service | Datadog Yoga clothes + running gear | lululemon athletica
In this session, Dave Brown, vice president, Amazon EC2, introduces the latest innovations in the compute space, announcing new compute capabilities as well as walking you through a few key services and features, including Amazon EC2 instances, EC2 networking, EC2 Spot Instances, Amazon Lightsail, and AWS Outposts. Dave is joined by Matt Garman, vice president of AWS compute services, to share some of the history of AWS as well as insights into the underlying thinking that makes the AWS compute business unique.
AWS Outposts extends AWS to your on-premises and connected edge environments to support applications with latency and local data processing requirements. Attend this session to learn more about how it works and about key customer use cases.
Learn how you can use Amazon RDS to create and manage databases running on-premises on AWS Outposts or VMware vSphere environments. AWS Outposts bring native AWS services, infrastructure, and operating models to virtually any data center, co-location space, or on-premises facility. We cover how you can use the same RDS capabilities that you use today on the cloud to easily set up, operate, scale, and manage databases running on AWS Outposts and VMware vSphere environments in your data centers. Amazon RDS automates time-consuming administrative tasks such as database setup, patching, backups, and restore in your on-premises environments. See how Amazon RDS makes it seamless to create, monitor, and manage databases running across your data centers and the cloud.
If you want to use cloud storage, but still have applications in a data center, or remote field operations that require computing and storage capabilities, this session is for you. In it, we explain the services that can make AWS storage a seamless extension of your existing on-premises infrastructure and application investments to support business operations almost anywhere in the world. Get educated on the continuum of capabilities that you can choose to bring to your site, including AWS Outposts storage options, AWS Storage Gateway, AWS Snowball Edge, Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration, and more.
Andy Jassy, CEO of Amazon Web Services, delivers his AWS re:Invent 2019 keynote, featuring the latest news and announcements, including the launches of M6g, R6g, C6g instances, Inf1 instances, Amazon EKS for AWS Fargate , Amazon S3 Access Points, Amazon Redshift RA3 instances, AQUA (Advanced Query Accelerator) for Amazon Redshift, UltraWarm for Amazon Elasticsearch Service, Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra Service, Amazon SageMaker Studio, Amazon SageMaker Notebooks, Amazon SageMaker Experiments, Amazon SageMaker Debugger, Amazon SageMaker Model Monitor, Amazon SageMaker Autopilot, Amazon Fraud Detector, Amazon CodeGuru, Contact Lens for Amazon Connect, Amazon Kendra, the general availability of AWS Outposts, AWS Local Zones, and AWS Wavelength. Guest speakers include Dr. Matt Wood, of AWS; David Solomon, of Goldman Sachs; Brent Shafer, of Cerner, and Hans Vestberg, of Verizon. Launch Announcements:00:19:50 M6g, R6g, C6g EC2 instances00:23:00 Inf1 EC2 instances00:27:50 Amazon EKS on AWS Fargate00:56:50 Amazon S3 Access Points01:03:30 Amazon Redshift RA3 instances01:06:45 AQUA (Advanced Query Accelerator) for Amazon Redshift01:11:05 UltraWarm for Amazon Elasticsearch Service01:16:50 Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra Service01:36:00 Amazon SageMaker Studio01:37:20 Amazon SageMaker Notebooks01:38:30 Amazon SageMaker Experiments01:40:10 Amazon SageMaker Debugger01:42:55 Amazon SageMaker Model Monitor01:45:40 Amazon SageMaker Autopilot01:55:20 Amazon Fraud Detector01:58:40 Amazon CodeGuru02:05:55 Contact Lens for Amazon Connect02:09:15 Amazon Kendra02:16:30 General availability of AWS Outposts02:23:20 AWS Local Zones02:31:55 AWS Wavelength Guest speakers include:01:48:00 Dr. Matt Wood, of AWS00:30:40 David Solomon, of Goldman Sachs01:21:35 Brent Shafer, of Cerner02:26:20 Hans Vestberg, of VerizonLearn more about AWS at - https://amzn.to/2OPqk0FNote: Amazon EKS for AWS Fargate is the proper term @ 00:27:58Awaken Your DataPower your workloads on AWS with the latest 2nd Gen Intel Xeon Scalable processors featuring built-in AI acceleration. On-demand viewing of the Keynote sponsored by Intel. Visit: https://youtu.be/MIv32gcwOQM
It’s the re:Invent episode! We also have digressions/delights on why Oracle is so sticky despite (rival vendors tell us) how much people want to leave it. And, since it’s that time of year, Sinterklaas. Sometime in December we’ll do a listener questions (and our answers) episode. Send us your questions in Slack or in Twitter or whatever with by tagging them with hashbrowns #asksdt. Mood board: #asksdt “Where are you thought-lording us to?” Pepernoot (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pepernoot). Always pack a back-up croissant. Here’s the thing with bread. I thought he hated the swans. Dogs clearly rank as humanities number one friend. Then it’s bread/alcohol. Everyone knows when Bastille Day is Coté. Halloween in London grocery stores: not this shit again. They got a pee-jug back there? Relevant to your interests AWS re:Invent AWS Launches & Previews at re:Invent 2019 – Sunday, December 1st (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/aws-launches-previews-at-reinvent-2019-sunday-december-1st/) AWS DeepRacer Update – New Features & New Racing Opportunities (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/aws-deepracer-update-new-features-new-racing-opportunities/) AWS DeepComposer – Compose Music with Generative Machine Learning Models (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/aws-deepcomposer-compose-music-with-generative-machine-learning-models/) AWS End-of-Support Migration Program for Windows Server (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/new-program-to-future-proof-windows-server-applications/) Amazon Transcribe Medical – Real-Time Automatic Speech Recognition for Healthcare Customers (http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AmazonWebServicesBlog/~3/ikfP6jz4tHY/) Automate OS Image Build Pipelines with EC2 Image Builder (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/automate-os-image-build-pipelines-with-ec2-image-builder/) No Monday blog post with announcements? AWS Launches & Previews at re:Invent 2019 – Tuesday, December 3rd (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/aws-launches-previews-at-reinvent-2019-tuesday-december-3rd/) AWS Outposts brings hybrid cloud support – but only for Amazon (https://searchaws.techtarget.com/news/252474945/AWS-Outposts-brings-hybrid-cloud-support-but-only-for-Amazon) Amazon EKS on AWS Fargate Now Generally Available (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-eks-on-aws-fargate-now-generally-available/) Coming Soon – Graviton2-Powered General Purpose, Compute-Optimized, & Memory-Optimized EC2 Instances (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/coming-soon-graviton2-powered-general-purpose-compute-optimized-memory-optimized-ec2-instances/) Amazon SageMaker Processing – Fully Managed Data Processing and Model Evaluation (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-sagemaker-processing-fully-managed-data-processing-and-model-evaluation/) Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra Service (MCS) (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/new-amazon-managed-apache-cassandra-service-mcs/) Easily Manage Shared Data Sets with Amazon S3 Access Points (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/easily-manage-shared-data-sets-with-amazon-s3-access-points/) Amazon Redshift Update – Next-Generation Compute Instances and Managed, Analytics-Optimized Storage (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-redshift-update-next-generation-compute-instances-and-managed-analytics-optimized-storage/) AWS Launches & Previews at re:Invent 2019 – Wednesday, December 4th (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/aws-launches-previews-at-reinvent-2019-wednesday-december-4th/) Amazon Braket – Get Started with Quantum Computing (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-braket-get-started-with-quantum-computing/) Announcing UltraWarm (Preview) for Amazon Elasticsearch Service (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/announcing-ultrawarm-preview-for-amazon-elasticsearch-service/) Identify Unintended Resource Access with AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) Access Analyzer (https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/identify-unintended-resource-access-with-aws-identity-and-access-management-iam-access-analyzer/) Amazon Kendra AI search tool indexes enterprise data (https://aws.amazon.com/kendra/) Oxid (https://oxide.computer/)e (https://oxide.computer/) - nice cake! John Chambers and a star team of ex-Cisco engineers have finally launched Pensando Systems, a startup with $278 million in funding, to take on Amazon — and Cisco (https://www.businessinsider.com/john-chambers-pensando-systems-cisco-stars-amazon-2019-10). A letter from Larry and Sergey (https://blog.google/inside-google/alphabet/letter-from-larry-and-sergey). Nonsense Costco Pays Dearly for Shopping SNAFU (https://www.newser.com/story/283702/costco-pays-dearly-for-shopping-snafu.html) The Taco Cleanse Is a Real Diet — and Involves Eating Tacos All Day (https://people.com/food/taco-cleanse-we-tried-it/) United Changes it Frequent Flyer Program (https://mileageplusupdates.com/mileageplus/english/upgrades/) The Effort to Make Everyone Look Less Awful on Video Conference Calls (https://slate.com/human-interest/2019/12/video-conferencing-is-the-worst.html) (https://mileageplusupdates.com/mileageplus/english/upgrades/) Sponsors SolarWinds: To try it FREE for 14 days, just go to http://loggly.com/sdt. If it logs, it can log to Loggly. PagerDuty: To see how companies like GE, Vodafone, Box and American Eagle Outfitters rely on PagerDuty to continuously improve their digital operations visit https://pagerduty.com. . Conferences, et. al. December 12-13 2019 - Kubernetes Forum Sydney (https://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/kubernetes-summit-sydney-2019/) NO-SSH-JJ wants you go to DeliveryConf (https://www.deliveryconf.com/) in Seattle on Jan 21st & 22nd (https://www.deliveryconf.com/), Use promo code: SDT10 to get 10% off. JJ wants you to read about Delivery Conf Format too (https://www.deliveryconf.com/format). June 1-4: ChefConf 2020 (https://chefconf.chef.io/) Jordi wants you to go to GitLab Commit (https://about.gitlab.com/events/commit/) Jan. 14th SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop stickers! Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/) Listen to the Software Defined Interviews Podcast (https://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/). Check out the back catalog (http://cote.coffee/howtotech/). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Use the code SDT to get $20 off Coté’s book, (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt) Digital WTF (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt), so $5 total. Recommendations Matt: SysAdvent 2019 (https://sysadvent.blogspot.com/2019/) Brandon: The Irishmen (https://www.netflix.com/title/80175798); Venture Capital and Control with Dave Teare (https://rework.fm/venture-capital-and-control-with-david-teare/). Coté: Pivot (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pivot/id1073226719) podcast; Art as Therapy (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17899481-art-as-therapy?from_search=true&qid=98oDN0EKI0&rank=1) book.
In this episode of AWS TechChat we cover the main keynote of re:Invent 2019 by Andy Jassy, AWS CEO, with a ton of announcements for all. We started the show with a new range of Arm-based processors based on AWS new Arm chip - M6g, C6g and R6g making that price to performance ration even more attractive. We continue to share the announcements that we made: Amazon Braket – A fully managed service that allows scientists, researchers, and developers to begin experimenting with computers from multiple quantum hardware providers in a single place. AWS Fargate has made its way to Amazon EKS, you can now launch EKS containers as a Fargate launch type. Amazon EC2 instance for inference - the Amazon EC2 Inf1, powered by our own custom silicon Inferentia chips has gone GA. AWS Fargate Spot is a new capability on AWS Fargate that can run interruption tolerant Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) Tasks at up to a 70% discount off the Fargate price. AWS Outposts has gone GA, so if you need hybrid cloud with the same AWS feeling it is now available. If you do not want to manage your Outpost, you can leverage a Local Zone. The first Local Zone in Los Angeles is available now and you can start using it today. AWS Wavelength brings local compute to the 5G Edge. Provisioned Concurrency for AWS Lambda Functions ensure cold starts issue and sudden traffic spikes do not impact latent sensitive operations. Amazon S3 Access Points makes it simple to manage access at scale for applications using shared data sets on S3. Amazon Sagemaker bore the brunt of many announcements: - Amazon Sagemaker Studio, your machine learning Integrated Development Environment in the cloud. - Amazon Sagemaker Notebooks bringing one click Jupyter notebooks to AWS. - Amazon Sagemaker Model Monitor automatically detects concept drift in deployed models. - Amazon Sagamaker Autopilot automatically creating your machine learning models but with transparency. Amazon CodeGuru is a new machine learning service for automated code reviews and application performance recommendations. Amazon Fraud Detector, which is a new machine learning service that makes it easy to identify potentially fraudulent online activities such as online payment fraud and the creation of fake accounts. Contact Lens for Amazon Connect, bulking out Amazon Connect capabilities, allows you to understand the sentiment, trends, and compliance risks of customer conversations to train agents effectively, replicate successful interactions, and identify crucial company and product feedback. We are launching in open preview Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra Service (MCS), a scalable, highly available, and managed Apache Cassandra-compatible database service. Amazon Redshift introduces RA3 nodes with managed storage enabling independent compute and storage scaling. Finally, UltraWarm is a performance-optimized warm storage tier for Amazon Elasticsearch Service. It complements the existing Amazon Elasticsearch hot storage tier by providing less expensive storage for older and less-frequently accessed data while still providing an interactive analytics experience allowing up to 3PB per cluster. Speakers: Shane Baldacchino - Solutions Architect, ANZ, AWS Peter Stanski - Head of Solution Architecture, AWS AWS Events: AWS Builders Online Series https://aws.amazon.com/events/builders-online-series/ AWS Modern Application Development on-demand https://aws.amazon.com/events/application/modern-app-development/ AWS Innovate on-demand https://aws.amazon.com/events/aws-innovate/ AWS Events and Webinars https://aws.amazon.com/events/
Simon gives you a summary of all the new announcements from Andy Jassy's keynote! Topic || Analytics Announcing Amazon Redshift data lake export: share data in Apache Parquet format | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-amazon-redshift-data-lake-export/ Amazon Redshift introduces support for federated querying (preview) | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/amazon-redshift-federated-query-preview/ Amazon Redshift introduces RA3 nodes with managed storage enabling independent compute and storage scaling | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/amazon-redshift-announces-ra3-nodes-managed-storage/ Ultrawarm for Amazon ElasticSearch | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/announcing-ultrawarm-preview-for-amazon-elasticsearch-service/ Topic || Compute Announcing New Amazon EC2 M6g, C6g, and R6g Instances Powered by Next-Generation Arm-based AWS Graviton2 Processors | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-new-amazon-ec2-m6g-c6g-and-r6g-instances-powered-by-next-generation-arm-based-aws-graviton2-processors/ Introducing Amazon EC2 Inf1 Instances, high performance and the lowest cost machine learning inference in the cloud | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-amazon-ec2-inf1-instances-high-performance-and-the-lowest-cost-machine-learning-inference-in-the-cloud/ Introducing AWS Compute Optimizer | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-aws-compute-optimizer/ Introducing AWS Local Zone in Los Angeles, CA | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-aws-local-zone-in-los-angeles-ca/ Announcing AWS Wavelength for delivering ultra-low latency applications for 5G | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-aws-wavelength-delivering-ultra-low-latency-applications-5g/ Announcing General Availability of AWS Outposts | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-general-availability-of-aws-outposts/ Amazon RDS on Outposts is available in preview | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/amazon-rds-on-outposts-available-in-preview/ Run Serverless Kubernetes Pods Using Amazon EKS and AWS Fargate | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/run-serverless-kubernetes-pods-using-amazon-eks-and-aws-fargate/ Topic || Storage Amazon S3 Access Points makes it simple to manage access at scale for applications using shared data sets on S3 | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/amazon-s3-access-points-manage-data-access-at-scale-shared-data-sets/ Introducing Access Analyzer for Amazon S3 to review access policies | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-access-analyzer-for-amazon-s3-to-review-access-policies/ Topic || Databases Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-amazon-managed-apache-cassandra-service-now-in-preview/ Topic || Machine Learning Amazon Sagemaker Studio | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-sagemaker-studio-the-first-fully-integrated-development-environment-for-machine-learning/ Amazon Sagemaker Debugger | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-sagemaker-debugger-debug-your-machine-learning-models/ Amazon Sagemaker Monitor | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-sagemaker-model-monitor-fully-managed-automatic-monitoring-for-your-machine-learning-models/ Amazon Sagemaker | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-sagemaker-processing-fully-managed-data-processing-and-model-evaluation/ Amazon Sagemaker Autopilot | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-sagemaker-autopilot-fully-managed-automatic-machine-learning/ Amazon Sagemaker Experiments | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-sagemaker-experiments-organize-track-and-compare-your-machine-learning-trainings/ Introducing Amazon SageMaker Support for Deep Graph Library (DGL): Build and Train Graph Neural Networks | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-deep-learning-graphs-with-dgl-sagemaker/ Announcing Amazon Augmented AI: Easily Implement Human Review for ML Predictions | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-amazon-augmented-ai/ Introducing Amazon Fraud Detector - Now in Preview | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-amazon-fraud-detector-now-in-preview/ Announcing Amazon Kendra: Reinventing Enterprise Search with Machine Learning | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-amazon-kendra-reinventing-enterprise-search-with-machine-learning/ Topic || Networking and Content Delivery AWS Transit Gateway now supports Inter-Region Peering | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/aws-transit-gateway-supports-inter-region-peering/ Amazon Web Services Announces AWS Transit Gateway Network Manager to Centrally Monitor Your Global Network | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/aws-announces-aws-transit-gateway-network-manager/ Run IP Multicast Workloads in the Cloud Using AWS Transit Gateway | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/run-ip-multicast-workloads-aws-transit-gateway/ Announcing Accelerated Site-to-Site VPN for Improved VPN Performance | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/announcing-accelerated-site-to-site-vpn-for-improved-vpn-performance/ Amazon VPC Ingress Routing Makes it Easy to Insert Virtual Appliances in the Forwarding Path of VPC Traffic | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/amazon-vpc-ingress-routing-insert-virtual-appliances-forwarding-path-vpc-traffic/ Topic || Security, Identity and Compliance Introducing AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) Access Analyzer | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-aws-identity-and-access-management-access-analyzer/ Introducing Amazon Detective | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-amazon-detective/ Topic || Customer Engagement Introducing Seneca for Amazon Connect | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/introducing-seneca-amazon-connect/ Topic || Developer Tools AWS announces Amazon CodeGuru for automated code reviews and application performance recommendations | https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/12/aws-announces-amazon-codeguru-for-automated-code-reviews-and-application-performance-recommendations/
Ben Kehoe is a Cloud Robotics Research Scientist at iRobot and Serverless Hero (https://aws.amazon.com/developer/community/heroes/ben-kehoe/) among many things. After an exciting twitter thread which centered around what the upcoming AWS Outposts product could do (and perhaps be limited to) and the "why on-prem?" question that many ask, Ben joined me for a powerful conversation where we explore the advantages and challenges of cloud-owned features and so much which will be important to cloud ops and cloud developer teams everywhere. See that conversation here: https://twitter.com/discoposse/status/1133459635862687744 Thank you to Ben for taking the twitter chat live and sharing great insights!
teppeisさん、makogaさんとパッケージソフトビジネス、サブスクリプションモデル、ff14の麻雀実装、品質保証の考え方の変化、クラウドからパッケージへのフィードバックサイクルなどについて話しました。 Teppei Sato on Twitter: “パッケージソフトビジネスの話でてきた。弊社パッケージ=>クラウド移行を経験したので、それが与える開発組織への影響とかその辺りは無限に話せる気がする… “ ajitofm 41: Software Engineering Survival Guide 商売の脆弱性 – V – Medium サイボウズが2019年度の事業戦略を発表、「米国での事業を盛り上げていく」 - クラウド Watch サイボウズ Office とは | グループウェア サイボウズ Office 10 動作環境(パッケージ版) | グループウェア サイボウズ Office 10 電撃 - 【GDC 2014】『新生FFXIV』吉田プロデューサーに聞く今世代最後のMMORPGとしての『新生FFXIV』。パッチ2.2やその後の展開にも直撃 FFXIVの「ドマ式麻雀」が世界で大ブレイク 導入の経緯は - ライブドアニュース 『FFXIV』麻雀実装で新規・復帰が急増。プロ雀士も参戦し、24時間数秒でマッチングする初のコンテンツへ…実は“住めるゲーム”を目指す新たな挑戦の第一歩だった 「世の中に価値を届けよう!」サイボウズのプロダクトマネジメントについて - Cybozu Inside Out | サイボウズエンジニアのブログ Teppei Sato on Twitter: “B2B SaaS失敗あるある: 初期の大きなカスタマーに要求されてオンプレ版を作ってしまう (Signal Sciences) #ctonight” Teppei Sato on Twitter: “しかしお金は必要。Auth0でも同じ問題があったが、結果的に現在でも売上の35%がオンプレから来ている。エンタープライズは大きい市場 #ctonight” Enterprise · A smarter way to work together AWS Outposts 概要ページ 組織変更したら部長がいなくなりました - Cybozu Inside Out | サイボウズエンジニアのブログ 後ろでvoyarockが賑やかな回になってしまいました。 フィードバックもお待ちしております! https://ajito.fm/form/ または Twitter: #ajitofm までどうぞ。
Today's Datanauts explores three different topics in one show: we dive into AWS Outposts with Ned Bellavance, NVMe fabrics with Howard Marks, and parallel NFS with Chris Wahl. It's a triple play episode! The post Datanauts 156: AWS Outposts, Choosing An NVMe Fabric, Parallel NFS Cautions appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Datanauts explores three different topics in one show: we dive into AWS Outposts with Ned Bellavance, NVMe fabrics with Howard Marks, and parallel NFS with Chris Wahl. It's a triple play episode! The post Datanauts 156: AWS Outposts, Choosing An NVMe Fabric, Parallel NFS Cautions appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Datanauts explores three different topics in one show: we dive into AWS Outposts with Ned Bellavance, NVMe fabrics with Howard Marks, and parallel NFS with Chris Wahl. It's a triple play episode! The post Datanauts 156: AWS Outposts, Choosing An NVMe Fabric, Parallel NFS Cautions appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Have you ever had high expectations about a new software product? Did you think it was going to be spectacular? Instead, did it become less about solving a problem for you and more about reaching a bunch of billable consultants? The dynamics of open source communities and the Cloud platform can make or break software products. Today, we’re talking to Andrew Clay Shafer, who was a notable voice during the days of OpenStack. He had high hopes for OpenStack, which was an effort to bring a democratized solution of Cloud computing to anyone’s data center. He describes the importance of understanding the challenges associated with open source projects in order for them to be successful. Some of the highlights of the show include: Open source is not a business model; capture value for customers, or they’ll go with a different solution Openness/Closure: Every open source project has its own community dynamics Losing sight of level of expertise for profitability and easy path to useage Whether to become a product or service company - difficult to be both effectively or go from being one to the other; build partner relationship, focus, and say “no” Lack of awareness about AWS Outposts admitting public Cloud is no longer a viable business model Amazon relentlessly focuses on what its customers want and tries to keep promises about what it can and can’t do Cloud Native: Not where you run, but how you run; confining variables Self-fulfilling prophecy to under deliver when you make the bad decision to under source IT across the board Cloud Native, DevOps, SRE: Buzzwords that equal one thing and work together Dilemma of not building everything and buying some things, but you can’t buy everything; humans like to shop and go with the easiest option Links: Andrew Clay Shafer on Twitter Andrew Clay Shafer on LinkedIn Puppet Re:invent OpenStack Eucalyptus Docker Redis MongoDB Confluent Kubernetes AWS Outposts AWS Ground Station AmazonBasics Simon Wardley Maslach Burnout Inventory Datadog
Show Notes Buffer Overflow: It’s Poop, Plus Water, Plus Time Episode 86 AWS Outposts, Zero Knowledge Computing, and Marriott Millions Breached Hosts Ned Bellavance, Director of Cloud Solutions https://www.linkedin.com/in/ned-bellavance-ba68a52 @Ned1313 […] The post Episode 86: It’s Poop, Plus Water, Plus Time appeared first on Anexinet.
Andy Jassy, CEO of Amazon Web Services, delivers his AWS re:Invent 2018 keynote, featuring the latest AWS news and announcements. Learn more about AWS at - https://amzn.to/2RiLQte. Topics: 00:01:10 AWS business update 00:05:00 Cloud market share 00:22:00 Glacier Deep Archive 00:25:45 Amazon FSx 00:32:30 Dean Del Vecchio, Guardian - CIO 00:43:45 AWS Control Tower 00:47:00 AWS Security Hub 00:49:20 AWS Lake Formation 01:05:00 DynamoDB Read/Write Capacity On Demand 01:09:00 Amazon Timestream 01:16:20 Amazon Quantum Ledger Database 01:17:40 Amazon Managed Blockchain 01:30:00 Amazon Elastic Inference 01:34:00 AWS Inferentia 01:39:00 Ross Brawn Obe, Formula 1 - Managing Director 01:51:30 Amazon SageMaker Ground Truth 02:00:10 Amazon SageMaker RL 02:02:10 AWS DeepRacer 02:08:00 Dr Matt Wood, AWS - GM Deep Learning and AI 02:14:55 Amazon Textrack 02:18:30 Amazon Personalize 02:22:55 Amazon Forecast 02:28:30 Pat Gelsinger, VMware - CEO 02:33:50 AWS Outposts