Podcasts about microsoft windows server

Group of server operating systems by Microsoft

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Best podcasts about microsoft windows server

Latest podcast episodes about microsoft windows server

The Cloud Pod
181: You get a Tanzu, I get a Tanzu, EVERYONE GETS A TANZU

The Cloud Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 48:26


On The Cloud Pod this week, Amazon announces Amazon Inspector's new support of Windows OS for continual software vulnerability scanning of EC2 workloads, Google has several exciting announcements regarding Chronicle, Azure is announcing pretty much everything under the sun, and Oracle announces OCI Lake in beta. 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 ⏰  Amazon Inspector now supports Windows operating system (OS) for continual software vulnerability scanning of EC2 workloads. ⏰  Google makes 3 announcements about Chronicle. ⏰  Azure has three–yes, three–new releases this week. ⏰ Oracle announces OCI Lake in beta. Top Quote

I lavori di domani
SPECIALE ACADEMY - Italo Piroddi, Aruba Academy e il Technical Operation

I lavori di domani

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2022


La funzione del Technical Operation o Tech Ops è fondamentale in azienda, e anche in più aziende. Un Data Center può arrivare a tenere "in piedi" fino a 10 aziende; quindi, la figura del Tech Ops è fondamentale per garantire la continuità del business. In questa chiave possiamo definire il Data Center un punto cardine dell'industria Tech in fortissima espansione e la figura del Tech Ops una professionalità che sarà sempre più richiesta. Tra i suoi compiti l'assistenza e gestione di primo livello di tutti i sistemi presenti nel data center (principalmente basati su sistemi operativi Microsoft Windows Server, Linux e VMWare), il presidio fisico delle sale dati, il provisioning e deprovisioning fisico di prima installazione di tutti gli apparati informatici interni alle sale dati quali server, storage, cablaggi e qualsiasi altro asset contenuto all'interno dei rack. Ed è in partenza il 27 giugno uno di questi corsi di formazione professionale di Aruba Academy per TechOps, in partnership con Randstad Technologies - la divisione specializzata del gruppo Randstad che si occupa della ricerca e selezione di profili ICT - ha l'obiettivo di fornire agli studenti una conoscenza esaustiva dell'intera componente IT della sala dati, che deve essere mantenuta sicura, ordinata e presidiata, 24 ore su 24, 365 giorni l'anno. Il corso è aperto alla partecipazione di 12 diplomati in informatica, o neolaureati STEM, che desiderino acquisire skill tecnologiche sempre più specifiche ma anche competenze gestionali per affrontare un percorso di carriera in questo settore. La durata sarà di 6 settimane (dal 27 giugno al 5 agosto), con lezioni dal lunedì al venerdì, in modalità di aula virtuale per una durata di 240 ore. E la possibilità di entrare a far parte del team Technical Operation nei data center di Aruba o di ricevere una formazione per i lavori di domani.

I lavori di domani
Italo Piroddi, Aruba Academy e il Technical Operation

I lavori di domani

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2022


Italo Piroddi Head of Aruba Academy. Italo Piroddi è HR Training Manager & Head of Aruba Academy di Aruba S.p.A. Da 10 anni in Aruba è Responsabile del coordinamento della formazione aziendale a 360°, attraverso la Aruba Academy, la scuola del Gruppo Aruba che sviluppa, certifica e mantiene alto il livello delle competenze delle persone di Aruba tramite una formazione mirata e costante. Si occupa, in particolare, insieme al suo team, di gestire i percorsi formativi dei neo-assunti, progettare attività di training aziendali e implementare strumenti e progetti di Digital Learning e di Engaging. Guida, inoltre, la verifica e l'efficacia degli interventi formativi e valuta le azioni di follow-up previste per l'inserimento in azienda. Laureato in Comunicazione all'Università degli Studi di Cagliari, possiede ampia esperienza nei processi di training, nel project management, nel coaching e nel coordinamento di team di lavoro, acquisite precedentemente presso importanti realtà aziendali. Aruba S.p.A. è il principale cloud provider italiano e prima azienda in Italia per i servizi di data center, hosting, trust services, email, PEC e registrazione domini, rivolti a privati, professionisti, imprese e Pubblica Amministrazione. Fondata nel 1994, Aruba oggi gestisce 2,6 milioni di domini registrati, 9,4 milioni di caselle email, 8 milioni di caselle PEC, 130.000 server gestiti, per un totale di 16 milioni di utenti. Dal 2014 è Registro ufficiale dell'estensione '.cloud' per la registrazione in tutto il mondo dei domini Internet. Aruba PEC e Actalis sono le 2 Certification Authority di Aruba entrambe accreditate presso AgID (Agenzia per l'Italia Digitale). Nel 2021 l'azienda fa il suo ingresso nel mercato delle telecomunicazioni con un'offerta di servizi di connettività fibra broadband e ultrabroadband. Negli ultimi 20 anni Aruba ha progettato e costruito i propri Data Center in Italia sviluppando un know-how unico nel settore. Siti app e link utili Arubaacademy.com Aruba.it Arubanetworks.com Randstad.it Randstad.it Il Technical Operation (Tech Ops) La funzione del Technical Operation o Tech Ops è fondamentale in azienda, e anche in più aziende. Un Data Center può arrivare a tenere "in piedi" fino a 10 aziende; quindi, la figura del Tech Ops è fondamentale per garantire la continuità del business. In questa chiave possiamo definire il Data Center un punto cardine dell'industria Tech in fortissima espansione e la figura del Tech Ops una professionalità che sarà sempre più richiesta. Tra i suoi compiti l'assistenza e gestione di primo livello di tutti i sistemi presenti nel data center (principalmente basati su sistemi operativi Microsoft Windows Server, Linux e VMWare), il presidio fisico delle sale dati, il provisioning e deprovisioning fisico di prima installazione di tutti gli apparati informatici interni alle sale dati quali server, storage, cablaggi e qualsiasi altro asset contenuto all'interno dei rack. Ed è in partenza il 27 giugno uno di questi corsi di formazione professionale di Aruba Academy per TechOps, in partnership con Randstad Technologies - la divisione specializzata del gruppo Randstad che si occupa della ricerca e selezione di profili ICT - ha l'obiettivo di fornire agli studenti una conoscenza esaustiva dell'intera componente IT della sala dati, che deve essere mantenuta sicura, ordinata e presidiata, 24 ore su 24, 365 giorni l'anno. Il corso è aperto alla partecipazione di 12 diplomati in informatica, o neolaureati STEM, che desiderino acquisire skill tecnologiche sempre più specifiche ma anche competenze gestionali per affrontare un percorso di carriera in questo settore. La durata sarà di 6 settimane (dal 27 giugno al 5 agosto), con lezioni dal lunedì al venerdì, in modalità di aula virtuale per una durata di 240 ore. E la possibilità di entrare a far parte del team Technical Operation nei data center di Aruba o di ricevere una formazione per i lavori di domani.

B2B Tech Talk with Ingram Micro
A madcap exploration of Dell and Microsoft's approach to cyber resilience

B2B Tech Talk with Ingram Micro

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 32:09 Transcription Available


And now for something completely different…  Join hosts George Warren, Channel Marketing for Microsoft Server Attach. Dell Technologies , and Doug Mellard, Professional Agitator, for a freewheeling conversation about Dell and Microsoft's approach to cyber resilience. They talk about:  - Cyber resilience - Dell's secure supply chain - Microsoft Windows Server 2022  To join the discussion, follow us on Twitter @IngramTechSol #B2BTechTalk  Listen to this episode and more like it by subscribing to B2B Tech Talk on Spotify , Apple Podcasts , or Stitcher . Or, tune in on our website .

Screaming in the Cloud
Developing Storage Solutions Before the Rest with AB Periasamay

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 38:54


About ABAB Periasamy is the co-founder and CEO of MinIO, an open source provider of high performance, object storage software. In addition to this role, AB is an active investor and advisor to a wide range of technology companies, from H2O.ai and Manetu where he serves on the board to advisor or investor roles with Humio, Isovalent, Starburst, Yugabyte, Tetrate, Postman, Storj, Procurify, and Helpshift. Successful exits include Gitter.im (Gitlab), Treasure Data (ARM) and Fastor (SMART).AB co-founded Gluster in 2005 to commoditize scalable storage systems. As CTO, he was the primary architect and strategist for the development of the Gluster file system, a pioneer in software defined storage. After the company was acquired by Red Hat in 2011, AB joined Red Hat's Office of the CTO. Prior to Gluster, AB was CTO of California Digital Corporation, where his work led to scaling of the commodity cluster computing to supercomputing class performance. His work there resulted in the development of Lawrence Livermore Laboratory's “Thunder” code, which, at the time was the second fastest in the world.  AB holds a Computer Science Engineering degree from Annamalai University, Tamil Nadu, India.AB is one of the leading proponents and thinkers on the subject of open source software - articulating the difference between the philosophy and business model. An active contributor to a number of open source projects, he is a board member of India's Free Software Foundation.Links: MinIO: https://min.io/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/abperiasamy MinIO Slack channel: https://minio.slack.com/join/shared_invite/zt-11qsphhj7-HpmNOaIh14LHGrmndrhocA LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/abperiasamy/ 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 sponsored in part by our friends at Sysdig. Sysdig is the solution for securing DevOps. They have a blog post that went up recently about how an insecure AWS Lambda function could be used as a pivot point to get access into your environment. They've also gone deep in-depth with a bunch of other approaches to how DevOps and security are inextricably linked. To learn more, visit sysdig.com and tell them I sent you. That's S-Y-S-D-I-G dot com. My thanks to them for their continued support of this ridiculous nonsense.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friends at Rising Cloud, which I hadn't heard of before, but they're doing something vaguely interesting here. They are using AI, which is usually where my eyes glaze over and I lose attention, but they're using it to help developers be more efficient by reducing repetitive tasks. So, the idea being that you can run stateless things without having to worry about scaling, placement, et cetera, and the rest. They claim significant cost savings, and they're able to wind up taking what you're running as it is, in AWS, with no changes, and run it inside of their data centers that span multiple regions. I'm somewhat skeptical, but their customers seem to really like them, so that's one of those areas where I really have a hard time being too snarky about it because when you solve a customer's problem, and they get out there in public and say, “We're solving a problem,” it's very hard to snark about that. Multus Medical, Construx.ai, and Stax have seen significant results by using them, and it's worth exploring. So, if you're looking for a smarter, faster, cheaper alternative to EC2, Lambda, or batch, consider checking them out. Visit risingcloud.com/benefits. That's risingcloud.com/benefits, and be sure to tell them that I said you because watching people wince when you mention my name is one of the guilty pleasures of listening to this podcast.in a siloCorey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. I'm joined this week by someone who's doing something a bit off the beaten path when we talk about cloud. I've often said that S3 is sort of a modern wonder of the world. It was the first AWS service brought into general availability. Today's promoted guest is the co-founder and CEO of MinIO, Anand Babu Periasamy, or AB as he often goes, depending upon who's talking to him. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me today.AB: It's wonderful to be here, Corey. Thank you for having me.Corey: So, I want to start with the obvious thing, where you take a look at what is the cloud and you can talk about AWS's ridiculous high-level managed services, like Amazon Chime. Great, we all see how that plays out. And those are the higher-level offerings, ideally aimed at problems customers have, but then they also have the baseline building blocks services, and it's hard to think of a more baseline building block than an object store. That's something every cloud provider has, regardless of how many scare quotes there are around the word cloud; everyone offers the object store. And your solution is to look at this and say, “Ah, that's a market ripe for disruption. We're going to build through an open-source community software that emulates an object store.” I would be sitting here, more or less poking fun at the idea except for the fact that you're a billion-dollar company now.AB: Yeah.Corey: How did you get here?AB: So, when we started, right, we did not actually think about cloud that way, right? “Cloud, it's a hot trend, and let's go disrupt is like that. It will lead to a lot of opportunity.” Certainly, it's true, it lead to the M&S, right, but that's not how we looked at it, right? It's a bad idea to build startups for M&A.When we looked at the problem, when we got back into this—my previous background, some may not know that it's actually a distributed file system background in the open-source space.Corey: Yeah, you were one of the co-founders of Gluster—AB: Yeah.Corey: —which I have only begrudgingly forgiven you. But please continue.AB: [laugh]. And back then we got the idea right, but the timing was wrong. And I had—while the data was beginning to grow at a crazy rate, end of the day, GlusterFS has to still look like an FS, it has to look like a file system like NetApp or EMC, and it was hugely limiting what we can do with it. The biggest problem for me was legacy systems. I have to build a modern system that is compatible with a legacy architecture, you cannot innovate.And that is where when Amazon introduced S3, back then, like, when S3 came, cloud was not big at all, right? When I look at it, the most important message of the cloud was Amazon basically threw everything that is legacy. It's not [iSCSI 00:03:21] as a Service; it's not even FTP as a Service, right? They came up with a simple, RESTful API to store your blobs, whether it's JavaScript, Android, iOS, or [AAML 00:03:30] application, or even Snowflake-type application.Corey: Oh, we spent ten years rewriting our apps to speak object store, and then they released EFS, which is NFS in the cloud. It's—AB: Yeah.Corey: —I didn't realize I could have just been stubborn and waited, and the whole problem would solve itself. But here we are. You're quite right.AB: Yeah. And even EFS and EBS are more for legacy stock can come in, buy some time, but that's not how you should stay on AWS, right? When Amazon did that, for me, that was the opportunity. I saw that… while world is going to continue to produce lots and lots of data, if I built a brand around that, I'm not going to go wrong.The problem is data at scale. And what do I do there? The opportunity I saw was, Amazon solved one of the largest problems for a long time. All the legacy systems, legacy protocols, they convinced the industry, throw them away and then start all over from scratch with the new API. While it's not compatible, it's not standard, it is ridiculously simple compared to anything else.No fstabs, no [unintelligible 00:04:27], no [root 00:04:28], nothing, right? From any application anywhere you can access was a big deal. When I saw that, I was like, “Thank you Amazon.” And I also knew Amazon would convince the industry that rewriting their application is going to be better and faster and cheaper than retrofitting legacy applications.Corey: I wonder how much that's retconned because talking to some of the people involved in the early days, they were not at all convinced they [laugh] would be able to convince the industry to do this.AB: Actually, if you talk to the analyst reporters, the IDC's, Gartner's of the world to the enterprise IT, the VMware community, they would say, “Hell no.” But if you talk to the actual application developers, data infrastructure, data architects, the actual consumers of data, for them, it was so obvious. They actually did not know how to write an fstab. The iSCSI and NFS, you can't even access across the internet, and the modern applications, they ran across the globe, in JavaScript, and all kinds of apps on the device. From [Snap 00:05:21] to Snowflake, today is built on object store. It was more natural for the applications team, but not from the infrastructure team. So, who you asked that mattered.But nevertheless, Amazon convinced the rest of the world, and our bet was that if this is going to be the future, then this is also our opportunity. S3 is going to be limited because it only runs inside AWS. Bulk of the world's data is produced everywhere and only a tiny fraction will go to AWS. And where will the rest of the data go? Not SAN, NAS, HDFS, or other blob store, Azure Blob, or GCS; it's not going to be fragmented. And if we built a better object store, lightweight, faster, simpler, but fully compatible with S3 API, we can sweep and consolidate the market. And that's what happened.Corey: And there is a lot of validity to that. We take a look across the industry, when we look at various standards—I mean, one of the big problems with multi-cloud in many respects is the APIs are not quite similar enough. And worse, the failure patterns are very different, of I don't just need to know how the load balancer works, I need to know how it breaks so I can detect and plan for that. And then you've got the whole identity problem as well, where you're trying to manage across different frames of reference as you go between providers, and leads to a bit of a mess. What is it that makes MinIO something that has been not just something that has endured since it was created, but clearly been thriving?AB: The real reason, actually is not the multi-cloud compatibility, all that, right? Like, while today, it is a big deal for the users because the deployments have grown into 10-plus petabytes, and now the infrastructure team is taking it over and consolidating across the enterprise, so now they are talking about which key management server for storing the encrypted keys, which key management server should I talk to? Look at AWS, Google, or Azure, everyone has their own proprietary API. Outside they, have [YAML2 00:07:18], HashiCorp Vault, and, like, there is no standard here. It is supposed to be a [KMIP 00:07:23] standard, but in reality, it is not. Even different versions of Vault, there are incompatibilities for us.That is where—like from Key Management Server, Identity Management Server, right, like, everything that you speak around, how do you talk to different ecosystem? That, actually, MinIO provides connectors; having the large ecosystem support and large community, we are able to address all that. Once you bring MinIO into your application stack like you would bring Elasticsearch or MongoDB or anything else as a container, your application stack is just a Kubernetes YAML file, and you roll it out on any cloud, it becomes easier for them, they're able to go to any cloud they want. But the real reason why it succeeded was not that. They actually wrote their applications as containers on Minikube, then they will push it on a CI/CD environment.They never wrote code on EC2 or ECS writing objects on S3, and they don't like the idea of [past 00:08:15], where someone is telling you just—like you saw Google App Engine never took off, right? They liked the idea, here are my building blocks. And then I would stitch them together and build my application. We were part of their application development since early days, and when the application matured, it was hard to remove. It is very much like Microsoft Windows when it grew, even though the desktop was Microsoft Windows Server was NetWare, NetWare lost the game, right?We got the ecosystem, and it was actually developer productivity, convenience, that really helped. The simplicity of MinIO, today, they are arguing that deploying MinIO inside AWS is easier through their YAML and containers than going to AWS Console and figuring out how to do it.Corey: As you take a look at how customers are adopting this, it's clear that there is some shift in this because I could see the story for something like MinIO making an awful lot of sense in a data center environment because otherwise, it's, “Great. I need to make this app work with my SAN as well as an object store.” And that's sort of a non-starter for obvious reasons. But now you're available through cloud marketplaces directly.AB: Yeah.Corey: How are you seeing adoption patterns and interactions from customers changing as the industry continues to evolve?AB: Yeah, actually, that is how my thinking was when I started. If you are inside AWS, I would myself tell them that why don't use AWS S3? And it made a lot of sense if it's on a colo or your own infrastructure, then there is an object store. It even made a lot of sense if you are deploying on Google Cloud, Azure, Alibaba Cloud, Oracle Cloud, it made a lot of sense because you wanted an S3 compatible object store. Inside AWS, why would you do it, if there is AWS S3?Nowadays, I hear funny arguments, too. They like, “Oh, I didn't know that I could use S3. Is S3 MinIO compatible?” Because they will be like, “It came along with the GitLab or GitHub Enterprise, a part of the application stack.” They didn't even know that they could actually switch it over.And otherwise, most of the time, they developed it on MinIO, now they are too lazy to switch over. That also happens. But the real reason that why it became serious for me—I ignored that the public cloud commercialization; I encouraged the community adoption. And it grew to more than a million instances, like across the cloud, like small and large, but when they start talking about paying us serious dollars, then I took it seriously. And then when I start asking them, why would you guys do it, then I got to know the real reason why they wanted to do was they want to be detached from the cloud infrastructure provider.They want to look at cloud as CPU network and drive as a service. And running their own enterprise IT was more expensive than adopting public cloud, it was productivity for them, reducing the infrastructure, people cost was a lot. It made economic sense.Corey: Oh, people always cost more the infrastructure itself does.AB: Exactly right. 70, 80%, like, goes into people, right? And enterprise IT is too slow. They cannot innovate fast, and all of those problems. But what I found was for us, while we actually build the community and customers, if you're on AWS, if you're running MinIO on EBS, EBS is three times more expensive than S3.Corey: Or a single copy of it, too, where if you're trying to go multi-AZ and you have the replication traffic, and not to mention you have to over-provision it, which is a bit of a different story as well. So, like, it winds up being something on the order of 30 times more expensive, in many cases, to do it right. So, I'm looking at this going, the economics of running this purely by itself in AWS don't make sense to me—long experience teaches me the next question of, “What am I missing?” Not, “That's ridiculous and you're doing it wrong.” There's clearly something I'm not getting. What am I missing?AB: I was telling them until we made some changes, right—because we saw a couple of things happen. I was initially like, [unintelligible 00:12:00] does not make 30 copies. It makes, like, 1.4x, 1.6x.But still, the underlying block storage is not only three times more expensive than S3, it's also slow. It's a network storage. Trying to put an object store on top of it, another, like, software-defined SAN, like EBS made no sense to me. Smaller deployments, it's okay, but you should never scale that on EBS. So, it did not make economic sense. I would never take it seriously because it would never help them grow to scale.But what changed in recent times? Amazon saw that this was not only a problem for MinIO-type players. Every database out there today, every modern database, even the message queues like Kafka, they all have gone scale-out. And they all depend on local block store and putting a scale-out distributed database, data processing engines on top of EBS would not scale. And Amazon introduced storage optimized instances. Essentially, that reduced to bet—the data infrastructure guy, data engineer, or application developer asking IT, “I want a SuperMicro, or Dell server, or even virtual machines.” That's too slow, too inefficient.They can provision these storage machines on demand, and then I can do it through Kubernetes. These two changes, all the public cloud players now adopted Kubernetes as the standard, and they have to stick to the Kubernetes API standard. If they are incompatible, they won't get adopted. And storage optimized that is local drives, these are machines, like, [I3 EN 00:13:23], like, 24 drives, they have SSDs, and fast network—like, 25-gigabit 200-gigabit type network—availability of these machines, like, what typically would run any database, HDFS cluster, MinIO, all of them, those machines are now available just like any other EC2 instance.They are efficient. You can actually put MinIO side by side to S3 and still be price competitive. And Amazon wants to—like, just like their retail marketplace, they want to compete and be open. They have enabled it. In that sense, Amazon is actually helping us. And it turned out that now I can help customers build multiple petabyte infrastructure on Amazon and still stay efficient, still stay price competitive.Corey: I would have said for a long time that if you were to ask me to build out the lingua franca of all the different cloud providers into a common API, the S3 API would be one of them. Now, you are building this out, multi-cloud, you're in all three of the major cloud marketplaces, and the way that you do that and do those deployments seems like it is the modern multi-cloud API of Kubernetes. When you first started building this, Kubernetes was very early on. What was the evolution of getting there? Or were you one of the first early-adoption customers in a Kubernetes space?AB: So, when we started, there was no Kubernetes. But we saw the problem was very clear. And there was containers, and then came Docker Compose and Swarm. Then there was Mesos, Cloud Foundry, you name it, right? Like, there was many solutions all the way up to even VMware trying to get into that space.And what did we do? Early on, I couldn't choose. I couldn't—it's not in our hands, right, who is going to be the winner, so we just simply embrace everybody. It was also tiring that to allow implement native connectors to all of them different orchestration, like Pivotal Cloud Foundry alone, they have their own standard open service broker that's only popular inside their system. Go outside elsewhere, everybody was incompatible.And outside that, even, Chef Ansible Puppet scripts, too. We just simply embraced everybody until the dust settle down. When it settled down, clearly a declarative model of Kubernetes became easier. Also Kubernetes developers understood the community well. And coming from Borg, I think they understood the right architecture. And also written in Go, unlike Java, right?It actually matters, these minute new details resonating with the infrastructure community. It took off, and then that helped us immensely. Now, it's not only Kubernetes is popular, it has become the standard, from VMware to OpenShift to all the public cloud providers, GKS, AKS, EKS, whatever, right—GKE. All of them now are basically Kubernetes standard. It made not only our life easier, it made every other [ISV 00:16:11], other open-source project, everybody now can finally write one code that can be operated portably.It is a big shift. It is not because we chose; we just watched all this, we were riding along the way. And then because we resonated with the infrastructure community, modern infrastructure is dominated by open-source. We were also the leading open-source object store, and as Kubernetes community adopted us, we were naturally embraced by the community.Corey: Back when AWS first launched with S3 as its first offering, there were a bunch of folks who were super excited, but object stores didn't make a lot of sense to them intrinsically, so they looked into this and, “Ah, I can build a file system and users base on top of S3.” And the reaction was, “Holy God don't do that.” And the way that AWS decided to discourage that behavior is a per request charge, which for most workloads is fine, whatever, but there are some that causes a significant burden. With running something like MinIO in a self-hosted way, suddenly that costing doesn't exist in the same way. Does that open the door again to so now I can use it as a file system again, in which case that just seems like using the local file system, only with extra steps?AB: Yeah.Corey: Do you see patterns that are emerging with customers' use of MinIO that you would not see with the quote-unquote, “Provider's” quote-unquote, “Native” object storage option, or do the patterns mostly look the same?AB: Yeah, if you took an application that ran on file and block and brought it over to object storage, that makes sense. But something that is competing with object store or a layer below object store, that is—end of the day that drives our block devices, you have a block interface, right—trying to bring SAN or NAS on top of object store is actually a step backwards. They completely missed the message that Amazon told that if you brought a file system interface on top of object store, you missed the point, that you are now bringing the legacy things that Amazon intentionally removed from the infrastructure. Trying to bring them on top doesn't make it any better. If you are arguing from a compatibility some legacy applications, sure, but writing a file system on top of object store will never be better than NetApp, EMC, like EMC Isilon, or anything else. Or even GlusterFS, right?But if you want a file system, I always tell the community, they ask us, “Why don't you add an FS option and do a multi-protocol system?” I tell them that the whole point of S3 is to remove all those legacy APIs. If I added POSIX, then I'll be a mediocre object storage and a terrible file system. I would never do that. But why not write a FUSE file system, right? Like, S3Fs is there.In fact, initially, for legacy compatibility, we wrote MinFS and I had to hide it. We actually archived the repository because immediately people started using it. Even simple things like end of the day, can I use Unix [Coreutils 00:19:03] like [cp, ls 00:19:04], like, all these tools I'm familiar with? If it's not file system object storage that S3 [CMD 00:19:08] or AWS CLI is, like, to bloatware. And it's not really Unix-like feeling.Then what I told them, “I'll give you a BusyBox like a single static binary, and it will give you all the Unix tools that works for local filesystem as well as object store.” That's where the [MC tool 00:19:23] came; it gives you all the Unix-like programmability, all the core tool that's object storage compatible, speaks native object store. But if I have to make object store look like a file system so UNIX tools would run, it would not only be inefficient, Unix tools never scaled for this kind of capacity.So, it would be a bad idea to take step backwards and bring legacy stuff back inside. For some very small case, if there are simple POSIX calls using [ObjectiveFs 00:19:49], S3Fs, and few, for legacy compatibility reasons makes sense, but in general, I would tell the community don't bring file and block. If you want file and block, leave those on virtual machines and leave that infrastructure in a silo and gradually phase them out.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friends at Vultr. Spelled V-U-L-T-R because they're all about helping save money, including on things like, you know, vowels. So, what they do is they are a cloud provider that provides surprisingly high performance cloud compute at a price that—while sure they claim its better than AWS pricing—and when they say that they mean it is less money. Sure, I don't dispute that but what I find interesting is that it's predictable. They tell you in advance on a monthly basis what it's going to going to cost. They have a bunch of advanced networking features. They have nineteen global locations and scale things elastically. Not to be confused with openly, because apparently elastic and open can mean the same thing sometimes. They have had over a million users. Deployments take less that sixty seconds across twelve pre-selected operating systems. Or, if you're one of those nutters like me, you can bring your own ISO and install basically any operating system you want. Starting with pricing as low as $2.50 a month for Vultr cloud compute they have plans for developers and businesses of all sizes, except maybe Amazon, who stubbornly insists on having something to scale all on their own. Try Vultr today for free by visiting: vultr.com/screaming, and you'll receive a $100 in credit. Thats v-u-l-t-r.com slash screaming.Corey: So, my big problem, when I look at what S3 has done is in it's name because of course, naming is hard. It's, “Simple Storage Service.” The problem I have is with the word simple because over time, S3 has gotten more and more complex under the hood. It automatically tiers data the way that customers want. And integrated with things like Athena, you can now query it directly, whenever of an object appears, you can wind up automatically firing off Lambda functions and the rest.And this is increasingly looking a lot less like a place to just dump my unstructured data, and increasingly, a lot like this is sort of a database, in some respects. Now, understand my favorite database is Route 53; I have a long and storied history of misusing services as databases. Is this one of those scenarios, or is there some legitimacy to the idea of turning this into a database?AB: Actually, there is now S3 Select API that if you're storing unstructured data like CSV, JSON, Parquet, without downloading even a compressed CSV, you can actually send a SQL query into the system. IN MinIO particularly the S3 Select is [CMD 00:21:16] optimized. We can load, like, every 64k worth of CSV lines into registers and do CMD operations. It's the fastest SQL filter out there. Now, bringing these kinds of capabilities, we are just a little bit away from a database; should we do database? I would tell definitely no.The very strength of S3 API is to actually limit all the mutations, right? Particularly if you look at database, they're dealing with metadata, and querying; the biggest value they bring is indexing the metadata. But if I'm dealing with that, then I'm dealing with really small block lots of mutations, the separation of objects storage should be dealing with persistence and not mutations. Mutations are [AWS 00:21:57] problem. Separation of database work function and persistence function is where object storage got the storage right.Otherwise, it will, they will make the mistake of doing POSIX-like behavior, and then not only bringing back all those capabilities, doing IOPS intensive workloads across the HTTP, it wouldn't make sense, right? So, object storage got the API right. But now should it be a database? So, it definitely should not be a database. In fact, I actually hate the idea of Amazon yielding to the file system developers and giving a [file three 00:22:29] hierarchical namespace so they can write nice file managers.That was a terrible idea. Writing a hierarchical namespace that's also sorted, now puts tax on how the metadata is indexed and organized. The Amazon should have left the core API very simple and told them to solve these problems outside the object store. Many application developers don't need. Amazon was trying to satisfy everybody's need. Saying no to some of these file system-type, file manager-type users, what should have been the right way.But nevertheless, adding those capabilities, eventually, now you can see, S3 is no longer simple. And we had to keep that compatibility, and I hate that part. I actually don't mind compatibility, but then doing all the wrong things that Amazon is adding, now I have to add because it's compatible. I kind of hate that, right?But now going to a database would be pushing it to the whole new level. Here is the simple reason why that's a bad idea. The right way to do database—in fact, the database industry is already going in the right direction. Unstructured data, the key-value or graph, different types of data, you cannot possibly solve all that even in a single database. They are trying to be multimodal database; even they are struggling with it.You can never be a Redis, Cassandra, like, a SQL all-in-one. They tried to say that but in reality, that you will never be better than any one of those focused database solutions out there. Trying to bring that into object store will be a mistake. Instead, let the databases focus on query language implementation and query computation, and leave the persistence to object store. So, object store can still focus on storing your database segments, the table segments, but the index is still in the memory of the database.Even the index can be snapshotted once in a while to object store, but use objects store for persistence and database for query is the right architecture. And almost all the modern databases now, from Elasticsearch to [unintelligible 00:24:21] to even Kafka, like, message queue. They all have gone that route. Even Microsoft SQL Server, Teradata, Vertica, name it, Splunk, they all have gone object storage route, too. Snowflake itself is a prime example, BigQuery and all of them.That's the right way. Databases can never be consolidated. There will be many different kinds of databases. Let them specialize on GraphQL or Graph API, or key-value, or SQL. Let them handle the indexing and persistence, they cannot handle petabytes of data. That [unintelligible 00:24:51] to object store is how the industry is shaping up, and it is going in the right direction.Corey: One of the ways I learned the most about various services is by talking to customers. Every time I think I've seen something, this is amazing. This service is something I completely understand. All I have to do is talk to one more customer. And when I was doing a bill analysis project a couple of years ago, I looked into a customer's account and saw a bucket with okay, that has 280 billion objects in it—and wait was that billion with a B?And I asked them, “So, what's going on over there?” And there's, “Well, we built our own columnar database on top of S3. This may not have been the best approach.” It's, “I'm going to stop you there. With no further context, it was not, but please continue.”It's the sort of thing that would never have occurred to me to even try, do you tend to see similar—I would say they're anti-patterns, except somehow they're made to work—in some of your customer environments, as they are using the service in ways that are very different than ways encouraged or even allowed by the native object store options?AB: Yeah, when I first started seeing the database-type workloads coming on to MinIO, I was surprised, too. That was exactly my reaction. In fact, they were storing these 256k, sometimes 64k table segments because they need to index it, right, and the table segments were anywhere between 64k to 2MB. And when they started writing table segments, it was more often [IOPS-type 00:26:22] I/O pattern, then a throughput-type pattern. Throughput is an easier problem to solve, and MinIO always saturated these 100-gigabyte NVMe-type drives, they were I/O intensive, throughput optimized.When I started seeing the database workloads, I had to optimize for small-object workloads, too. We actually did all that because eventually I got convinced the right way to build a database was to actually leave the persistence out of database; they made actually a compelling argument. If historically, I thought metadata and data, data to be very big and coming to object store make sense. Metadata should be stored in a database, and that's only index page. Take any book, the index pages are only few, database can continue to run adjacent to object store, it's a clean architecture.But why would you put database itself on object store? When I saw a transactional database like MySQL, changing the [InnoDB 00:27:14] to [RocksDB 00:27:15], and making changes at that layer to write the SS tables [unintelligible 00:27:19] to MinIO, and then I was like, where do you store the memory, the journal? They said, “That will go to Kafka.” And I was like—I thought that was insane when it started. But it continued to grow and grow.Nowadays, I see most of the databases have gone to object store, but their argument is, the databases also saw explosive growth in data. And they couldn't scale the persistence part. That is where they realized that they still got very good at the indexing part that object storage would never give. There is no API to do sophisticated query of the data. You cannot peek inside the data, you can just do streaming read and write.And that is where the databases were still necessary. But databases were also growing in data. One thing that triggered this was the use case moved from data that was generated by people to now data generated by machines. Machines means applications, all kinds of devices. Now, it's like between seven billion people to a trillion devices is how the industry is changing. And this led to lots of machine-generated, semi-structured, structured data at giant scale, coming into database. The databases need to handle scale. There was no other way to solve this problem other than leaving the—[unintelligible 00:28:31] if you looking at columnar data, most of them are machine-generated data, where else would you store? If they tried to build their own object storage embedded into the database, it would make database mentally complicated. Let them focus on what they are good at: Indexing and mutations. Pull the data table segments which are immutable, mutate in memory, and then commit them back give the right mix. What you saw what's the fastest step that happened, we saw that consistently across. Now, it is actually the standard.Corey: So, you started working on this in 2014, and here we are—what is it—eight years later now, and you've just announced a Series B of $100 million dollars on a billion-dollar valuation. So, it turns out this is not just one of those things people are using for test labs; there is significant momentum behind using this. How did you get there from—because everything you're saying makes an awful lot of sense, but it feels, at least from where I sit, to be a little bit of a niche. It's a bit of an edge case that is not the common case. Obviously, I missing something because your investors are not the types of sophisticated investors who see something ridiculous and, “Yep. That's the thing we're going to go for.” There right more than they're not.AB: Yeah. The reason for that was the saw what we were set to do. In fact, these are—if you see the lead investor, Intel, they watched us grow. They came into Series A and they saw, everyday, how we operated and grew. They believed in our message.And it was actually not about object store, right? Object storage was a means for us to get into the market. When we started, our idea was, ten years from now, what will be a big problem? A lot of times, it's hard to see the future, but if you zoom out, it's hidden in plain sight.These are simple trends. Every major trend pointed to world producing more data. No one would argue with that. If I solved one important problem that everybody is suffering, I won't go wrong. And when you solve the problem, it's about building a product with fine craftsmanship, attention to details, connecting with the user, all of that standard stuff.But I picked object storage as the problem because the industry was fragmented across many different data stores, and I knew that won't be the case ten years from now. Applications are not going to adopt different APIs across different clouds, S3 to GCS to Azure Blob to HDFS to everything is incompatible. I saw that if I built a data store for persistence, industry will consolidate around S3 API. Amazon S3, when we started, it looked like they were the giant, there was only one cloud industry, it believed mono-cloud. Almost everyone was talking to me like AWS will be the world's data center.I certainly see that possibility, Amazon is capable of doing it, but my bet was the other way, that AWS S3 will be one of many solutions, but not—if it's all incompatible, it's not going to work, industry will consolidate. Our bet was, if world is producing so much data, if you build an object store that is S3 compatible, but ended up as the leading data store of the world and owned the application ecosystem, you cannot go wrong. We kept our heads low and focused on the first six years on massive adoption, build the ecosystem to a scale where we can say now our ecosystem is equal or larger than Amazon, then we are in business. We didn't focus on commercialization; we focused on convincing the industry that this is the right technology for them to use. Once they are convinced, once you solve business problems, making money is not hard because they are already sold, they are in love with the product, then convincing them to pay is not a big deal because data is so critical, central part of their business.We didn't worry about commercialization, we worried about adoption. And once we got the adoption, now customers are coming to us and they're like, “I don't want open-source license violation. I don't want data breach or data loss.” They are trying to sell to me, and it's an easy relationship game. And it's about long-term partnership with customers.And so the business started growing, accelerating. That was the reason that now is the time to fill up the gas tank and investors were quite excited about the commercial traction as well. And all the intangible, right, how big we grew in the last few years.Corey: It really is an interesting segment, that has always been something that I've mostly ignored, like, “Oh, you want to run your own? Okay, great.” I get it; some people want to cosplay as cloud providers themselves. Awesome. There's clearly a lot more to it than that, and I'm really interested to see what the future holds for you folks.AB: Yeah, I'm excited. I think end of the day, if I solve real problems, every organization is moving from compute technology-centric to data-centric, and they're all looking at data warehouse, data lake, and whatever name they give data infrastructure. Data is now the centerpiece. Software is a commodity. That's how they are looking at it. And it is translating to each of these large organizations—actually, even the mid, even startups nowadays have petabytes of data—and I see a huge potential here. The timing is perfect for us.Corey: I'm really excited to see this continue to grow. And I want to thank you for taking so much time to speak with me today. If people want to learn more, where can they find you?AB: I'm always on the community, right. Twitter and, like, I think the Slack channel, it's quite easy to reach out to me. LinkedIn. I'm always excited to talk to our users or community.Corey: And we will of course put links to this in the [show notes 00:33:58]. Thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it.AB: Again, wonderful to be here, Corey.Corey: Anand Babu Periasamy, CEO and co-founder of MinIO. 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 podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, along with what starts out as an angry comment but eventually turns into you, in your position on the S3 product team, writing a thank you note to MinIO for helping validate your market.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.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

Melbourne AWS User Group
What's new in October 2021

Melbourne AWS User Group

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2022 69:58


A lot of things happened in October, and we talked about them all in early November. In this episode Arjen, Guy, and JM discuss a whole bunch of cool things that were released and may be a bit harsh on everything Microsoft. News Finally in Sydney Amazon EC2 Mac instances are now available in seven additional AWS Regions Amazon MemoryDB for Redis is now available in 11 additional AWS Regions Serverless Lambda AWS Lambda now supports triggering Lambda functions from an Amazon SQS queue in a different account AWS Lambda now supports IAM authentication for Amazon MSK as an event source Step Functions Now — AWS Step Functions Supports 200 AWS Services To Enable Easier Workflow Automation | AWS News Blog AWS Batch adds console support for visualizing AWS Step Functions workflows Amplify Announcing General Availability of Amplify Geo for AWS Amplify AWS Amplify for JavaScript now supports resumable file uploads for Storage Other Accelerating serverless development with AWS SAM Accelerate | AWS Compute Blog Containers Amazon EKS Managed Node Groups adds native support for Bottlerocket AWS Fargate now supports Amazon ECS Windows containers Announcing the general availability of cdk8s and support for Go | Containers Monitoring clock accuracy on AWS Fargate with Amazon ECS Amazon ECS Anywhere now supports GPU-based workloads AWS Console Mobile Application adds support for Amazon Elastic Container Service AWS Load Balancer Controller version 2.3 now available with support for ALB IPv6 targets AWS App Mesh Metric Extension is now generally available EC2 & VPC New – Amazon EC2 C6i Instances Powered by the Latest Generation Intel Xeon Scalable Processors | AWS News Blog Amazon EC2 now supports sharing Amazon Machine Images across AWS Organizations and Organizational Units Amazon EC2 Hibernation adds support for Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Announcing Amazon EC2 Capacity Reservation Fleet a way to easily migrate Amazon EC2 Capacity Reservations across instance types Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling now supports describing Auto Scaling groups using tags Amazon EC2 now offers Microsoft SQL Server on Microsoft Windows Server 2022 AMIs AWS Elastic Beanstalk supports Database Decoupling in an Elastic Beanstalk Environment AWS FPGA developer kit now supports Jumbo frames in virtual ethernet frameworks for Amazon EC2 F1 instances Amazon VPC Flow Logs now supports Apache Parquet, Hive-compatible prefixes and Hourly partitioned files Network Load Balancer now supports TLS 1.3 New – Attribute-Based Instance Type Selection for EC2 Auto Scaling and EC2 Fleet | AWS News Blog Amazon Lightsail now supports AWS CloudFormation for instances, disks and databases Dev & Ops CLI AWS Cloud Control API, a Uniform API to Access AWS & Third-Party Services | AWS News Blog Now programmatically manage alternate contacts on AWS accounts CodeGuru Amazon CodeGuru now includes recommendations powered by Infer Amazon CodeGuru announces Security detectors for Python applications and security analysis powered by Bandit Amazon CodeGuru Reviewer adds detectors for AWS Java SDK v2's best practices and features IaC AWS CDK releases v1.121.0 - v1.125.0 with features for faster development cycles using hotswap deployments and rollback control AWS CloudFormation customers can now manage their applications in AWS Systems Manager Other NoSQL Workbench for Amazon DynamoDB now enables you to import and automatically populate sample data to help build and visualize your data models Amazon Corretto October Quarterly Updates Bulk Editing of OpsItems in AWS Systems Manager OpsCenter AWS Fault Injection Simulator now supports Spot Interruptions AWS Fault Injection Simulator now injects Spot Instance Interruptions Security Firewalls AWS Firewall Manager now supports centralized logging of AWS Network Firewall logs AWS Network Firewall Adds New Configuration Options for Rule Ordering and Default Drop Backups AWS Backup Audit Manager adds compliance reports AWS Backup adds an additional layer for backup protection with the availability of AWS Backup Vault Lock Other AWS Security Hub adds support for cross-Region aggregation of findings to simplify how you evaluate and improve your AWS security posture Amazon SES now supports 2048-bit DKIM keys AWS License Manager now supports Delegated Administrator for Managed entitlements Data Storage & Processing Goodbye Microsoft SQL Server, Hello Babelfish | AWS News Blog Announcing availability of the Babelfish for PostgreSQL open source project Announcing Amazon RDS Custom for Oracle AWS announces AWS Snowcone SSD Amazon RDS Proxy now supports Amazon RDS for MySQL Version 8.0 Amazon OpenSearch Service (successor to Amazon Elasticsearch Service) announces support for Cross-Cluster Replication Amazon OpenSearch Service (successor to Amazon Elasticsearch Service) now comes with an improved management console AWS Transfer Family customers can now use Amazon S3 Access Point aliases for granular and simplified data access controls Amazon EMR now supports Apache Spark SQL to insert data into and update Apache Hive metadata tables when Apache Ranger integration is enabled Amazon Neptune now supports Auto Scaling for Read Replicas AWS Glue Crawlers support Amazon S3 event notifications Amazon Keyspaces (for Apache Cassandra) now supports automatic data expiration by using Time to Live (TTL) settings New – AWS Data Exchange for Amazon Redshift | AWS News Blog AI & ML SageMaker Announcing Fast File Mode for Amazon SageMaker Amazon SageMaker Projects now supports Image Building CI/CD templates Amazon SageMaker Data Wrangler now supports Amazon Athena Workgroups, feature correlation, and customer managed keys Other Amazon Kendra launches support for 34 additional languages Amazon Fraud Detector now supports event datasets AWS announces a price reduction of up to 56% for Amazon Fraud Detector machine learning fraud predictions Amazon Fraud Detector launches new ML model for online transaction fraud detection Amazon Transcribe now supports custom language models for streaming transcription Amazon Textract launches TIFF support and adds asynchronous support for receipts and invoices processing Announcing Amazon EC2 DL1 instances for cost efficient training of deep learning models Other Cool Stuff AWS IoT Core now makes it optional for customers to send the entire trust chain when provisioning devices using Just-in-Time Provisioning and Just-in-Time Registration AWS IoT SiteWise announces support for using the same asset models across different hierarchies VMware Cloud on AWS Outposts Brings VMware SDDC as a Fully Managed Service on Premises | AWS News Blog AWS Outposts adds new CloudWatch dimension for capacity monitoring Amazon Monitron launches iOS app Amazon Braket offers D-Wave's Advantage 4.1 system for quantum annealing Amazon QuickSight adds support for Pixel-Perfect dashboards Amazon WorkMail adds Mobile Device Access Override API and MDM integration capabilities Announcing Amazon WorkSpaces API to create new updated images with latest AWS drivers Computer Vision at the Edge with AWS Panorama | AWS News Blog Amazon Connect launches API to configure hours of operation programmatically New region availability and Graviton2 support now available for Amazon GameLift Sponsors CMD Solutions Silver Sponsors Cevo Versent

time microsoft security i am advantage region api python ml aws hive javascript ubuntu jumbo gpu jm lambda hourly tls mdm redis postgresql arjen amazon s3 d wave babel fish microsoft sql server apache cassandra amazon rds aws fargate cloudwatch auto scaling aws cloudformation amazon dynamodb microsoft windows server amazon sqs aws organizations apache hive amazon elasticsearch service amazon msk
Melbourne AWS User Group
What's New in September 2021

Melbourne AWS User Group

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2022 71:23


After a very long delay, our September 2021 episode finally drops. Recorded in early October Arjen, JM, and Guy discuss how September finally has a fair number of interesting announcements again and of course point out everything that wasn't great as well. As a headsup, our October and November episodes will be released over the next 2 weeks. News Finally in ANZ Amazon Textract announces reduced pricing of up to 32% on AnalyzeDocument and DetectDocumentText requests in eight global AWS Regions Ability to customize reverse DNS for Elastic IP addresses now available in additional regions for Virtual Private Cloud customers Amazon ElastiCache for Redis now supports auto scaling in 17 additional public regions In the Works – AWS Region in New Zealand | AWS News Blog Serverless AWS Lambda Functions Powered by AWS Graviton2 Processor – Run Your Functions on Arm and Get Up to 34% Better Price Performance | AWS News Blog Cross-account event discovery for Amazon EventBridge schema registry AWS Amplify announces command hooks to execute custom scripts when running Amplify CLI commands Containers Amazon Managed Service for Prometheus Is Now Generally Available with Alert Manager and Ruler | AWS News Blog Amazon EKS Anywhere – Now Generally Available to Create and Manage Kubernetes Clusters on Premises | AWS News Blog Amazon EKS Connector is now in public preview AWS RoboMaker now supports container images in simulation Amazon ECR adds the ability to replicate individual repositories to other regions and accounts Amazon ECR Public adds the ability to launch containers directly to AWS App Runner EC2 & VPC Instances Amazon EC2 now offers Global View on the console to view all resources across regions together New – Amazon EC2 VT1 Instances for Live Multi-stream Video Transcoding | AWS News Blog Amazon EC2 T3 instances are now supported on EC2 Dedicated Hosts in multiple AWS Regions AWS Compute Optimizer Now Helps Customers Understand Impact of Migrating to Graviton2-based Instances AWS Marketplace launches aliases for all single AMI products Amazon EC2 Hibernation adds support for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, CentOS 8, and Fedora 34 AWS announces availability of Microsoft Windows Server 2022 images on Amazon EC2 VPC IPv6 endpoints are now available for the Amazon EC2 Instance Metadata Service, Amazon Time Sync Service, and Amazon VPC DNS Server Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) customers can now resize their prefix list Amazon VPC Routing Enhancements Allow You to Inspect Traffic Between Subnets In a VPC | AWS News Blog Amazon VPC Announces New Routing Enhancements to Make It Easy to Deploy Virtual Appliances Between Subnets In a VPC Amazon EC2 announces increases for instance network bandwidth Application Load Balancer-type Target Group for Network Load Balancer | Networking & Content Delivery Other AWS Elastic Beanstalk supports Dynamic Instance Type Selection Amazon EC2 Fleet instant mode now supports targeted Amazon EC2 On-Demand Capacity Reservations Dev & Ops Dev Amazon Managed Grafana Is Now Generally Available with Many New Features | AWS News Blog EC2 Image Builder supports Amazon EventBridge notifications Amazon CodeGuru Reviewer adds new inconsistency detectors AWS CDK releases v1.117.0 - v1.120.0 with improved support for Amazon Kinesis Firehose, Amazon CloudFront, Amazon Cognito, and more AWS CodeBuild now supports a small ARM machine type Amazon CodeGuru Reviewer enhances security findings generated by GitHub Action by adding severity fields and CWE tags Amazon Corretto 17 is now generally available AWS Device Farm announces support for testing web apps on Microsoft Edge browser Ops New for AWS CloudFormation – Quickly Retry Stack Operations from the Point of Failure | AWS News Blog AWS Systems Manager enables additional application management capabilities AWS Systems Manager Change Calendar now supports third-party calendar imports, giving you a more holistic view of events AWS Managed Services (AMS) now offers a catalog of operational offerings with Operations on Demand Amazon CloudWatch Application Insights and AWS Systems Manager Application Manager combine to offer an integrated application management experience Amazon CloudWatch Application Insights adds account application auto-discovery and new health dashboard ADOT New for AWS Distro for OpenTelemetry – Tracing Support is Now Generally Available | AWS News Blog AWS Distro for OpenTelemetry adds support for Amazon ECS in Amazon CloudWatch Container Insights and metrics support for AWS Lambda applications in Amazon Managed Prometheus (Preview) Security ACM Private CA now supports the Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) IAM Access Analyzer helps you generate fine-grained policies that specify the required actions for more than 50 services Amazon Macie adds support for selecting managed data identifiers WAF AWS Firewall Manager now supports AWS WAF log filtering AWS WAF now offers in-line regular expressions AWS Firewall Manager now supports AWS WAF rate-based rules Detective Amazon Detective offers Splunk integration Amazon Detective supports S3 and DNS finding types, adds finding details Data Storage & Processing Opensearch Amazon Elasticsearch Service Is Now Amazon OpenSearch Service and Supports OpenSearch 1.0 | AWS News Blog OpenSearch Dashboards Notebooks, a new visual reporting feature, now available on Amazon OpenSearch Service (successor to Amazon Elasticsearch Service) Amazon OpenSearch Service (successor to Amazon Elasticsearch Service) now supports Data Streams with OpenSearch 1.0 to simplify management of time-series data Amazon OpenSearch Service (successor to Amazon Elasticsearch Service) now supports Index Transforms Migrating to OpenSearch with CloudFormation – One Cloud Please Databases Amazon Aurora now supports AWS Graviton2-based T4g instances Amazon Aurora now supports AWS Graviton2-based X2g instances Amazon Aurora Serverless v1 supports configurable autoscaling timeout Amazon RDS now supports X2g instances for MySQL, MariaDB, and PostgreSQL databases. Amazon RDS now supports T4g instances for MySQL, MariaDB, and PostgreSQL databases. Amazon RDS now supports R5b instances for MySQL and PostgreSQL databases AQUA is now available for Amazon Redshift RA3.xlplus nodes New full-text search non-string indexing capabilities for Amazon Neptune Announcing general availability of Amazon RDS for MySQL and Amazon Aurora MySQL databases as new data sources for federated querying Amazon Redshift announces the next generation of Amazon Redshift Query Editor Storage New – Amazon EFS Intelligent-Tiering Optimizes Costs for Workloads with Changing Access Patterns | AWS News Blog How to Accelerate Performance and Availability of Multi-region Applications with Amazon S3 Multi-Region Access Points | AWS News Blog AWS SIGv4 and SIGv4A — shufflesharding.com Amazon S3 Intelligent-Tiering – Improved Cost Optimizations for Short-Lived and Small Objects | AWS News Blog New – Amazon FSx for NetApp ONTAP | AWS News Blog Amazon EBS direct APIs now supports creating 64 TB EBS Snapshots MSK Introducing Amazon MSK Connect – Stream Data to and from Your Apache Kafka Clusters Using Managed Connectors | AWS News Blog Amazon MSK now supports running multiple authentication modes and updates to TLS encryption settings Other Now authenticate Amazon EMR Studio users using IAM-based authentication or IAM Federation, in addition to AWS Single Sign-On Now auto-terminate idle EMR clusters to lower cost AI & ML SageMaker Amazon SageMaker Model Registry now supports Inference Pipelines Amazon SageMaker now supports M5d, R5, and P3dn instances for SageMaker Studio Notebooks Amazon SageMaker now supports inference endpoint testing from SageMaker Studio Amazon SageMaker Autopilot now generates additional metrics for classification problems Other Extract custom entities from documents in their native format with Amazon Comprehend Amazon Comprehend announces model management and evaluation enhancements Optimize your Amazon Forecast model with the accuracy metric of your choice Other Cool Stuff Announcing custom widgets for CloudWatch dashboards Amazon CloudWatch request metrics for Amazon S3 Access Points now available Amazon CloudWatch Application Insights adds support for Microsoft SQL Server FCI and FSx storage Amazon Monitron launches a new ethernet gateway device Amazon Pinpoint now supports encrypted SNS topics for inbound SMS Amazon Braket introduces verbatim compilation for quantum circuits AWS ParallelCluster now supports cluster management through Amazon API Gateway Amazon SES now supports emails with a message size of up to 40MB AWS announces General Availability of the Amazon GameLift Plug-in and AWS CloudFormation Templates for Unity AWS Ground Station announces Licensing Accelerator New – Amazon Genomics CLI Is Now Open Source and Generally Available | AWS News Blog Connect Amazon Connect Wisdom is now generally available Contact Lens for Amazon Connect adds support for 8 languages Amazon Connect Chat now supports passing a customer display name and contact attributes through the chat user interface Amazon Connect Customer Profiles adds product purchase history to personalize customer interactions Amazon Connect Voice ID is now generally available Amazon Connect now offers, in Public Preview, high-volume outbound communications for calls, texts, and emails IoT AWS IoT Device Management announces new fleet monitoring enhancements AWS IoT Device Defender announces Audit One-Click AWS IoT Device Defender now supports Detect alarm verification states Sponsors CMD Solutions Silver Sponsors Cevo Versent

ChannelBuzz.ca
Windows Server Explained Power by Intel® Xeon® Series: Windows Server and the Azure Stack

ChannelBuzz.ca

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021


Kirk from Microsoft and Devlin from Intel are joined by two Microsoft Windows Server specialists on the final edition of our special podcast series.

Ingram Micro Business & Technology Solutions
Ep.1 | Intel & Microsoft Windows Server Explained

Ingram Micro Business & Technology Solutions

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2021 13:54


In this episode, Kirk Sinclair, Partner Sales Executive - Microsoft Canada and Devlin Norris, Distribution Account Executive - Intel Corporation discuss what is new and exciting in both their portfolios highlighting the alignment and synergy between the two that is exciting for resellers.   Also in this episode:   On premise, hybrid, and cloud servers How the pandemic has changed the landscape Disaster recovery and off-site backup Simplified server migration using the cloud Refreshing hardware   Scalable processors The synergy between silicon and software   Resources: Chris Pierson - Channel Account Specialist Microsoft Devices chris.pierson@ingrammicro.com   Steve Chung - Senior Product Manager, Intel  steve.chung@ingrammicro.com   https://ark.intel.com/ https://expertzone.microsoft.com https://serverexplained.com .  Connect with Ingram Micro:  Twitter: https://twitter.com/ingrammicroca  Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ingram-micro/  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IngramMicroCanada  Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNv1gMCMQPLvzaKhfUlzrWA?view_as=subscriber  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ingrammicrocanada/  .

Ingram Micro Business & Technology Solutions
Ep.3 | Microsoft Windows Server Explained

Ingram Micro Business & Technology Solutions

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2021 22:30


In this episode, Kirk Sinclair, Partner Sales Executive - Microsoft Canada, is joined by Devlin Norris, Distribution Account Executive - Intel Corporation, as well as Matt Crumb & Carter Wilson, Windows Server Specialists at Microsoft.   Kirk, Devlin, Matt and Carter discuss on-premise servers and some great differentiated technology that is emerging in that space. They also discuss Cloud servers, Hybrid servers, and how the latest Intel technology is adding value for the resellers.     Also in this episode:   Windows Server 2019, Data Centre, HCI - (Hyper Converged Infrastructure) features and benefits Outperforming competitors  Hardware requirements and configurations Improving throughput with Intel Optane Windows Admin Centre  When to introduce hybrid servers Apps in Microsoft Azure Opportunities for resellers Total cost of ownership Optimizing for todays new workload and priorities Security . Resources:  Connect with Ingram Micro:  Twitter: https://twitter.com/ingrammicroca  Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ingram-micro/  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IngramMicroCanada  Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNv1gMCMQPLvzaKhfUlzrWA?view_as=subscriber  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ingrammicrocanada/  .

כל תכני עושים היסטוריה
[CPRadio] SIGRED: Hijacking Microsoft Windows Server

כל תכני עושים היסטוריה

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2020 19:41


DNS is the phone book of the internet--it's how your computer knows where to go to reach the website you want to visit. It's no stretch to say that, without functioning DNS, the internet as we know it could not exist. So imagine what would happen if you could completely compromise it...

dns hijacking microsoft windows server
CPradio - Check Point Research Podcast
[CPRadio] SIGRED: Hijacking Microsoft Windows Server

CPradio - Check Point Research Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2020 19:40


DNS is the phone book of the internet--it's how your computer knows where to go to reach the website you want to visit. It's no stretch to say that, without functioning DNS, the internet as we know it could not exist. So imagine what would happen if you could completely compromise it..

dns hijacking microsoft windows server
Transformación Digital
E49 Arrendamiento de Software Microsoft

Transformación Digital

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 7:18


En este episodio Ricardo Villegas nos habla de las condiciones necesarias para usar software en la modalidad de arrendamiento, expone cuales de los productos de Microsoft son los que están permitidos para arrendar y que aspectos deben ser revisados antes de tomar un contrato de arrendamiento de software y asegurar que se usando software legalmente. A continuación, presentamos los enlaces a episodios en donde se profundiza con mas detalle en temas tocados en este episodio:   Normatividad y aspectos legales del software E40 La Privacidad en un mundo digital E28 Normatividad y aspectos legales de un mundo global y conectado (Episodio 2 de 2) E27 Normatividad y aspectos legales de un mundo global y conectado (Episodio 1 de 2)   Licenciamiento de software E26 Licenciamiento de software orientado a usuario final E20 Licenciamiento de Microsoft SQL Server E18 Licenciamiento de Microsoft Windows Server con Ricardo Villegas    Auditorias de Software: E16 Licenciamiento y auditorías de software Microsoft y otros fabricantes (Episodio 2 de 2) E15 Licenciamiento y auditorías de software Microsoft y otros fabricantes (Episodio 1 de 2)   Conducen: Ricardo Villegas Londoño: email: r_villegas@hotmail.com Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez: email: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com     Producido por: Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez Podcast URL: https://apelaez.podbean.com/ Web site: https://www.avenetsa.com email: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com   Redes Sociales Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alejandropelaezr/ Twiter: https://twitter.com/apelaez Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Avenetsa/   Créditos Music by: Fontanez / Doug Maxwell - Urban Lullaby Fotografía: https://www.juanjalvarez.com

Transformación Digital
E47 Software Microsoft mas usado en Colombia por las Pymes, en 9 minutos

Transformación Digital

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2020 9:29


En Colombia las Pymes son un segmento de gran importancia, son empresas pequeñas o medianas en cuanto a volumen de ingresos, valor del patrimonio y número e trabajadores y se caracterizan por tener unas necesidades en software específicas que deben ser cubiertas protegiendo presupuestos y ajustando la inversión únicamente a lo que estrictamente se requiere. En este episodio Ricardo Villegas nos habla de las necesidades mas comunes que deben ser satisfechas en lo que concierne a software de Microsoft. Hablamos acerca de herramientas como Microsoft Office, licencias de Sistema Operativo Windows y para empresas de mayor tamaño Microsoft Windows Server y Microsoft SQL Server. Conducen: Ricardo Villegas Londoño: email: r_villegas@hotmail.com Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez: email: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com Producido por: Alejandro Pelaez Rodriguez Web site: https://www.apelaez.com/podcasts/transformacion-digitalBlog: https://www.apelaez.com/blogemail: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com Redes SocialesInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/alejandropelaezrYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/alejandropelaezrTwitter: https://twitter.com/apelaezFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/alejandropelaezr CreditosMusic by: Fontanez / Doug Maxwell - Urban LullabyFotografia: Juan Jose Alvarez Calle https://www.kreafoto.com

Transformación Digital
E47 Software Microsoft mas usado en Colombia por las Pymes, en 9 minutos

Transformación Digital

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2020 9:29


En Colombia las Pymes son un segmento de gran importancia, son empresas pequeñas o medianas en cuanto a volumen de ingresos, valor del patrimonio y número e trabajadores y se caracterizan por tener unas necesidades en software específicas que deben ser cubiertas protegiendo presupuestos y ajustando la inversión únicamente a lo que estrictamente se requiere. En este episodio Ricardo Villegas nos habla de las necesidades mas comunes que deben ser satisfechas en lo que concierne a software de Microsoft. Hablamos acerca de herramientas como Microsoft Office, licencias de Sistema Operativo Windows y para empresas de mayor tamaño Microsoft Windows Server y Microsoft SQL Server. A continuación, presentamos los enlaces a episodios en donde se profundiza con mas detalle en temas tocados en este episodio: Transformación Digital E31 Experiencias y retos de la Transformación Digital en las pequeñas empresas (Pymes) con Santiago Osorio E30 Hablando de Transformación Digital en Básica E21 El rol de la educación en la transformación digital E17 Conversatorio sobre la nube con Ricardo Villegas Londoño Normatividad y aspectos legales del software E40 La Privacidad en un mundo digital E28 Normatividad y aspectos legales de un mundo global y conectado (Episodio 2 de 2) E27 Normatividad y aspectos legales de un mundo global y conectado (Episodio 1 de 2) Licenciamiento de software E26 Licenciamiento de software orientado a usuario final E20 Licenciamiento de Microsoft SQL Server E18 Licenciamiento de Microsoft Windows Server con Ricardo Villegas  Auditorias de Software: E16 Licenciamiento y auditorías de software Microsoft y otros fabricantes (Episodio 2 de 2) E15 Licenciamiento y auditorías de software Microsoft y otros fabricantes (Episodio 1 de 2)   Conducen: Ricardo Villegas Londoño: email: r_villegas@hotmail.com Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez: email: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com     Producido por: Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez Podcast URL: https://apelaez.podbean.com/ Web site: https://www.avenetsa.com email: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com   Redes Sociales Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alejandropelaezr/ Twiter: https://twitter.com/apelaez Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Avenetsa/   Créditos Music by: Fontanez / Doug Maxwell - Urban Lullaby Fotografía: https://www.juanjalvarez.com

Transformación Digital
E46 Microsoft Office, versiones disponibles y su licenciamiento en 7 minutos

Transformación Digital

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2020 7:10


El Office es la herramienta de oficina y productividad mas popular del mundo, este conjunto de herramientas pensadas para hacer los trabajos de oficina es ofrecido por Microsoft en diferentes versiones que permiten ajustar el presupuesto a las necesidades de las empresas en cada uno de sus puestos de trabajo.  En este episodio Ricardo Villegas explica cuales son las diferentes opciones de licenciamiento de la suite Microsoft Office. Si quiere ajustar su presupuesto puede elegir entre diferentes grupos de opciones que incluye la suite de Microsoft Office identificando las necesidades y eligiendo adquirir solo lo que necesita su compañía. A continuación, encontrará las 5 ediciones disponibles - Office Hogar y EstudianteIncluye Excel, Word Power Point y One Note - Office Hogar y EmpresaIncluye Excel, Word Power Point, One Note y Outlook (para empresa) - Office ProfesionalIncluye Excel, Word Power Point, One Note, Outlook y Access - Office EstándarIncluye Excel, Word Power Point, One Note Outlook, Access mas Herramientas de inteligencia Profesional PlusIncluye Excel, Word Power Point y One Note Outlook y Access mas Herramientas de inteligencia Si quiere profundizar sobre la Suite de Microsoft Office, aspectos legales y licenciamiento lo invitamos a escuchar los siguientes episodios relacionados: Transformación Digital E31 Experiencias y retos de la Transformación Digital en las pequeñas empresas (Pymes) con Santiago Osorio E30 Hablando de Transformación Digital en Básica E21 El rol de la educación en la transformación digital E17 Conversatorio sobre la nube con Ricardo Villegas Londoño Normatividad y aspectos legales del software E40 La Privacidad en un mundo digital E28 Normatividad y aspectos legales de un mundo global y conectado (Episodio 2 de 2) E27 Normatividad y aspectos legales de un mundo global y conectado (Episodio 1 de 2) Licenciamiento de software E26 Licenciamiento de software orientado a usuario final E20 Licenciamiento de Microsoft SQL Server E18 Licenciamiento de Microsoft Windows Server con Ricardo Villegas  Auditorias de Software: E16 Licenciamiento y auditorías de software Microsoft y otros fabricantes (Episodio 2 de 2) E15 Licenciamiento y auditorías de software Microsoft y otros fabricantes (Episodio 1 de 2)   Conducen: Ricardo Villegas Londoño: email: r_villegas@hotmail.com Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez: email: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com     Producido por: Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez Podcast URL: https://apelaez.podbean.com/ Web site: https://www.avenetsa.com email: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com   Redes Sociales Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alejandropelaezr/ Twiter: https://twitter.com/apelaez Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Avenetsa/   Créditos Music by: Fontanez / Doug Maxwell - Urban Lullaby Fotografía: https://www.juanjalvarez.com

Transformación Digital
E18 Licenciamiento de Microsoft Windows Server con Ricardo Villegas

Transformación Digital

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2019 42:31


En episodio tenemos de nuevo a Ricardo Villegas Londoño sobre uno de los sistemas operativos mas populares del mercado se trata de Microsoft Windows Server. En este panel compartimos algunas historias, impresiones y conceptos alrededor de los inicios de la nube. Durante la conversación se exponen no pocos detalles sobre las diferentes regals del modelo de licenciamiento que Microsoft ha venido actualizando para su sistema operativo que es pieza fundamental para ejecutar muchos de sus productos de software y de programas de otros fabricantes, es por ello que es de vital importancia entenderlo para tener bajo control los riesgos de licenciamiento que pueden tener las compañías. En especial se tratan detalles del licenciamiento en: Máquinas físicas Ambientes virtualizados Maquinas virtuales corriendo en la nube Comparte este podcast, deja tus comentarios y escríbenos que temas quisieras escuchar en este espacio de Transformación Digital. Invitado: Ricardo Villegas Londoño email: r_villegas@hotmail.co Producido por: Alejandro Pelaez Rodriguez Web site: https://www.apelaez.com/podcasts/transformacion-digitalBlog: https://www.apelaez.com/blogemail: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com Redes SocialesInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/alejandropelaezrYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/alejandropelaezrTwitter: https://twitter.com/apelaezFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/alejandropelaezr CreditosMusic by: Fontanez / Doug Maxwell - Urban LullabyFotografia: Juan Jose Alvarez Calle https://www.kreafoto.com

Transformación Digital
E18 Licenciamiento de Microsoft Windows Server con Ricardo Villegas

Transformación Digital

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2019 42:31


En episodio tenemos de nuevo a Ricardo Villegas Londoño sobre uno de los sistemas operativos mas populares del mercado se trata de Microsoft Windows Server. En este panel compartimos algunas historias, impresiones y conceptos alrededor de los inicios de la nube. Durante la conversación se exponen no pocos detalles sobre las diferentes regals del modelo de licenciamiento que Microsoft ha venido actualizando para su sistema operativo que es pieza fundamental para ejecutar muchos de sus productos de software y de programas de otros fabricantes, es por ello que es de vital importancia entenderlo para tener bajo control los riesgos de licenciamiento que pueden tener las compañías. En especial se tratan detalles del licenciamiento en:  Máquinas físicas Ambientes virtualizados Maquinas virtuales corriendo en la nube  Comparte este podcast, deja tus comentarios y escríbenos que temas quisieras escuchar en este espacio de Transformación Digital.  Invitado: Ricardo Villegas Londoño email: r_villegas@hotmail.comConduce: Alejandro Peláez Rodríguez Music by: Fontanez / Doug Maxwell - Urban Lullaby Fotografía: https://www.juanjalvarez.comProducido por: Alejandro Peláez RodríguezPodcast URL: https://apelaez.podbean.com/Web site: https://www.avenetsa.comemail: alejandropelaezr@gmail.com

Datacenter Technical Deep Dives
#vBrownBag US - Microsoft Windows Server 2019 Next Level Hybrid Cloud w/ Thomas Maurer

Datacenter Technical Deep Dives

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2019 64:00


Thomas Maurer returns to the Azure series to discuss Windows Server 2019 and its hybrid cloud functionality. The Microsoft TechCommunity blog is at ITOpsTalk.com Thomas is on twitter at https://www.twitter.com/ThomasMaurer Thomas's website is www.thomasmaurer.ch Join this session for the best of Windows Server 2019, about the new innovation and improvements of Windows Server and Windows Admin Center. Learn how Microsoft enhances the SDDC feature like Hyper-V, Storage and Networking and get the most out of the new Azure Hybrid Cloud Integration and Container features. Youâ??ll get an overview about the new, exciting improvements that are in Windows Server and how theyâ??ll improve your day-to-day job.

Datacenter Technical Deep Dives
#vBrownBag US - Microsoft Windows Server 2008 End of Life: Know Your Options with Phoummala Schmidt @ExchangeGoddess

Datacenter Technical Deep Dives

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2019 56:41


Phoummala Schmidt joins vBrownbag to discuss options for End of Life for Windows Server 2008 and SQL 2008 Reach out to Phommala Schmidt on twitter at https;//www.twitter.com/ExchangeGoddess Visit the End of Support resource center: www.microsoft.com/2008-eos

schmidt end of life windows server know your options microsoft windows server
Intel Conversations in the Cloud
Modernize your IT Infrastructure with Intel Select Solutions for Azure Stack HCI – Conversations in the Cloud – Episode 173

Intel Conversations in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019


In this Intel Conversations in the Cloud audio podcast: Discover the benefits of modernizing your IT Infrastructure with Microsoft Windows Server 2019 and Intel Select Solutions for Microsoft Azure Stack HCI in this latest Conversations in the Cloud with Todd Christ, Enterprise Solutions Architect in Intel’s Data Center Group. Todd talks about how virtualization gives […]

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Cloud Computing – Connected Social Media
Modernize your IT Infrastructure with Intel Select Solutions for Azure Stack HCI – Conversations in the Cloud – Episode 173

Cloud Computing – Connected Social Media

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019


In this Intel Conversations in the Cloud audio podcast: Discover the benefits of modernizing your IT Infrastructure with Microsoft Windows Server 2019 and Intel Select Solutions for Microsoft Azure Stack HCI in this latest Conversations in the Cloud with Todd Christ, Enterprise Solutions Architect in Intel’s Data Center Group. Todd talks about how virtualization gives […]

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Intel CitC
Modernize your IT Infrastructure with Intel® Select Solutions for Azure Stack HCI*--CitC Episode 173

Intel CitC

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2019 17:13


Discover the benefits of modernizing your IT Infrastructure with Microsoft Windows Server 2019 and Intel® Select Solutions for Microsoft Azure Stack HCI* in this latest Conversations in the Cloud with Todd Christ, Enterprise Solutions Architect in Intel’s Data Center Group. Todd talks about how virtualization gives customers more flexibility and elasticity in their data center, and allows their systems to be more fluid and provide solid uptime. He also discusses the impact that moving to Microsoft Windows Server 2019 will make on performance, security, and memory. Todd provides an overview of the updated Intel Select Solutions for Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (formerly known as Microsoft Windows Server Software Defined), which combine Intel-based hardware with software from Microsoft to form the basis for simplified, low-cost, hyperconverged infrastructure. Tailored to the different compute, memory, and storage needs at the edge and in the data center, he discusses the benefits of adding 2nd Generation Intel® Xeon® Scalable processors and Intel® Optane™ DC persistent memory to these solutions and how they can help IT organizations optimize performance, reduce evaluation time and cost, and deploy faster. To learn more about Intel Select Solutions for Azure Stack HCI, go to: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/solutions/select-solutions/cloud.html

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Techradarportal
En säkrare och enklare Servermiljö

Techradarportal

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2019 35:52


Nu är lösningen äntligen här! Microsoft Windows Server 2019 tillsammans med HPE ProLiant Gen10 servrar levererar nyheter och uppdateringar som stödjer företagens behov idag och i framtiden. Företag som vill ha förbättrad säkerhet, förbättrad effektivitet, bättre dataanalys och flexibiliteten att migrera till molnet ska verkligen se Windows Server 2019 som det självklara valet. Välkommen till Techradar – Din portal och ledstjärna inom IT och tech, där vi pratar djupt och brett med härligt surr och mycket skratt. Det här är framtidens podcast 2.0 – Nu kör vi! I studion vår programledare Micke Thunander, till vardags komiker med förkärlek till prylar och teknik. Gäster i studion idag är Johnny Lindholm, Solution Architect på Tech Data och Magnus Wetterberg, Category Manager för HPE Compute på HPE. I dagens avsnitt ska vi prata om Windows Server 2019 och HPE ROK

En Liten Podd Om It
En Liten Podd Om IT - Avsnitt 199 - Håkan Hellström-funktionen

En Liten Podd Om It

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2019 80:32


Om Shownotes ser konstiga ut så finns de på webben här också: https://www.enlitenpoddomint.se/e/en-liten-podd-om-it-avsnitt-199. Avsnitt 199 spelades in den 27:e januari. Och eftersom det är dagen innan Karl har namnsdag handlar avsnittet därför om följande. FEEDBACK OCH BACKLOG:* Johan har spenderat första hela veckan hos sin nya arbetsgivare, och nya kund.* David har varit på konsert och letat trådfri-saker på IKEA.* Huawei är ett nationellt säkerhetshot.* Ready Player One finns nu hos Netflix och ViaPlay.* Star Trek Discorvery finns oxå hos Netflix.* American Gods finns hos Amazon Prime. MICROSOFT:* Windows Server 2019 finns nu att ladda ned som ISO.* Nya versionen av Office 365 sparar dokumenten i OneDrive automagiskt.* Office 365-applikationerna finns i Mac App Store. Och det är rött! APPLE:* Nya överöronhörlurar från Apple som inte heter Beats.* Airpods 2 kommer snart.* Apple anställer en batterisnubbe från Samsung.* Använd din iPhone och dina Airpods som hörapparat. GOOGLE:* Direktkoppling mellan din Chromebook och din telefon. ÖVRIGA NYHETER:* Spotify kan filtrera bort artister.* Nya Amazon Alexa får Zigbee-stöd.* Über startar ett lojalitetsprogram. PRYLLISTA:* David vill ha en fotoram. Johan tipsar honom om "MagicMirror2" och DakBoard.* Johan vill ha en LEGO Millennium Falcon. Fortfarande. Men kan tänka sig en Rocketboard. EGNA LÄNKAR:* En Liten Podd Om IT på webben: http://enlitenpoddomit.se/* En Liten Podd Om IT på Facebook https://www.facebook.com/EnLitenPoddOmIt/  LÄNKAR TILL VART MAN HITTAR PODDEN FÖR ATT LYSSNA: * Apple Podcaster (iTunes)* Overcast* Acast* Spotify* Stitcher (Tack för att du orkade läsa så här långt!!)

Intel CitC
Fujitsu, Intel and Microsoft Work Together to Drive Data Center Modernization - CitC Episode 163

Intel CitC

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019 13:46


Learn what Fujitsu, Intel, and Microsoft are doing together to drive data center innovation in this Chip Chat Conversations in the Cloud episode with Marcel Schuster, Senior Product Marketing Manager for PRIMERGY Server & Product Related Services at Fujitsu. Marcel talks about Fujitsu’s PRIMERGY Server line-up and how they are workload optimized at the core of all digital transformation. He also discusses the benefits of Fujitsu’s deep collaboration with Intel and the impact Microsoft Windows Server 2019 will have on IT Infrastructure. To learn more, go to: http://www.fujitsu.com/global/products/computing/servers/primergy/ https://blog.global.fujitsu.com/digital-transformation-the-top-5-factors-for-smes-to-consider/

Intel Conversations in the Cloud
Modernize with Windows Server 2019 and Intel Select Solutions – Intel Conversations in the Cloud – Episode 160

Intel Conversations in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2018


In this Intel Conversations in the Cloud audio podcast: Jeff Woolsey, Principal Program Manager of Windows Server and Hybrid Cloud at Microsoft, joins Conversations in the Cloud to discuss the importance of IT modernization and how Microsoft Windows Server 2019 will impact performance, security, and scalability. He also talks about Microsoft’s partnership with Intel to […]

Intel CitC
Modernize with Windows Server 2019 and Intel Select Solutions - Intel CitC Episode 160

Intel CitC

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2018 11:33


Jeff Woolsey, Principal Program Manager of Windows Server and Hybrid Cloud at Microsoft, joins Conversations in the Cloud to discuss the importance of IT modernization and how Microsoft Windows Server 2019 will impact performance, security, and scalability. He also talks about Microsoft’s partnership with Intel to create Intel Select Solutions for Windows Server Software Defined Storage and how its unique benefits meet the ongoing demands of the hybrid cloud. To learn more visit www.intel.com/Cloud or www.microsoft.com/azure.

Enterprise Security Weekly (Video)
Signal Sciences, Zscaler, and Google Cloud - Enterprise Security Weekly #63

Enterprise Security Weekly (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2017 26:36


Google Cloud acquires Bitium, Ixia extends cloud visibility, Lacework announces Microsoft Windows Server support, Signal Sciences joins Splunk's Adaptive Response Initiative, and more enterprise security news! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode63 Visit http://securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

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Enterprise Security Weekly (Audio)
Enterprise Security Weekly #63 - Temporal Tempura

Enterprise Security Weekly (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2017 41:11


Paul and John discuss network security architecture. In the news, Google Cloud acquires Bitium, Ixia extends cloud visibility, Lacework now supports Microsoft Windows Server, and more on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly!Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode63 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

Paul's Security Weekly TV
Signal Sciences, Zscaler, and Google Cloud - Enterprise Security Weekly #63

Paul's Security Weekly TV

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2017 26:36


Google Cloud acquires Bitium, Ixia extends cloud visibility, Lacework announces Microsoft Windows Server support, Signal Sciences joins Splunk's Adaptive Response Initiative, and more enterprise security news! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode63 Visit http://securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

google cloud zscaler lacework signal sciences microsoft windows server ixia enterprise security weekly bitium es episode63 visit
Paul's Security Weekly
Enterprise Security Weekly #63 - Temporal Tempura

Paul's Security Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2017 41:11


Paul and John discuss network security architecture. In the news, Google Cloud acquires Bitium, Ixia extends cloud visibility, Lacework now supports Microsoft Windows Server, and more on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly!Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode63 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

Soveltoradio
Jakso 3: Windows Server 2016, mitä kuuluu?

Soveltoradio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2017 26:55


Senior-konsultti Heikki Bergius kertoo tässä Soveltoradion jaksossa Microsoft Windows Server 2016:n uusista ja parannetuista ominaisuuksista sekä käy läpi asioita, joita palvelinhallintaa tekevän IT-ammattilaisen kannattaa osata.

En podd om teknik
31: Det finns inget som åldras så väl som tekniknyheter

En podd om teknik

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2016 92:25


Ett flong nytt avsnitt där vi avslöjar hur en vanlig vardag kan se ut för oss, vilka verktyg vi använder dagligen och hur vi får tiden att gå tillsammans med teknik. Vi följer även upp Jezpers TV-äventyr och tipsar om lite sköna TV-spel. Pinterest https://se.pinterest.com/ Unravel http://www.unravelgame.com/ Firewatch http://www.firewatchgame.com/ The Witness http://the-witness.net/ This War of Mine http://www.11bitstudios.com/games/16/this-war-of-mine En podd om teknik-community på PS4 Gå till användaren “kottkrig” och via honom, gå till En podd om teknik-gemenskapen 1Password https://agilebits.com/onepassword John Oliver och Snowden https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzGzB-yYKcc XKCD https://xkcd.com/936/ Threes http://asherv.com/threes/ Monument Valley http://www.monumentvalleygame.com/ Installera Airsonos i 18 enkla steg http://www.johanl.se/post/airsonos/ Sonos http://sonos.com Philips Hue http://meethue.com Atom https://atom.io/ Google Chrome http://google.com/chrome Tower https://www.git-tower.com/ GitLab https://gitlab.com Microsoft OneNote https://www.onenote.com/ Spotify http://spotify.com Noizio http://noiz.io/ Day One http://dayoneapp.com/ Netflix http://netflix.com HBO Nordic https://se.hbonordic.com/ Playstation 4 http://playstation.com Airmail http://airmailapp.com/ Todoist https://todoist.com/ AppleTV http://apple.com/tv f.lux https://justgetflux.com/ Microsoft Windows Server http://microsoft.com/windowsserver Microsoft SQL Server http://microsoft.com/sqlserver Microsoft Access http://microsoft.com/office/access Microsoft Office http://microsoft.com/office Magnus feature watch http://enpoddomteknik.se/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/magnus_feature_watch.jpg Smile Software promo code: enpoddomteknik http://smilesoftware.com En podd om teknik Hemsida Skicka feedback En chatt om teknik Donera Om oss Social media En podd om teknik på Twitter En podd om teknik på Facebook Jezper på Twitter Johan på Twitter Magnus på Twitter Tommie på Twitter  

Hyper-V-Server Podcast
Microsoft Virtualisierungs Podcast Folge 24: Interview mit einem Private Cloud Evangelisten und einem MVP Virtual Machine

Hyper-V-Server Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2012 49:48


In dieser Folge habe ich direkt zwei Interviews: Zum Einen spreche ich mit Bernhard Frank über die Microsoft Windows Server 2012 IT-Camps die gerade in sechs deutschen Städten gelaufen sind und zum Anderen habe ich den taufrischen und glücklichen MVP für Virtual Machine Thomas Maurer am Mikrofon. Zusätzlich habe ich in der Folge wieder viele Links […] Der Beitrag Microsoft Virtualisierungs Podcast Folge 24: Interview mit einem Private Cloud Evangelisten und einem MVP Virtual Machine erschien zuerst auf Hyper-V Server Blog.

HP TechCast
HP Tech Cast #6: Microsoft Windows Server 2012

HP TechCast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2012 59:56


On Tuesday, Microsoft officially launched Server 2012 to the public. This was a low key launch with a landing page with keynote videos. After, we got on HP Tech Cast with a few bloggers to talk about the “Cloud OS”. Calvin Zito joins me with bloggers John Obeto, Jason Lopez and Hans Vredevoort. We talk […] The post HP Tech Cast #6: Microsoft Windows Server 2012 appeared first on Geekazine.com.

tech microsoft server microsoft windows server geekazine calvin zito
IT-cast.de – Das Videoportal für die Praxis in der IT » Podcast Feed
Videointerview mit Benny Tritsch zu RDS in Windows Server 2012

IT-cast.de – Das Videoportal für die Praxis in der IT » Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2012 13:49


Das deutsche Microsoft Windows Server 2012  Community Event wurde in Bad Homburg von Beny Tritsch und mir gehalten. Benny ist MVP für RDS und deshalb habe ich die Chance genutzt und Ihn zu den Neuerungen auf dem Gebiet der Remote Desktop Services in Windows Server 2012 befragt. Viel Spaß bei unserem Interview.

interview mvp gebiet neuerungen ihn rds community events windows server bad homburg virtualisierung microsoft windows server remote desktop services
RunAs Radio
Danielle and Nelson Ruest on Virtualization in Small Business

RunAs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2008 36:19


Richard and Greg talk to Nelson and Danielle Ruest of Resolution Enterprises (www.reso-net.com) about implementing virtualization technologies in small businesses. Nelson and Danielle are the authors of the book Microsoft Windows Server 2008: The Complete Reference.

small business virtualization microsoft windows server
Datacenter of the Future
Overview of New Security Features in Windows Server 2008

Datacenter of the Future

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2007 7:21


Microsoft Longhorn, otherwise known as Microsoft Windows Server 2008 has a lot of new features, especially deployment and security features. Today we’re talking about Bitlocker. No, it isn’t a place where you keep all your bits. It is an important component Longhorn that adds two cool new features: Whole disk encryption and secure startup. But how does it work? Listen to Chip Webb, OS Server Engineering Technologist at Dell.

Datacenter of the Future
How Ready Are You to Upgrade to Microsoft Windows Server 2008?

Datacenter of the Future

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 9:58


There has been a lot of buzz about Server 2008, otherwise known as Longhorn. But the question on many IT peoples’ minds is whether their infrastructure is ready for it. Wouldn’t it great if there was a tool that would let you know? Fortunately a Readiness Advisory Utility is available that scans your infrastructure and lets you know just how ready you are, and where there are areas that need work before upgrading. So listen to some expert advice from Jemilson Pierrelouis, who is a senior software engineer at Dell, and one of those who is developing the Utility.