Wednesday April 22, 2009
Offshore monitoring of windfarms using GlassFish - MySQL Users Conference 2009 Day 3
John Powell from eMapSite
stopped by at the Whisper
Suite in MySQL
Users Conference earlier today to talk about his GlassFish
issue. The possible workaround was suggested and then the discussion
became interesting on how GlassFish is used for offshore monitoring of
windfarms and process weather forecasting data. Hear all about it and
watch a flashy demo of their product in this video:
NetBeans,
GlassFish, and MySQL
is their development stack with a "very positive experience"!
Stay tuned for the stories
entry.
And the complete picture album is available at:
Technorati: conf
mysqlconf
mysql
santaclara
glassfish
netbeans
Posted by Arun Gupta in General | Comments[1]
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| LOTD #21: Production Deployment Tips for running Rails on GlassFish v2 using Windows
SeaChange
Affinity uses Rails and GlassFish
as their deployment platform. One of their core developers posted
tips based upon their experience so far and they are
available at:
Rails
on GlassFish v2 using Windows
Here are some of the quotes:
Glassfish can really
handle a heavy load
and
handling 400
simultaneous users under a supremely heavy load, the
memory was holding great
All previous links in this series are archived at LOTD.
Technorati: lotd
glassfish
jruby
rubyonrails
windows
Posted by Arun Gupta in web2.0 | Comments[0]
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| MySQL Users Conference 2009 Day 3 - Cloud Shootout
I arrived at the MySQL
Users Conference just in time for the The
Great Open Cloud Shootout.
| Thorsten | Fully automatbale computing infrastructure, changes the way production scale deployments operate, saves time/cost, increases reliability |
| Chander | Elasiticity is an important aspect, Can "shoot for the moon without shooting foot", accessing a pool of resources which is infinite from an individual/organization perspective |
| Monty | Much like electricity/network bandwidth, applying that same model to computing resources |
| Jeremy | Virtualization is an important piece |
| Lew | Not new technology, rather a new way of delivery. As a developer, provision the application through the code. |
| Monty | It's for you |
| Thorsten | Amazon launched, mostly for geeks. 2007 -> Amazon skeptical and RightScale gets VC funding, 2008 -> some common usage, 2009 -> Top-down from CIOs. Basically everybody, cross-organiation, vertical |
| Mike | Horizontal technology opportunity, starting to see mainstream applications including ISVs/primary line of business, interest/adoption is growing |
| Chander | Definitely growing for ISVs, makes backup sexy, "Even though running a backup company, expected to be entertaining" |
| Jeremy | Power outlets are shaped differently, technology has not matured enough. Next few years standardization will happen. |
| Monty | People will never notice it exists, but able to access the information |
| Prashant | Putting/Sharing the data on cloud |
| Monty | All of a sudden facebook traffic, leverage a collective of people who are already investing in an effort |
| Lew | Cloud computing based on virtualization |
| Mike | More & more enterprises moving in the cloud, gain durability & resilience which was not an option because of a single data center |
| Jeremy | Legacy apps are easiest to move into cloud, they are better understood and can scale easily |
| Prashant | Cloud is the right approach/dream, not there yet. Traditional apps can be moved into cloud. |
| Thorsten | Flexibility in development and tests, DBA clone another slave server with exactly the same setup to test out schema changes |
| Monty | Spin up EC2 instances, run the tests and shut them down ... everything in approx $1. Give it back to the cloud and make it more efficient for the world in general. |
| Lew | We are making it so affordable, cost can be 10% of what it was before. |
| Chander | Performance, a customer requested a refund where they were trying to shove a 1TB in an hour. US is 6Mbps, needs to significantly increase before it can be utilized. |
| Thorsten | Compute needs to move where the data is. |
| Chander | Most businesses will find bandwidth/redundancy limited. Customer always need to customer where not to use cloud and set expectations accordingly |
| Lew | Financially sensitive applications, owning your own data center |
| Chander | Trust and privacy, it's more about education though. Encryption is going tobe a key. |
| Jeremy | Competitiion, unless other companies battle it out and making it easy to to migrate from one service to other, it'll be difficult. Avoid vendor lockin. |
| Mike | Based on open industry standards, no deep rooted concern in the user community |
| Thorsten | Way to operate across different clouds, API is not the most important level. What is a server ? Can I hibernate it, mount it, how much storage volume is allowed, cross-data center boundary are a better abstraction. |
| Lew | Very early to lock the standards, everybody is currently in a stage of experiementation |
| Monty | Potential downside to premature standardization, too early to jump to standards |
| Chander | Open standards are a definite key to success. S3 fostered innovation. |
| Thorsten | S3 is a good standard but not an open API. It will be doubly nice if it's "free" or "open" or whatever the word is. |
| Mike | Standards dont really matter if the performance cannot be met. When innovating at a rapid rate, it' difficult to make everybody agree upon standards. |
| Lew | At least publish the API where everybody can use them. |
| Chander | Showing backup to Sun cloud, Sun has S3 compatible APIs, also compatible to WebDAV. |
| Monty | You can |
| Mike | Very unique and compelling business opportunity. Amazon Dev Pay: Buy infrastructure on demand, setup your software on AMI, set your own price and then customers can use it, "Software as a Innuity" |
| Chander | Traditional backup vendors will be worried. |
| Prashant | Database on the cloud |
| Lew | Seeing an explosion in the amount of data/compute required, accordingly analytics. Tremendous amount of opportunity when Cassandra & Drizzle are cloud-enabled. |
| Mike | More ISVs in the cloud. |
| Jeremy | How to do performance tuning and optimizations in cloud, do that for major cloud infrastructure. |
| Monty | Freedom to work from anywhere, don't need to be physically at the datacenter, enables multinational consulting |
| Chander | When more clouds become available, it'll be explosion which will happen later this year. |
| Jeremy | CPU time in terms of use, storage centric clouds pay for integrity |
| Lew | Creating Data centers with loading docks. |
| Monty | Paying for CPU cycle, like mainframe model. |
| Thorsten | Cloud is like mainframe but very elastic. |
| Chander | Billing is not a challenge, storage clouds are better because of pricing, compute is challenging |
| Thorsten | Flexibility of moving to the next volume, master, slave makes is very refreshing |
| Monty | Start out thinking M x N problems, never think about one database instance in cloud, there will be X > 1 |
Posted by Arun Gupta in General | Comments[6]
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