Archive for the ‘Cloud Hosting’ Category

VMwareCloud Server Company Shavlik Technologies

Monday, May 16th, 2011

VMware this morning announced that it has agreed to acquire Shavlik Technologies, a provider of cloud server IT management solutions for small and medium businesses.

The terms of the acquisition were not disclosed but valued in the muti-millions.  Shavlik is said to have more than 3500 customers using it’s cloud hosting platform and cloud products.  Their SaaS-based management solutions helps enable SMBs to manage, monitor and secure their IT environments when moving to virtual and cloud computing IT deployments

VMware and Shavlik already had a partnership in place with regards to the former’s VMware GO product, a joint SaaS offering that has been available since 2009 and basically assists SMBs with the installation and management of VMware’s vSphere.

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Tumblr Cloud Hosting

Monday, May 9th, 2011

Tumblr is a service that lets you effortlessly share anything that was founded by David Karp in 2007. Post text, photos, quotes, links, music, and videos, from your browser, phone, desktop, email, or wherever you happen to be. You can customize everything, from colors, to your theme‘s HTML.

Tumblr is also a very scalable website and therefore is a great customer for cloud hosting.  With all the 1000’s of new blogs that are posting . This easy to us microblogging platform that allows users to post text, images, videos, links, quotes and audio to their tumblelog, a short-form blog. Users can follow other users, or choose to make their tumblelog private. The service emphasizes ease of use.

In my opinion the Tumblr cloud server platform would better suit them for their cloud hosting needs. Tumblr website hosting is important to the millions of people that use the system.

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What Really Happend with the Amazon Cloud Server

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

Around 1AM PST on Thursday April 21st 2011, one of the four availability  cloud hosting zones in the AWS US East region experienced a network fault that caused connectivity failures between EC2 instances and EBS.

This event triggered a failover sequence wherein EC2 automatically swapped out the EBS volumes that had lost connectivity with backup copies. At the same time, EC2 attempted to create new backup copies of all of the affected EBS volumes (they refer to this as “re-mirroring”).

While this procedure works fine for a few isolated EBS failures, this event was more widespread which created a very high load on the EBS infrastructure and the network that connects it to EC2. To make matters worse, some AWS users likely noticed problems and began attempting to restore their failed or poorly performing EBS volumes on their own.

All of this activity appears to have caused a meltdown of the network connecting EC2 to EBS and exhausted the available EBS physical storage in this availability zone. Because EBS performance is dependent on network latency and throughput to EC2, and because those networks were saturated with activity, EBS performance became severely degraded, or in many cases completely failed. These issues likely bled into other availability zones in the region as users attempted to recover their services by launching new EBS volumes and EC2 instances in those availability zones. Overall, a very bad day for AWS and EC2.

Article thanks to Cloud Harmony

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