From Rachel Chalmer’s 2003, coverage of Novell buying “SuSE” (451 client access required):
Historically, Novell’s Achilles’ heel has been its inability to keep its independent developer community happy. Some fled NetWare for OS/2, which IBM botched in its turn. Meanwhile, Microsoft was happy to embrace and pamper NetWare and OS/2 burn victims as independent software vendors for Windows. Now developers are asking themselves whether Novell has learned its lesson, or whether it’s about to make the same mistake again.
Posts in "BigCo"
A $50m super computer for $33k
Amazon today operates at a scale that most people are unaware of and find incomprehensible when they get a glimmer of understanding of it. Just to offer an example, one weekend Cycle Computing used EC2 spot instances to create a 156,000 core supercomputer that spanned 8 AWS regions and provided 1.2 Petaflops of processing power. In its presentation, Cycle noted the tremendous cost savings this offered: $33,000 instead of the $50 million plus it would have cost if the equipment were purchased.
A $50m super computer for $33k
Amazon today operates at a scale that most people are unaware of and find incomprehensible when they get a glimmer of understanding of it. Just to offer an example, one weekend Cycle Computing used EC2 spot instances to create a 156,000 core supercomputer that spanned 8 AWS regions and provided 1.2 Petaflops of processing power. In its presentation, Cycle noted the tremendous cost savings this offered: $33,000 instead of the $50 million plus it would have cost if the equipment were purchased.
A $50m super computer for $33k
Amazon today operates at a scale that most people are unaware of and find incomprehensible when they get a glimmer of understanding of it. Just to offer an example, one weekend Cycle Computing used EC2 spot instances to create a 156,000 core supercomputer that spanned 8 AWS regions and provided 1.2 Petaflops of processing power. In its presentation, Cycle noted the tremendous cost savings this offered: $33,000 instead of the $50 million plus it would have cost if the equipment were purchased.
Cloud is hard
Cloud is really, really hard. Just read the headlines – enterprises and traditional IT vendors are struggling.
Cloud is hard
Cloud is hard
Cloud is really, really hard. Just read the headlines – enterprises and traditional IT vendors are struggling.
Cloud is hard
Cloud is hard
Cloud is really, really hard. Just read the headlines – enterprises and traditional IT vendors are struggling.
Cloud is hard
There's big expectations mis-alignment in OpenStack-land
While this dude’s tone is pretty harsh, there’s not too much wrong here if you peel that back. The issue is one of contextualizing OpenStack. I think a lot of people want it to be a finished, done product.
There’s even the sense from some OpenStack die-hards I’ve spoken with over recent years that commercializing at this point is a joke: it’s too early. I don’t think any of them realize that’s what they’re thinking, but when you hear about modularity and customization, it’s a good sign that the person is implying “it’s not fully baked yet” (though not always).
There's big expectations mis-alignment in OpenStack-land
While this dude’s tone is pretty harsh, there’s not too much wrong here if you peel that back. The issue is one of contextualizing OpenStack. I think a lot of people want it to be a finished, done product.
There’s even the sense from some OpenStack die-hards I’ve spoken with over recent years that commercializing at this point is a joke: it’s too early. I don’t think any of them realize that’s what they’re thinking, but when you hear about modularity and customization, it’s a good sign that the person is implying “it’s not fully baked yet” (though not always).
There's big expectations mis-alignment in OpenStack-land
While this dude’s tone is pretty harsh, there’s not too much wrong here if you peel that back. The issue is one of contextualizing OpenStack. I think a lot of people want it to be a finished, done product.
There’s even the sense from some OpenStack die-hards I’ve spoken with over recent years that commercializing at this point is a joke: it’s too early. I don’t think any of them realize that’s what they’re thinking, but when you hear about modularity and customization, it’s a good sign that the person is implying “it’s not fully baked yet” (though not always).