Posts Tagged ‘Usage Models’

feature: Cloud platform choices: a developer’s-eye view

feature: Cloud platform choices: a developer’s-eye view



Cloud computing is one of the most hyped technology concepts in
recent memory, and, like many buzzwords,
the term “cloud” is overloaded and overused. A while back Ars ran an
article

attempting to clear some of the confusion by reviewing the cloud’s
hardware underpinnings and giving it a proper definition, and in this article I’ll flesh out that picture on the software side by offering a brief tour of the cloud platform options available to development teams today. I’ll also discuss
these options’ key strengths and weaknesses, and I’ll conclude with some
thoughts about the kinds of advances we can expect in the near term.
In all, though, it’s important to keep in mind that what’s presented here is just a snapshot. The cloud is evolving very rapidly—critical features
that seem to be missing today may be standard a year from now.

Before I begin, it’s worth noting one of the key reasons for the confusion that surrounds cloud computing. Unlike most hot tech trends that attain buzzword status, the aspects of the cloud that make it a truly new form of client-server (e.g., rapid scalability from a few resource units to tens of thousands, metered usage models, the ability to access resources from any Internet-connected device, low barriers to client entry, etc.) also make it impossible, at least from a developer’s perspective, to pin down into traditional “enterprise,” “small to medium business,” or “consumer” boxes that the IT world traditionally thinks in terms of. Enterprises, SMBs, and tiny startups, and lone coders all run their code on the cloud platforms described below. It’s true that each category of user faces different parameters and constraints when deciding how and where to use cloud services, and I’ll reference a few of the issues that enterprise users face in the article below. But just because the basic perspective of this article is that of enterprise IT, much of the material has relevance to non-enterprise users, as well.

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Archos releases developer edition firmware for Internet Tablets

Archos releases developer edition firmware for Internet Tablets

According to a press release dated this morning, Archos is making proof-of-concept “developer edition” firmware available for its ARCHOS 5 and ARCHOS 7 Internet Media Tablets. Based on the Angstrom Linux distribution, this is by no means a commercial distro (no multimedia software) but since you’re taking it upon yourself to code the next great multimedia / social networking / productivity / time travel app anyways, you don’t really want to be bogged down by such pedestrian fare. According to the PR, the company “eagerly anticipates seeing its hardware platform used as a foundation for creating exciting new usage models and applications that the developer community brings.” And so do we! Read all about it after the break.

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Archos releases developer edition firmware for Internet Tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 28 Nov 2009 11:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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