|
Google Opens Its Infrastructure
(TechwebNews.com Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)
InformationWeek Daily - Thursday, April 10, 2008
Google Opens Its Infrastructure
Google this week began a limited beta test of its new
Google App Engine, a platform for developing and running Web applications. Its arrival into the infrastructure-as-a-service space will surely not go unnoticed by Amazon.com, which appears to be building a significant business selling computing power by the drink through Amazon Web services.
Google's arrival on the scene offers developers the chance to test out Google's vaunted infrastructure for themselves. Much has been made of the competitive advantage Google enjoys because of its ability to deploy and link commodity hardware to form a superfast, redundant network. It will be interesting to see whether there's substance to the mystique, or whether Amazon, as its people have claimed, runs an equally impressive, though less storied, IT operation.
It's probably only a matter of time before Microsoft gets into the act. Microsoft, after all, has been shadowing Google's moves for a while now, and it's hard to image that the hypercompetitive Steve Ballmer wants to cede the cloud computing platform space to Amazon, Google, and a few plucky startups.
And that's great news for developers. With so many options emerging, deploying online applications has never been easier.
But developers looking to travel the path of least resistance should pay close attention to the risks of depending on someone else and to the limitations imposed by terms-of-service contracts. We're talking about outsourcing your infrastructure, after all.
Google embraced open sourcesoftware as a way to control its own destiny, without being subject to contractual hindrances. For startups that aim high, that want to compete with Google rather than be bought by it, there's still something to be said for building everything yourself.
What do you think? Leave a comment here .
Thomas Claburntclaburn@cmp.comwww.informationweek.com
"When there is an income tax, the just will pay more and the unjust less." -- Plato
Adobe Joins Content Fray With Media Player 1.0 And Adobe TV
Adobe believes it has an edge over rivals Windows Media Player, RealPlayer, and iTunes by not constraining users by platform or proprietary software.
Related Stories:
Microsoft Adds Adobe Flash Lite To Windows Mobile
Adobe Revs Acrobat For Windows Vista And Office 2007
Sun, Fujitsu Target Data-Centers With UltraSparc T2 Plus Servers
The T5140 and T5240 systems allow up to 128 virtual servers per system to help customers in data center consolidation.
Microsoft Releases 'Critical' Security Updates For Windows, Explorer
One of the key vulnerabilities involves a weakness in Microsoft's VBScript and JScript scripting engines.
Yahoo To Purchase Web Analytics Firm IndexTools
Yahoo expects the acquisition to add insight and metrics for the more than 150,000 businesses advertising through the portal.
Yahoo Reportedly In Talks To Use Google Search Ads
The partnership signals a search on Yahoo's part for potential alternatives to being bought by Microsoft.
AMD Makes Quad-Core Opteron Broadly Available
The chipmaker also said that Hewlett-Packard is shipping ProLiant G5 servers powered by the quad-core Barcelona processor.
Adobe Joins Content Fray With Media Player 1.0 And Adobe TV
Adobe believes it has an edge over rivals Windows Media Player, RealPlayer, and iTunes by not constraining users by platform or proprietary software.
Yahoo Launches Video On Flickr
Users can upload up to 90 seconds of footage, with a maximum size of 150 MB, from any recording device.
Google Groups Still Littered With Malware-Infected Explicit Videos
Sunbelt Software CEO Alex Eckelberry says the problem is directly tied to hacks of Google's CAPTCHA security.
Global Group Ranks U.S. Internet Economy Fourth
The Global Information Technology Report's multivariable index rated the United States higher than other studies that focus solely on broadband capacity or data speeds.
Berggi Adds Video To Its Mobile Mix
The free service, which is compatible with any handset with Java-based MIPD 2.0, features video jockeys' playlists that change on the hour, a la MTV.
Verizon Connects Smartphones, PBXes
The company's PBX Mobile Extension software turns BlackBerry devices and other mobile handsets into extensions of the corporate voice environment.
Google Earth, U.N. Commission Reveal Plight Of Refugees
The collaboration is designed to identify what issues are present and where humanitarian efforts are needed.
All Our Latest News
See InformationWeek's daily breaking news on your mobile device, visit wap.informationweek.com and sign up for daily SMS notifications.
Sun, Fujitsu Target Data-Centers With UltraSparc T2 Plus Servers
Microsoft Releases 'Critical' Security Updates For Windows, Explorer
Yahoo To Purchase Web Analytics Firm IndexTools
Yahoo Reportedly In Talks To Use Google Search Ads
AMD Makes Quad-Core Opteron Broadly Available
Virtualization At The Desktop?
Examine how more than 250 companies plan to adopt server virtualization technology in this recent InformationWeek Research report, Server Virtualization.
The BI Explosion
Examine the business intelligence strategies of 500 companies, including deployment drivers and challenges, spending plans, and vendor selection, in this recent InformationWeek Research report.
Content Players Look To Social Computing For New Sources Of Revenue
Has social computing become the enterprise software vendor's strategy to avoid a recession? It's evident there's a rush to help organizations become better collaborators. If you stick 2.0 behind any typical enterprise-oriented term, you've probably heard all the versions. ECM 2.0, knowledge management 2.0, and, of course, the party favorite, Enterprise 2.0. The real question is whether we'll see real revenue as these types of systems are rolled out.
Outspring Posts Fixes To Mac E-Mail Client That Learns By Watching You
Outspring Mail, a mail client that learns by watching you, got an upgrade recently that fixed some bugs in an early version, and also clarified its pricing. The software is available for an introductory price of $59.
Symantec Buying AppStream
The biggest news out of ManageFusion so far? Symantec bought AppStream last night & is rolling 'em into the newly formed 'Endpoint Virtualization' group.
Nokia N810 Hacked To Run Android, HTC To Debut 'Dream' Phone In May?
News about Android is slowly beginning to gather steam anew. First up, some developers have decided they can't wait for it to be finalized and hacked their Nokia N810 Linux-based Internet tablets to run the Android platform. On top of that, HTC has invited a bunch of journalists to a special event in early May. HTC doesn't usually party it up too much, so this could be the introduction of its Android-based 'Dream' phone.
VIA'S Turn To Open Up
Slowly, more and more hardware manufacturers are getting clued-in on the idea that open source drivers will help both them and their customers. Now VIA's stepping up to start offering driver source code for many of their current chipsets. Pop the champagne!
Which Is Better, T9, SureType, Or Qwerty?
If you use your phone to send SMS, IM, or e-mail messages frequently, surely you've run into all three types of text input. Rita El Khoury over at Symbian-Guru laid out her thoughts about T9. I fall into the qwerty camp, though I was pretty good with SureType. Which do you use, and why?
Google's Gears Needs More Cogs On The Wheel
As an everyday user of Google Docs, I was excited when Gears finally became available so that I could write while offline. I downloaded and installed Gears on both my computers, but in the end it was a waste of time. Right now Gears only supports Reader for me; I haven't been granted access to Docs in an offline mode yet. And this brings me to my big complaint: Google, why announce new features when not everyone can use them?
Google Docs Adds 'Save As PPT'
Either Google read my harangue from a couple of weeks ago or this was already long in the works. You can now save Google Presentations as PowerPoint files. That's one more reason to give cloud computing a shot.
Wheeling And Dealing
With the RSA conference on the West Coast competing with Storage Networking World in Orlando, Fla., this week, there are just a couple of vendors big enough to straddle both realms. Any guesses? Both have figured prominently in the tech headlines in the last 48 hours.
Online Storage: Security Risk Is MinimalInformationWeek security reporter Thomas Claburn questions the security of online storage services. Do online storage services pose a grave security risk?
Interoperability Breakdown: Who's To Blame? IMAP Or E-Mail Vendors?
In the e-mail world, where possible, I used to urge organizations to stick with the Internet-standard Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) instead of using the addictive proprietary alternatives from Microsoft and IBM Lotus (found in Outlook/Exchange and Lotus Notes). Now, thanks to Google's GMail service, I realize I may have been mistaken.
Business Case for Performance Management Systems
This research report is designed to help HR and line managers understand the business drivers and benefits of such systems - to aid in the development of the business case and planning process for selecting and implementing such systems.
How Operations Supports Business Service Management
This webinar explains how IT operations are becoming increasingly focused on business, and it will demonstrate how a new Business Service Platform can process metrics to support Business Service Management initiatives.
Intelligent Merchandising: Creating a Unique Shopping Experience, Part 1
Learn how you can how you can hook customers with fresh, unusual and relevant shopping experiences. Drive customer loyalty by training, empowering and providing employees with the technical tools to capture the nuances of customer behaviour.
Featured Jobs:
Broadcom seeking Sr Staff Software Development in Irvine, CA
Accenture seeking Java Developer in Minneapolis, MN
Comcast Cable seeking Senior Manager, Project Management in Manchester, NH
Label-Aire seeking Software Engineer in Fullerton, CA
Columbia Law School seeking Web Editor/Designer in New York, NY
For more great jobs, career-related news, features and services, please visit our Career Center.
Try InformationWeek's RSS FeedDiscover all InformationWeek's sites and newsletters
Recommend This Newsletter To A Friend
Do you have friends or colleagues who might enjoy this newsletter? Please forward it to them and point out the subscription page.
More than 20,000 IT terms, more than 20,000 definitions:
All at your fingertips, all in TechEncyclopedia
Saw a TechWeb feature you want to see again?
You are subscribed as #emailaddr#. To unsubscribe from, subscribe to, or change your E-mail address for this newsletter, please visit the InformationWeek Subscription Center.
Update your subscriber profile.
Note: To change your E-mail address, please subscribe your new address and unsubscribe your old one.Keep Getting This Newsletter
Don't let future editions of InformationWeek Daily go missing. Take a moment to add the newsletter's address to your anti-spam white list: InfoWeek@update.informationweek.com
If you're not sure how to do that, ask your administrator or ISP. Or check your anti-spam utility's documentation. Thanks. We take your privacy very seriously. Please review our Privacy Policy.
InformationWeek Daily Newsletter
A free service of InformationWeek and the TechWeb Network.
Copyright (c) 2008 United Business Media LLC
600 Community Drive
Manhasset, N.Y. 11030
? 2008 | United Business Media LLC | Privacy Statement | Terms Of Service
Copyright ? 2008 CMP Media LLC
[ Back To TMCnet.com's Homepage ]
|