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BotchagalupeMarks for July 30th – 09:50
By John | July 31, 2009
These are my links for July 30th from 09:50 to 16:12:
- RiverMuse | Everything is a Freaking DNS problem – Rivermuse is the new Fault Management platform tool on the market, their initial relase was lurking around the corner for a while now but since earlier this week it finally arrived
- Tools for Psychology and Neuroscience « Open source cognitive science – Open source tools make new options available for designing experiments, doing analysis, and writing papers. Already, we can see hardware becoming available for low-cost experimentation. There is an OpenEEG project. There are open source eye tracking tools for webcams. Stimulus packages like VisionEgg can be used to collect reaction times or to send precise timing signals to fMRI scanners. Neurolens is a free functional neuroimage analysis tool.
- Building a Private Cloud within a Public Cloud – One of our customers wanted to establish a site to site connectivity between their datacenter and public cloud (Amazon EC2) and then have a private network within Amazon EC2 with their own custom IP addresses for their servers in the cloud. Basically idea here is to augment the internal datacenter resources with the resources in the public cloud securely so that the servers in the cloud appear as if they are part of their own private corporate network. The idea here is to isolate the servers used by the customer in the cloud from the rest of the servers in the cloud using private network, just like the corporate internal datacenters are isolated using private network with private routers routing the internal traffic.
- CloudCamp Boston: Inching to the next phase | The Pervasive Datacenter – CNET News – To be sure, I read a few online commentators who were of the opinion that the material in the formal part of the event–CloudCamp is organized as a combination of pre-organized talks and an unconference format–was far too basic. However, a lot of the questions I heard and conversations I had at the event suggest to me that a lot of people are still trying to get their heads around the basic concept of cloud computing. As a result, it behooves those of us who work with this stuff on a daily basis to remember that not everyone is quite so immersed.
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