Mind Mapping. Big Data Tools. Hide My Ass! Free Proxy and Privacy Tools - Surf The Web Anonymously. To some people, maybe it doesn’t. To others, it matters a whole lot. The logging policy can be viewed symbolically: a VPN’s commitment to logging as little as possible is representative of their respect for your privacy and how seriously they approach the issue of protecting your data.
For example, for a lot of people, a VPN logging exactly what time they turn the VPN on or off might not be a matter of much concern: but our unwillingness to do even that hopefully signals just how earnestly we protect the data that is generally viewed as more sensitive. Bearing in mind that it takes considerable effort to reduce logging, and even costs us a not-inconsiderate amount of money to pull off, the value of underlining our commitment to your privacy comes down to illustrating our principles as much as bolstering our marketing. It’s proof that we mean what we say and say what we mean. Code rant. Platform as a Service Magazine | Latest PaaS News in a Magazine. Coté's People Over Process - One foot in the muck, the other in utopia.
John has been playing with Cloud Foundry a lot of late, so we go over that and PaaSes in general. Download the episode directly right here, subscribe to the feed in iTunes or other podcatcher to have episodes downloaded automatically, or just click play below to listen to it right here: Show Notes Cloud Foundry – a container of containers. “You need a ruby guy, for sure.”What is a PaaS exactly? A Lou Gerstner interludeCoté’s favorite Asymco.com chart, again.John uses Spot Cloud – and lives to tell!
How many levels of wonder does Amazon have? DevOps workshops – what people really want is to go right to the cool stuff, e.g., “let’s go install something! Transcript As usual with these un-sponsored episodes, I haven’t spent time to clean up the transcript. Michael Coté: Well, hello everybody. John Willis: John Willis at johnmwillis.com, or more recently at dtosolutions.com. Michael Coté: And you’ve been keeping busy over there I understand, like doing stuff. John Willis: Yeah, there you go. Steve Vinoski’s Blog.
Rediscovering Distributed Systems March 23rd, 2014 | Published in distributed systems | Bookmark on Pinboard.in As an editorial board member for Internet Computing magazine one of my duties is to occasionally write the “From the Editors” column, so for the March/April 2014 issue I contributed the article “Rediscovering Distributed Systems” (PDF). The idea behind the article is that many production systems today are distributed systems, and so more developers are taking a look back at all the distributed systems research from the past few decades so they can try to avoid reinventing the wheel. The brief article goes through a few important distributed systems papers, and also includes references to other sites and resources for learning more about distributed systems.
CUFP 2013 Erlang Web Tutorial On Monday Sep. 23, 2013, I’ll be giving a tutorial on Erlang web development at the Commercial Users of Functional Programming (CUFP) conference in Boston. Hope to see you there!