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Life on the EEEdge: Daily life with Asus' tiny laptop 04 January, 2008 07:15:21
6 annoying things (and 3 great ones) about Asus' ultraportableLike many gearheads, I've owned a lot of portable computers over the years -- and I've wanted to replace every last one with a smaller, sleeker upgrade, from the "luggable" Apple IIc onward. But most of those upgrades have left me disappointed: with the lack of software; with cheap, hard-to-use interfaces; and with "optional" add-ons that were in fact very much necessary to make the machine useful. - +
Everything you need to know about Microsoft certs 31 December, 2007 07:16:29
Certification guru Patrick Regan explains the new Microsoft certs and reveals which Cisco, project management and security certs are worthwhile.Moderator-Julie: Welcome and thank you for coming. Our guest today is certification guru Patrick Regan. Patrick has penned over a dozen books, written the study guides for the A+ certification exams for Cisco Press and is currently writing an Exam Cram on Windows Server 2008. When not writing books, Patrick is a senior network engineer at Pacific Coast Companies supporting a large enterprise network and a celebrity blogger for Microsoft Subnet. We are giving away 15 free copies of Patrick's latest book, too. Go to the contest page for details. Now onto the chat. - +
DRAM prices may hit speed bump on way down 30 November, 2007 07:24:22
Prices may not rebound until second quarter next yearUsers should not be fooled by a possible stabilizing in DRAM prices in coming weeks because it's only a speed bump on the way down, analysts say. - +
IBM files trade complaint against Asustek 07 December, 2007 08:22:48
IBM files a trade complaint against Asustek, alleging patent infringement.IBM has filed a trade complaint in the US against Taiwanese hardware vendor Asustek Computer, alleging that the company has infringed IBM patents. - +
URAM finds place in budding mobile TV segment 11 December, 2007 12:44:23
URAM, a memory technology developed to be embedded on chips, has found a place on mobile TV chipsets developed by Dibcom.URAM (user-RAM), a memory technology developed to be embedded on chips, has found a place on mobile TV chipsets developed by Dibcom.
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December is a relatively slow time of year at MLB Advanced Media, the company that brings you the official Major League Baseball Web sites. From pitch-by-pitch accounts of games to streaming audio and video -- plus news, schedules, statistics and more -- it has baseball covered. Doing so requires serious horsepower, so much so that the company's Manhattan data center is pretty much tapped out in terms of space and power, according to Ryan Nelson, director of operations for the firm. Strategic use of virtualization technology enabled him nevertheless to forge ahead with implementing new products during the 2007 season, and promises to smooth a shift to a new data center in Chicago in time for the 2008 season.
How long have you been using virtualization technology?
It's all pretty new. We are a homogeneous Sun shop, so we're not really touching a lot of the VMwares of the world. One of the big features of Solaris 10 is Solaris Containers and Zones. We started using Solaris Zones in the last year to actually split off server environments, development environments and [quality assurance] environments.
During the 2007 season we got hit with a big new challenge we didn't find out about until the All-Star break, which was to add a chat product. There was pressure to get it lit up before September so fans could chat about the playoff races and use it during the playoffs. But it was a big, ambitious project and I didn't have any rack space or spare power and [there was] no time to order new machines. So, we worked with a company called Joyent in California that provides hosting using virtual zones and virtual storage.
We said to Joyent, 'We need 30 machines; 10 in a development cluster and two more gangs of 10 as big chat clusters.' And so the MLB chat client was basically turned up in a couple of days vs. a month or two that it would have taken us to get somebody to ship and install all these machines. And then we developed like crazy for about a month, tested for another three weeks, then launched it.
At launch time we asked for another 16G bytes of RAM in each server. It scaled very well. When the playoffs and World Series came around, we ordered up 15 more machines and got twice as much memory and processors installed on them, as well as on the ones we already had. Joyent dials all this up and down. As soon as the World Series is over, we call and say, 'Thanks, that was great. Let's scale down to a skeleton crew of these machines.' So, when I have a need for it, we pay for the utilization. When we don't, we don't. We can turn it up and down as we need to.
We can respond to new projects really quickly, and it also lets us try out new products. If our chat product had been a huge failure, we could've turned the whole thing off and it wouldn't have been a big deal. It makes it easy to try new things. We don't have to sign a contract, get approvals and all that.
We can also respond to the seasonal load changes. And we can also respond to differences in the season that we know are coming. In April, we're focusing on registering new users and selling new products. On draft day, I might need to really beef up my stat resources because people are querying our minor-league stats engine to see who this guy is they just drafted. In the middle of July I may need an additional 10 machines to be generating the CAPTCHA images and processing All-Star balloting. All-Star balloting is about four days of crazy database load, and then it goes back to nothing.
Give us a sense of the MLB.com infrastructure.
In terms of Web servers, we have roughly 100 at our New York data center, and we have a second data center in Chicago that is just about to go online that has 130 servers. So, by the time we get cooking on the 2008 season, we'll have in production about 180 of those.
So you're just wrapping up the new center?
We've had it for about a year, but it's been in build-out phase. Part of the reason we're interested in virtualization is because of the power, space and data-center-capacity pain -- we've certainly felt that. We were actually in a facility in Chicago and outgrew it before we got in production, and so moved to another facility from the same company. We knew we would need more floor space and more power. We're finishing it this off-season. Once Chicago comes online, we're going to take much of the New York data center offline and rebuild it.
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Multimedia Technology signs exclusive National distribution agreement with Freecom 07 October, 2008 14:30:00
Symantec State of Spam Report - October 2008 07 October, 2008 11:58:00
AIIA to Reward Sustainability and Green IT Champions at the 2009 iAwards 07 October, 2008 11:56:00
WD Unveils Affordable, High-Capacity Network Storage For Small Offices And Homes 07 October, 2008 11:40:00
Yellowfin Achieves BI Success with Asia Pacific Telcos 07 October, 2008 09:46:00
Bankstown Council streamlines their IT with Microsoft® Windows Server® 2008
Deciding it was time for more streamlined operations, Bankstown Council teamed up with OSS Infotech, a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner. The solution included Microsoft Windows Server, Microsoft SQL Server® and Microsoft Exchange®.









