Tag Archive for: building

VMware and EMC promise app building platform for Amazon, other clouds

Pivotal Senior VP Scott Yara discusses building apps across clouds.
Pivotal

VMware and EMC recently spun out several cloud computing and big data product teams to form a new, jointly owned subsidiary called “Pivotal.” Today, Pivotal said it has begun operations and will deliver a set of platform-as-a-service (PaaS) cloud products called Pivotal One, making it easier to build enterprise applications on a variety of cloud services.

Pivotal One will be sold “as a unified platform in Q4 2013,” according to a Pivotal data sheet, but some of the products it includes are already available today. One of those is VMware’s Cloud Foundry PaaS software, which will soon be able to operate on both Amazon Web Services and VMware-based cloud networks.

“One of the things we’re going to deliver this quarter is a version of Cloud Foundry showing this cloud-independent model where, at cloudfoundry.com, we’ll be running on both an Amazon infrastructure as well as VMware’s cloud infrastructure at the same time,” Scott Yara, senior VP of Pivotal’s platform and products, said on stage at a company announcement. Pivotal CEO Paul Maritz (and former VMware boss) also stressed the importance of working across different clouds, calling them the “modern equivalent of hardware.”

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Airborne intelligence: U.S. Army building NextGen surveillance planes

In a Maryland laboratory at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Army scientists, engineers and program developers are working on the Army’s next-generation surveillance aircraft, the Enhanced Medium Altitude Reconnaissance and Surveillance System (EMARSS). This NextGen flying spy [PDF] is a “C-12 based, direct support, manned airborne intelligence collection, processing, and targeting support system.
Ms. Smith’s blog

Is it common to minimize JavaScript usage when building a website?

This Q&A is part of a weekly series of posts highlighting common questions encountered by technophiles and answered by users at Stack Exchange, a free, community-powered network of 80+ Q&A sites.

Ryan asks:

I’ve been a web developer for almost 10 years and I’ve gotten into the habit of trying not to use JavaScript whenever possible. I’m not talking about building web apps here, but database driven websites.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

NSA: Building a More Secure Android – eSecurity Planet


eSecurity Planet

NSA: Building a More Secure Android
eSecurity Planet
But what is less well-known is that the U.S. government's National Security Agency (NSA) is among the teams working to improve Android security. Speaking at the LinuxCon North America 2012conference, NSA developer Stephen Smalley detailed how the

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