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Why Netflix Is One of the Most Important Cloud Computing Companies

Brandon Butler writes "Netflix, yes the video rental company Netflix, is changing the cloud game. During the past two years the company has pulled back the curtains through its Netflix OSS program to provide a behind-the-scenes look into how it runs one of the largest deployments of Amazon Web Services cloud-based resources. In doing so, the company is creating tools that can be used by both entire business-size scale cloud deployments and even smaller test environments. The Simian Army, for example randomly kills off VMs or entire availability zones in Amazon's cloud to test fault tolerance, Asgard is a cloud resource dashboard and Lipstick on (Apache) Pig, is a data visualization tool for the Hadoop program; there are dozens of others that help deploy, manage and monitor the tens of thousands of VM instances the company company can be running at any single time. Netflix is also creating a cadre of developers who are experts in managing cloud deployments, and already its former employees are popping up at other companies to bring their expertise on how to run a large-scale cloud resources. Meanwhile, Netflix does this all in AWS's cloud, which raises some questions of how good of a job it's actually doing when it can be massively impacted by cloud outages, such as the one on Christmas Eve last year that brought down Netflix's services but, interestingly, not Amazon's own video streaming system, which is a competitor to the company."

6 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. Netfilx works by MpVpRb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While I watch Netflix, I sometimes think about all of the magic that must be going on behind the scenes to deal with varying delivery speed

    In almost all cases, my video entertainment proceeds, uninterrupted

    As a guy who has worked with video streaming at the lowest level, I have nothing but respect for their tech

    1. Re:Netfilx works by KhabaLox · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's no small feat the transcoding automation they must have built to take the mezzanine files that they get delivered to them and create the packages of multi-bitrate, DRM-wrapped files that the consumer eventually sees. There are only a handful (maybe only 3) of companies that can do this on any type of scale.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
  2. Open Source by Bradmont · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It frustrates me that a company that relies so heavily on open source technologies on the server totally snubs users of those same open source technologies on the Desktop.

  3. Re:DRM Hell by Desler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So you would have rather had no Netflix support in Android or ChromeOS? Because there would be no support at all without DRM. Such is the nature of the beast.

  4. Re:DRM Hell by readingaccount · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I like how you say the movies are shitty, as if you know what the poster (and other Netflix users) watch. Saying they're shitty is somehow supposed to enhance your position - to suggest that they're not worth it anyway to offset the DRM aspect.

    Let's face it, hardware locked "trusted computing" phones and other hardware are the norm and getting worse no matter WHAT we do. We don't have the influence to tell every other person out there to not buy them - telling people to not enjoy life and modern technology over some ideological issues that really aren't that bad in the first place isn't going to work. Heck, as I get older I find myself less and less caring as well as more important things take priority in my life.

    We can't stop locked hardware trends because the companies are too powerful. Fight battles that can be won.

  5. Re:DRM Hell by lgw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why shouldn't it be? Because you think it's yucky? Standards document what multiple vendors do, to help them do it the same way. That's all - they do not endorse, or make moral judgments.

    Basically, successful standards usually take what vendors have working just fine without a standard and standardize it. Just making things up because they sound good and trying to impose them leads to fiascos like the previous HTML "standards", where half the endpoints didn't remotely comply.

    Avoiding things that Xtifr finds yucky is unproven at best as a method for making a successful standard.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.