They're large enough and have enough of a cloud presence that they carry weight. Smaller companies moving to the cloud aren't going to get level of service they're expecting. Unless they pay for it of course, and then they'll find out running it in house would have been cheaper.
This project must have an unrealistically low budget, otherwise there are quite a few Enterprise solutions that will do all OR a combination of these tasks.
> how do you present it back to the clients? Look at a NAS, not a SAN. ie NetApp or 3Par C series.
> And how do you back it up? Disaster Recovery replication to another system or hosted services. NetApp, EMC, 3Par, etc, etc
> Many SAN solutions have a maximum volume limit of only 16TB NetApp Infinite volumes limit is 20PB
You can contact a sales person from any of those companies to answer any of these questions.
The internet is in production. No one wants to touch anything that's already in production unless they literally can't make it any worse. Otherwise we would have IPv6 as well.
Is the target not a zfs filesystem as well? If so zfs send/recv allows for replication and handles deltas at the filesystem level. It should be more efficient.
People doing things that benefit themselves is the very definition of capitalism.
Perhaps you're thinking of Asshole Anarchy.
Central characteristics of capitalism include capital accumulation, competitive markets and wage labor.[3] In a capitalist economy, the parties to a transaction typically determine the prices at which assets, goods, and services are exchanged.[4]
Writing legislation to intervene with the free portion of a free market is the opposite of a capitalism. I would like to benefit myself by using the government sanctioned cable under the ground to create my own ISP. Now go write that into law.
I was going to mention that but I know how much "a certain demographic" shits a brick if you stomp on their circle-jerk. Much like lower IQ animals, if I don't actually say trigger words then they won't clue in. Unfortunately, you did, and now you're getting voted down (as of now).
Communism is just one extreme and and neither extreme is the answer. Just don't mention the S-word around animals that have been "conditioned" by their masters.
There is no such thing as death panels. It is just the insurance company working in "mysterious ways". That out has been working for god since the beginning of time and he gets away with starving children and gruesome deaths of innocent people by the hundreds.
You trade pre-existing support now for death panels later. Have fun. I hope you have a big appetite, because I have a feeling you're going to be eating those words about your "new and improved" healthcare in a few short years.
Ditto for net neutrality should sheep like you have your way.
This is why NEW ideas have such a hard time gaining traction. Save for the fact this isn't a NEW idea. It has been implemented successfully in basically all other modern industrial nations. This is like arguing the superiority of communism after the fall of communism (hopefully the irony of that example sets off the trolls, hahahha).
> Essentially ALL doors made nowadays have a cardboard core.
All doors that poor people buy, that is. Quality is still out there, and as available as it always was, you just have to be willing to pay for it.
This is an internal door, it's not like it needs to be sturdy. Then I realized: the only time you would need a solid oak door for a bathroom.... is the little boys room at the Vatican. (I'll be here all week folks!)
some people have expensive hardware that only works with xp and its NOT practical to rebuy working hardware
Old hardware as in systems without support contracts? Or old hardware with no available parts? So you just wait until the hardware fails AND THEN scramble to get the services back online? Doesn't sound very proactive to me.
Worst case scenario is to virtualize the system and use IO Passthrough for any proprietary cards. But hardware availability should not be a limitation because hardware fails.
This should not have to be explained. Maybe I got trolled.
Physical money isn't used very much even in real life. Less than 5% of US dollars are represented as cash/coins. It is mostly a ledger at a bank (bank account) and the banks are regulated and trusted entities not to cheat or tamper with the ledger (bank accounts).***
If you start with debit/credit cards as your model then Bitcoin is nothing more than a decentralized version of this.
Or another way to put it. If you were really poor and had no physical money. You could pay someone in an IOU and write it in a ledger. That person can pay you back in an IOU as well, but part of the IOUs would cancel out. No money ever changes hands because it never existed. It was just a ledger recording who owed who what.
THERE IS NO BITCOIN. Definitely not physical, but not even virtual! The closest thing is a wallet.
Bitcoin is nothing more than a ledger of transactions. You can't own a bitcoin. You can only own a wallet that has transactions associated with it. You create a wallet with a public and private key. The public key is what people use to increase your ledger count. The private key is what you use to decrease your ledge count by increasing someone else's ledger count..
It's like a fancy excel spreadsheet that tracks debits and credits.
Every time you close off a group of transactions in the ledger there is a pre-determined reward for the group that finds the hash. That reward is an increase in there ledger. That is the ONLY time new ledger entries are allowed that don't have an equal decrease in someone else's wallet.
Goes to show that sometimes it takes laws time to catch up. What value does HFT provide to the economy? Are companies suppose to change direction every 1/100 of a second in response to trades -OR- is it just a method for skimming money?
It wasn't even remotely Google. It's a different company entirely.
One layer of separation is all it takes to lose you?!
I could see if they had a vast network of shell companies spread across multiple countries, LLCs, holding companies, trusts.... nope. One company is all it took to throw you off.
"Dis guy heer bought da gas illegally.... den dis gas dun pumped into dis heer jet marked Google... "
"It wasn't even remotely Google".... you're a mook. I'm going to form an LLC and kick you in the face on behalf of the LLC and then dissolve the company.
They're large enough and have enough of a cloud presence that they carry weight. Smaller companies moving to the cloud aren't going to get level of service they're expecting. Unless they pay for it of course, and then they'll find out running it in house would have been cheaper.
Talking to professionals is the worst thing you can do? I can see why you post as anon.
This project must have an unrealistically low budget, otherwise there are quite a few Enterprise solutions that will do all OR a combination of these tasks.
> how do you present it back to the clients?
Look at a NAS, not a SAN. ie NetApp or 3Par C series.
> And how do you back it up?
Disaster Recovery replication to another system or hosted services. NetApp, EMC, 3Par, etc, etc
> Many SAN solutions have a maximum volume limit of only 16TB
NetApp Infinite volumes limit is 20PB
You can contact a sales person from any of those companies to answer any of these questions.
That never happens: http://www.bestgore.com/murder...
The internet is in production. No one wants to touch anything that's already in production unless they literally can't make it any worse.
Otherwise we would have IPv6 as well.
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E192...
Is the target not a zfs filesystem as well? If so zfs send/recv allows for replication and handles deltas at the filesystem level. It should be more efficient.
Considering this is the country that put melamine in milk and cadmium in toys, this speaks volumes.
I would like to know their official justification.
You actually believe that such a fence would keep people out?
Amazing.
Great Wall of China... Mongols. I rest my case.
actually you do pay the foreign carriers, it's in the postage you have to buy for the letter.
I hate to sound elitist, but if we charged more for the internet maybe it would keep inbred users to a minimum.
People doing things that benefit themselves is the very definition of capitalism.
Perhaps you're thinking of Asshole Anarchy.
Central characteristics of capitalism include capital accumulation, competitive markets and wage labor.[3] In a capitalist economy, the parties to a transaction typically determine the prices at which assets, goods, and services are exchanged.[4]
Writing legislation to intervene with the free portion of a free market is the opposite of a capitalism. I would like to benefit myself by using the government sanctioned cable under the ground to create my own ISP. Now go write that into law.
I was going to mention that but I know how much "a certain demographic" shits a brick if you stomp on their circle-jerk. Much like lower IQ animals, if I don't actually say trigger words then they won't clue in. Unfortunately, you did, and now you're getting voted down (as of now).
Communism is just one extreme and and neither extreme is the answer. Just don't mention the S-word around animals that have been "conditioned" by their masters.
For now I'm going for a W-A-L-K. :)
There is no such thing as death panels. It is just the insurance company working in "mysterious ways". That out has been working for god since the beginning of time and he gets away with starving children and gruesome deaths of innocent people by the hundreds.
You trade pre-existing support now for death panels later. Have fun. I hope you have a big appetite, because I have a feeling you're going to be eating those words about your "new and improved" healthcare in a few short years.
Ditto for net neutrality should sheep like you have your way.
This is why NEW ideas have such a hard time gaining traction. Save for the fact this isn't a NEW idea. It has been implemented successfully in basically all other modern industrial nations. This is like arguing the superiority of communism after the fall of communism (hopefully the irony of that example sets off the trolls, hahahha).
> Essentially ALL doors made nowadays have a cardboard core.
All doors that poor people buy, that is. Quality is still out there, and as available as it always was, you just have to be willing to pay for it.
This is an internal door, it's not like it needs to be sturdy. Then I realized: the only time you would need a solid oak door for a bathroom.... is the little boys room at the Vatican. (I'll be here all week folks!)
Here is the actual bug and arguement: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/s...
some people have expensive hardware that only works with xp and its NOT practical to rebuy working hardware
Old hardware as in systems without support contracts? Or old hardware with no available parts?
So you just wait until the hardware fails AND THEN scramble to get the services back online? Doesn't sound very proactive to me.
Worst case scenario is to virtualize the system and use IO Passthrough for any proprietary cards. But hardware availability should not be a limitation because hardware fails.
This should not have to be explained. Maybe I got trolled.
Physical money isn't used very much even in real life. Less than 5% of US dollars are represented as cash/coins. It is mostly a ledger at a bank (bank account) and the banks are regulated and trusted entities not to cheat or tamper with the ledger (bank accounts).***
If you start with debit/credit cards as your model then Bitcoin is nothing more than a decentralized version of this.
Or another way to put it. If you were really poor and had no physical money. You could pay someone in an IOU and write it in a ledger. That person can pay you back in an IOU as well, but part of the IOUs would cancel out. No money ever changes hands because it never existed. It was just a ledger recording who owed who what.
This explains everything:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
THERE IS NO BITCOIN. Definitely not physical, but not even virtual! The closest thing is a wallet.
Bitcoin is nothing more than a ledger of transactions. You can't own a bitcoin. You can only own a wallet that has transactions associated with it. You create a wallet with a public and private key. The public key is what people use to increase your ledger count. The private key is what you use to decrease your ledge count by increasing someone else's ledger count..
It's like a fancy excel spreadsheet that tracks debits and credits.
Every time you close off a group of transactions in the ledger there is a pre-determined reward for the group that finds the hash. That reward is an increase in there ledger. That is the ONLY time new ledger entries are allowed that don't have an equal decrease in someone else's wallet.
Goes to show that sometimes it takes laws time to catch up.
What value does HFT provide to the economy? Are companies suppose to change direction every 1/100 of a second in response to trades -OR- is it just a method for skimming money?
Oh look, "murder" was outlawed in 1200 B.C., those ideas are so antiquated.
Why is the parent being modded down. That is 100% relevant. This site is going down.
It wasn't even remotely Google. It's a different company entirely.
One layer of separation is all it takes to lose you?!
I could see if they had a vast network of shell companies spread across multiple countries, LLCs, holding companies, trusts.... nope. One company is all it took to throw you off.
"Dis guy heer bought da gas illegally.... den dis gas dun pumped into dis heer jet marked Google... "
"It wasn't even remotely Google".... you're a mook. I'm going to form an LLC and kick you in the face on behalf of the LLC and then dissolve the company.
http://www.corporationwiki.com...
Key roles for H211, LLC
Hillspire LLC
MEMBER
http://www.corporationwiki.com...
Key roles for Hillspire LLC
Eric Schmidt
MEMBER
Active
Schmidt 1997 Children
MEMBER
:)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
They want to send people with no plans of sending any supplies and no plans of sending the necessary life support systems in the first place.
Yeah, I'm seeing major activity from my bullshit meter right now. It's way off the charts.