This link has been bookmarked by 44 people . It was first bookmarked on 08 Apr 2008, by Jeremy James.
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21 Oct 09
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You simply can't load the needed software because you don't have your own servers. This is where Amazon wins big
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15 Jul 09
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13 Jun 09
AppEngine is solidly grounded in code and structure. It reminds me a little of the guy who ran a website out of S3 with a splash of Heroku thrown in as a chaser.
web distributed cloud development GAE HighScalability article resource
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08 Jan 09
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30 Dec 08
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03 Sep 08
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The idea is clearly to take advantage of our massive multi-core future by creating a shared nothing infrastructure based firmly on a core set of infinitely scalable database, storage and CPU services.
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27 Aug 08
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04 Jun 08
Andreas KrohnThe model is pure abstraction. The implementation is pure pragmatism. Your application exists in the cloud and is in no way tied to any single machine or cluster of machines. CPUs run parallel through your application like a swarm of busy bees while wizar
google appengine python cloud django scalability highscalability cloudcomputing delicious
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15 May 08
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09 Apr 08
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Tore HaugeA summary of the new Google service for hosting and running web application (for the time being only Python-based applications are supported, e.g., Django, Pylons and Google own webapp framework.
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08 Apr 08
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ken ."Everything that could have tied you to a machine is tossed. No disk access, no threads, no sockets, no root, no system calls, no nothing but service based access. Services are king because they are easily made scalable" - load balancing et al
amazon development google growth principles programming python services webdesign
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Brent SordylUsing the CGI interface was not mistake. CGI is the perfect metaphor for our brave new app container: get a request, process the request, die, repeat. Using AppEngine you have no choice but to write an app that can be splayed across a CPU grid.
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