All of Carlos Armas' Content on InfoQ
Latest featured content by Carlos Armas

- Topics
- SLA,
- QCon San Francisco 2009,
- policy,
- Business Process Management,
- QCon,
- Operations,
- Cloud Security,
- SOA,
- Business,
- Enterprise Architecture,
- Conferences,
- Infrastructure,
- Cloud Computing,
- Architecture,
- Security
Treb Ryan, CEO of OpSource, speaks on many cloud topics including security, SLA, policy compliance, advancing the cloud into the enterprise, the current need for hybrid solutions and the impact of cloud computing on the IT taskforce.
News by Carlos Armas
- Topics
- DSLs,
- Ruby,
- Domain Specific Languages,
- Dynamic Languages,
- Languages,
- Operations,
- Deployment / Datacenter,
- Linux,
- Management,
- Architecture,
- Infrastructure,
- Programming,
- Operating Systems
The team at Reductive Labs recently announced the release of version 0.25.2 of Puppet, the open source Ruby-based configuration management and automation tool for Linux and Unix servers. In this software bug-fix release, 123 open tickets were closed, and the developers claim a reduced memory footprint, improved error reporting, threading, and lock contention (a source of reported system hangs).
- Topics
- Amazon Web Services,
- MySQL,
- Amazon,
- Operations,
- Relational Databases,
- IaaS,
- Companies,
- Architecture,
- Infrastructure,
- Cloud Computing,
- Database,
- Database Replication,
- Maintenance,
- Amazon SimpleDB,
- Amazon RDS
Amazon recently added a new MySQL database offering to their Amazon Web Services (AWS) platform named Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS). InfoQ explores the benefits and shortcomings of this new service, how it compares to running a local MySQL database, maintenance and replication, the 4-hour weekly downtime window requirement, availability zones, and future plans.
- Topics
- Operations,
- Deployment / Datacenter,
- Architecture,
- Infrastructure,
- MySpace,
- SSD,
- HDD,
- Benchmark
MySpace and Fusion-io recently announced they are working together to reduce datacenter operations costs. Using Fusion-io's ioDrive SSDs, MySpace replaced 150 standard load servers, and reduced their number of heavy load servers from 80 to 30. Overall a reduction of 51% in server footprint was achieved, and MySpace will replace over 1700 of their remaining 2U servers as they reach end-of-life.