Bump. :)

I would also like to see the "Features" list updated:

-Slaves in mesos are fault tolerant as well. (we only say the master is
fault tolerant in the copy).
-Should we highlight Docker support?
-Containerization and Isolation are now flexible and pluggable.
-Resource monitoring.
-We're also aware of ports and disk as resources.
-Authorization support.
-Would be great to call out isolation support (e.g. including namespaces).
-Replicated log as a library?


On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 8:47 AM, Benjamin Hindman <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I believe it's high time to update the our website with some new copy (what
> we have presently hasn't been updated for a while), and I wanted to reach
> out to you for feedback in the hopes of making some improvements before
> MesosCon (and my talk!).
>
> While I've always felt the most apt description for Mesos was as a "kernel"
> in order to emphasize the power of the primitives for building new
> distributed systems, in the earliest days I tended on the conservative side
> with my choice of language as I felt it was easier for folks to grasp
> Mesos.
>
> But I feel like our project is at a level of maturity where that is less of
> a concern, and my gut is that we should really embrace the kernel messaging
> in order to leave folks with the right first impressions about the
> technology, especially with respect to what it facilitates today and what
> we hope it will facilitate tomorrow.
>
> I've pasted some new copy below that I'd love feedback on. We haven't
> really done much of a review process for the website in the past, but I
> thought I'd share this more widely in order to get any feedback before
> making any updates.
>
> Looking forward to seeing many of you at MesosCon this week!
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Headline:
>
> Program against your datacenter like it’s a single pool of resources.
>
> Subhead:
>
> Apache Mesos abstracts CPU, memory, storage, and other compute resources
> away from machines (physical or virtual), enabling fault-tolerant and
> elastic distributed systems to easily be built and run effectively.
>
>
> Distributed Systems Kernel
>
>
> Mesos is a distributed systems kernel built using the same principles as
> the Linux kernel, only at a different level of abstraction. The Mesos
> kernel runs on every machine and provides applications (e.g., Hadoop,
> Spark, Kafka, Elastic Search) with API’s for resource management and
> scheduling across entire datacenter and cloud environments.
>

Reply via email to