Depending on the dates, I might be able to fly out and give a presentation on the internals of Red Hat's OpenShift. Below is a quick abstract from the talk I am giving at Fosdem in a few weeks. I could also give a presentation on mobile application development using MongoDB as your remote datastore.
ABSTRACT You're using IaaS to build a large scale, multitenant, hosted service. At the end of the day, you're hosting other people's code in some form. Your environment needs to be dynamic to properly utilize IaaS capabilities and meet user expectations. You need it to stay secure and controlled. Your users need to stay isolated from each other without feeling restricted. You need to control orchestration, workload management and security. You need to orchestrate to respond to changes in scale or failures at the IaaS level. You need workload management to control the resources a single user can consume and how contention is managed. Lastly, you need users to have access to as much as possible so they feel in control without risking your control of the overall system. Come to this meetup to see how OpenShift uses MCollective for orchestration, SELinux for segmentation, Linux Control Groups for workload management and some core operational fundamentals applied to cloud architectures to tackle this challenge. On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 11:21 PM, Tod Hansmann <[email protected]>wrote: > On 1/22/2012 9:01 PM, Steve Meyers wrote: > > Does anybody have a topic they'd be willing to present on, or ideas of > > who I could contact to present? I've been working on a couple people, > > but I'm not sure I'll be able to get either of them nailed down for > > February. > > > Have we had a presentation on FreeSWITCH? Gabe Gunderson would give a > good presentation on that, I think. If he's unwilling, I could give an > entry-level overview of it, though I don't know how rewarding it would > or would not be. VoIP is an interesting topic that becomes more > relevant as we go, and I think it's a solution space for a lot of > business needs that we would do well to get into, especially if we can > avoid just learning Asterisk and calling it good. > > -Tod Hansmann > > /* > PLUG: http://plug.org, #utah on irc.freenode.net > Unsubscribe: http://plug.org/mailman/options/plug > Don't fear the penguin. > */ > /* PLUG: http://plug.org, #utah on irc.freenode.net Unsubscribe: http://plug.org/mailman/options/plug Don't fear the penguin. */
