On Fri, Oct 1, 2021 at 12:20 AM Stefan Hajnoczi <stefa...@redhat.com> wrote:

> On Thu, Sep 30, 2021 at 03:57:49PM +0000, Eldon Stegall wrote:
> > Hello!
> > I'd be happy to help with this. I'm mostly a consumer of QEMU, but
> > greatly appreciate all the work this community has done, and was able
> > to contribute a little by helping with QEMU advent this past year. I
> > would be happy to help streamline some of this activities if that would
> > be welcome, and would gratefully contribute time and resources. Hosting
> > and serving data like this has been core to my recent experience.
> >
> > I would be happy to suggest and build out a distribution strategy for
> > these packages, and believe I could cut some costs, and even convince a
> > small consultancy I am a part of here that uses QEMU to foot a
> > reasonable bill.
> >
> > A brief introduction, since I haven't had the pleasure of attending
> > FOSDEM or any other QEMU meetups: I am a startup-oriented Cloud Security
> > Architect, based out of Atlanta, previously with companies like
> > DataStax, but now working on AWS video pipelines for a startup here.
>
> Thanks for joining the discussion and for running last year's QEMU
> Advent Calendar, Eldon.
>
> Any ideas for moving download.qemu.org to a hosted service would be
> appreciated! We haven't compared CDN and cloud providers closely yet. If
> you have experience in this area or time to check them out, then that
> would be valuable.
>
> QEMU has funds if there is a cost for file hosting (probably less than
> $100/month). Some providers may be willing to support an open source
> project for free. Possible providers include CloudFlare, Akamai, Fastly,
> Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Storage, etc.
>

https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/opensource/aws-promotional-credits-open-source-projects/

Let me know if ya'll apply and I'm happy to push it through.

Regards,

Anthony Liguori

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