If you're interested in cloud computing (for your business, as a potential
path to a career, etc.), you should consider attending this event:

Cloud computing promises significant computing power with high efficiency at
low cost, but there are potential hazards in moving to the cloud. You're
depending on remote third parties for potentially mission-critical
operations, data storage, and data security, and you're facing a diminished
expectation of privacy. No business should take "moving to the cloud"
lightly.

Join local Austin experts in a discussion of potential cloud computing risks
and issues. Admission is free.

Presented by EFF-Austin, http://effaustin.org
When: 7pm, March 3, 2009
Where: Ventana del Soul Cafe and Cultural Center, Texas Espresso Ballroom,
1834 E. Oltorf St., Austin.
http://www.ventanadelsoul.org/map-and-directions/
Speakers:
W. Scott McCollough, Telecommunications and ISP Law Specialist,
McCollough|Henry, PC
Chris Boyd, Midas Networks
whurley, BMC Software, Inc.
Andrew Donoho, Strategist
Don Jarrell, Digital Thinking, Inc.

Moderator: Jon Lebkowsky, EFF-Austin, Social Web Strategies

If you're not familiar with the subject, here's more:

Cloud computing is a kind of computing that through which functional
real-time resources and tools are provided over the Internet. Users of these
services don't have to manage the technology infrastructure that supports
them - it's server based, generally provided through a web browser acting as
a "thin client." Google Apps and Google Docs are well-known examples. Google
offers word processing, spreadsheets, presentation development, and email
over the web. The software runs on Google's servers, and the data is stored
there. Users only need Internet connectivity and a browser to access
Google's applications.

Another example is Amazon, which found real efficiency in cloud
architectures, and started providing access to their systems via web
services in 2002.

The "cloud" is the Internet - that's how it's shown in network diagrams.
This suggests that the complex infrastructure is not visible to users, it's
"in a cloud." Some believe that many business IT services will move to the
cloud because per-use services offer greater efficiency.

-- 
Jon Lebkowsky
Social Web Strategies | http://budurl.com/socialwebstrategies
Mobile 512 762-6547
Twitter: http://twitter.com/jonl | LinkedIn: http://budurl.com/jonl
Blog: http://budurl.com/weblogsky
Think and do tank: http://plutopia.org/

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