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vCloud Disaster Recovery White paper published

Alan Renouf and Aidan Dalgleish have written a white paper on how to automate the failover of your vCloud environment. This case study is a really interesting read, with some really cool concepts in it. Definite recommended reading for anyone looking to automate the disaster recovery of there vCloud infrastructure and provide business continuity. Click here to read the whitepaper VMware vCloud Director® enables enterprise organizations to build secure private clouds that dramatically increase datacenter efficiency and business agility. Coupled with VMware vSphere®, vCloud Director delivers cloud computing for existing datacenters by pooling vSphere virtual resources and delivering them to users as catalog-based services. It helps users build agile infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) cloud environments that greatly accelerate the time to market for applications and the responsiveness of IT organizations. Resiliency is a key aspect of any infrastructure, it is even more important in IaaS solutions. This technical paper was developed to provide additional insight and information regarding the use of VMware vSphere PowerCLI™ to automate the recovery of a vCloud Director–based infrastructure. In particular, it focuses on automation of the recovery steps for vCloud Director 1.5–managed VMware vSphere vApp™ workloads. The recovery of management components can be achieved using VMware® vCenter™

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vCloud vApp Design and Use Case – Part 3

This article is part 3 of my vCloud vApp design considerations and use cases definition. Click here to read Part 1 and Part 2 In this follow on article we will look at some more of the use cases for vApp’s and what type of vCloud Director networking they will use. Use Case 3 – vApp Network (Routed) You would typically use this configuration where there is a requirement for connectivity between multiple vApps but in addition a requirement to provide controlled segregation between them.  In this example multiple vApps of the same configuration can be deployed without risk of conflict due to the firewall and NAT capability being introduced.  vApps will have connectivity to an isolated Organization network for inter vApp connectivity, but there is no external connectivity available and all network traffic within the Organization is isolated at Layer 2. If you think of a training environment, where you have a three tier application, with say an Oracle back end database server, changing the IP address on these servers would cause lots of issues and would have to be re-configured everytime you deployed it.  Using this method, you can deploy the same vApp multiple times without ever having

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RISC OS RC 8 Released

Published on March 25, 2013 by in RISC OS

They are coming thick and fast at the minute, the latest update to RISC OS for Raspberry PI is available for download now. This page contains links to SD card images for various operating system distributions. The minimum size SD card you can use is 2GB, but it is recommended to get a 4GB SD card or above. For each distribution, we provide both a direct HTTP download, a torrent file and a SHA-1 hash; the total number of concurrent direct downloads is limited, so we encourage you to use the torrent file if at all possible. It’s helpful to us if you download the torrent from this page, because it means we can see how many downloads are going on and use that to make rough predictions about sales. If you’re a total beginner and the above paragraph makes no sense at all to you, please come to the beginners’ section of our forum, where you can ask questions and members of our very friendly community will do their best to help you out. For anyone not sure about what the Raspberry PI or RISC OS is, click on the names for more information, they are awesome little pieces

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Michael Owen to retire – my farewell

Published on March 20, 2013 by in Randomness

I have read the news today that Michael Owen is going to retire at the end of the season in May. BBC Sport reported here. To begin with, this post has nothing to do with Virtualization or technology in any way but I felt the need to publish my thoughts on this special football player.   Former England striker Michael Owen is to retire from football at the end of the season. Owen, 33, who scored 40 goals in 89 internationals, played for Liverpool, Real Madrid, Newcastle United and Manchester United and is now at Stoke. He said: “It is with an immense amount of pride that I am announcing my intention to retire.” Now this makes me feel old today. I have grown up with watching Michael Owen in an England shirt. He was awesome. I actually got to see him play at Wembley in 2007 against Russia when he scored an absolute blinder! He will be missed. He is missed. England needs an out and out striker with his talent and ability. Rooney and Defoe are no where near! Everyone has said he could have achieved so much more if it wasn’t for injury, but I believe he has

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Show Hidden files on Mac OS X in Finder

Published on March 18, 2013 by in MAC OS X

This has already been blogged quite a few times by people, however I regularly have to google how to Show hidden files on Mac OS every time I re-build my Mac or buy a new one. Thanks to OSXDaily for the original information. Show Hidden Files on Mac OS X Launch terminal defaults write com.apple.Finder AppleShowAllFiles TRUE killall Finder Make sure you restart the finder by doing the killall command. If you want to hide the files again, follow these instructions: defaults write com.apple.Finder AppleShowAllFiles FALSE killall Finder Not much too it, just wish I could remember the command!

 
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