23%
22.08.2011
have been created over the last few years, including Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3), and JiffyBox. In the US, they are joined by providers such as Go
23%
30.11.2025
few years, including Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3), and JiffyBox. In the US, these vendors are joined by providers such as GoGrid, Rackspace, and Terremark
23%
18.07.2013
Lustre on top of ZFS [3] and reaching about 850GBps. Marc talked about moving data from older systems to Sequoia and some of the issues the team faced (it wasn't easy). His talk inspired me to examine
23%
30.11.2025
container. As its popularity increased and the server became more widespread, the JBoss community expanded and extended the product until, finally, application server version 3 (AS3) became a full
23%
09.06.2018
into dedicated hardware. This trend will only exacerbate with the arrival of 200/400-gigabit Ethernet (GbE) in 2019, and 800GbE shortly after that; hence, the window for CPU offload will remain open
23%
11.10.2016
for another editor.
ex
Ex [1] was written by Bill Joy [2] in 1976 as something of a replacement for the original *nix editor named ed [3] (ed was developed in 1969). Bill Joy modified a development of ed
23%
06.10.2019
the Debian-based, distributions install it along with openvpn – one exception being Ubuntu, which only offers easy-rsa starting with Cosmic Cuttlefish (Ubuntu version 18.10) [3].
The successor, Easy-RSA 3
23%
11.06.2014
of output provide information about the search and the type of output:
# extended LDIF
# LDAPv3
# base with scope subtree
# filter: (objectClass=olcDatabaseConfig)
# requesting: olc
23%
19.10.2012
is US$ 3.1/hour.
Thus, using the small usage case (80 cores, 4GB of RAM per core, and basic storage of 500GB) would cost US$ 24.00/hour (10 Eight Extra Large Instances). The larger usage case (256 cores
23%
04.11.2011
with AMD, IBM, and NVidia) submitted a specification to the Khronos Group, which promotes the OpenGL specification. Open Computing Language 1.0 (OpenCL) was released late in 2008 [3].
OpenCL now provides