Categorized | Wireless

OSCON 2010 Mobilizes

O’Reilly Media’s Open Source Developers Conference, taking place in Portland, Ore., this week with hundreds of speakers and lots to see and do. Here is the OSCON Blog, the OSCON 2010 Schedule, Keynotes, Events, Health Information Technology, BOF Sessions, and a Cloud Summit. Some OSCON tutorials will be live-streamed, although they require a registration fee.

OSCON’s Mobile sessions explain how to target all major mobile platforms with open source.

In a significant advance for open source cloud computing, Rackspace has announced OpenStack Computer. Robert Scoble explains it all. It means the end of lock-in for cloud customers. You can take your cloud-based apps somewhere else. Competitors who are using OpenStack can run their own (compatible) cloud infrastructure.

Rackspace collaborated with NASA to build the open reference platform for Amazon-style cloud computing under an Apache licence. Initial community sponsors include 25 companies like Dell and Intel.

OpenStack’s mission is to “produce the ubiquitous OpenSource Cloud Computing platform that will meet the needs of public and private clouds regardless of size, by being simple to implement and massively scalable.”

T $400 million, National Science Foundation-funded Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI), now being built along the West Coast of the United States, will use Amazon Web Services with two 10 Gbps connections to Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) and Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2)

Underwater sensors, powered by 10 KiloVolt cables carrying 10 Gbps data from a Shore Station on the coast of Oregon, will “bug” the ocean, forming an undersea network stretching from Canada to California.

The Cascadia Subduction zone has regularly generated 9+ earthquakes with associated tsunamis and is wired to Node 4, while Node 3 runs out to the Axial Seamount, an active undersea volcano 300 mi west of Cannon Beach. The 10GigE fiber runs from a Shore Station in Pacific City, Oregon to the Pittock Building in Portland, and on to the Ops Center at the U/Washington. Hopefully, OOI’s CyberInfrastructure and access policies won’t devolve into a SIAC party, managed by vested interests.

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