If like me, you’ve been struggling to understand the legalese of the Adobe ColdFusion 9 EULA, I have put together a brief and hopefully, helpful summary of what it actually means in in plain English.
Tags: Adobe, Adobe ColdFusion, Adobe Systems Inc, amazon, Cloud Computing, Cloud infrastructure, cloud network, ColdFusion, Computer software, Computing, Multi-core, Rackspace Cloud, Software license agreement, Twitter, Virtual Machine, Virtualization software licensing
The buzz around cloud computing has reached a fever pitch. Some believe it is a disruptive trend representing the next stage in the evolution of the Internet. Others believe it is hype, as it uses long established computing technologies. As with any new trend in the IT world, organizations must figure out the benefits and risks of cloud computing and the best way to use this technology.
Tags: cloud, Cloud Computing, cloud computing community, Cloud computing standards organisations, cloud services, established computing technologies, fever, grid computing, IT technologies, long established computing technologies, on demand, open cloud manifesto, physical hardware, scalability, soa, software orientated architecture, utility computing, Web 2.0
Adobe recently announced, in conjunction with Amazon, that they would bring LiveCycle to Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2).
Tags: Adobe, Adobe ColdFusion, Adobe LiveCycle, amazon, Amazon Web Services, AWS, chief rival, Cloud Computing, ColdFusion, content services, correspondence management, EC2, elastic cloud computing, Google, information technology, infrastructure web services platform, installation of LiveCycle ES Solution Components, Internet-based information technology services, Java, LiveCycle, LiveCycle Enterprise Suite, Podcast, process management, Railo, recent technology trends, S3, server software product, simple storage service, technology infrastructure, term cloud computing, utility computing, Web Browser, web services