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    Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM

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    xen kvm amazon aws virtualization cloud computing el reg
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    • dafyreD
      dafyre @travisdh1
      last edited by dafyre

      @travisdh1 said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

      Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

      I've found them both really easy 🙂

      XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

      How so?

      In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

      KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

      Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

      Yepp.

      Is there no web management for it then?

      Sure, there are options, but they can be run as VMs or on ports other than 80 or 443 (WebVirtMgr, or virt-manager on another Linux box).

      No firewall?

      Sadly, nothing other than IPTables.

      You had your platform server attached directly to the Internet?

      Yeah, he mentioned that earlier. Sounds like he basically installed XS into a vultr like session.

      Close. Physical box hosted in somebody else's closet. 🙂

      Is it Wholesaleinternet?

      KimSufi (OVH subsidiary). I looked at them, they have some good deals.

      I've got a dedicated box w/16GB RAM and 2TB storage with 1 public IP. All I need. (Backups are sent to my house once a month at the moment).

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @dafyre
        last edited by

        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

        Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

        I've found them both really easy 🙂

        XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

        How so?

        In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

        KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

        Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

        Yepp.

        Is there no web management for it then?

        Sure, there are options, but they can be run as VMs or on ports other than 80 or 443 (WebVirtMgr, or virt-manager on another Linux box).

        No firewall?

        Sadly, nothing other than IPTables.

        You had your platform server attached directly to the Internet?

        Yeah, he mentioned that earlier. Sounds like he basically installed XS into a vultr like session.

        Close. Physical box hosted in somebody else's closet. 🙂

        Can't you just sit an ERL on top of it then?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @dafyre
          last edited by

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

          Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

          I've found them both really easy 🙂

          XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

          How so?

          In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

          KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

          Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

          Yepp.

          Is there no web management for it then?

          Sure, there are options, but they can be run as VMs or on ports other than 80 or 443 (WebVirtMgr, or virt-manager on another Linux box).

          No firewall?

          Sadly, nothing other than IPTables.

          You had your platform server attached directly to the Internet?

          Yeah, he mentioned that earlier. Sounds like he basically installed XS into a vultr like session.

          Close. Physical box hosted in somebody else's closet. 🙂

          And they wouldn't let you put a ER-L in front of the server?

          It's hosted with KimSufi (OVH), so, no. They wouldn't. Their job is to image the box and put it online and give me necessary details.

          Oh, well stop using them 😉

          dafyreD DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • dafyreD
            dafyre @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

            Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

            I've found them both really easy 🙂

            XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

            How so?

            In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

            KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

            Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

            Yepp.

            Is there no web management for it then?

            Sure, there are options, but they can be run as VMs or on ports other than 80 or 443 (WebVirtMgr, or virt-manager on another Linux box).

            No firewall?

            Sadly, nothing other than IPTables.

            You had your platform server attached directly to the Internet?

            Yeah, he mentioned that earlier. Sounds like he basically installed XS into a vultr like session.

            Close. Physical box hosted in somebody else's closet. 🙂

            And they wouldn't let you put a ER-L in front of the server?

            It's hosted with KimSufi (OVH), so, no. They wouldn't. Their job is to image the box and put it online and give me necessary details.

            Oh, well stop using them 😉

            Why? They work so well, they're cheap, and I have my data backed up somewhere else.

            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DashrenderD
              Dashrender @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

              Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

              I've found them both really easy 🙂

              XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

              How so?

              In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

              KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

              Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

              Yepp.

              Is there no web management for it then?

              Sure, there are options, but they can be run as VMs or on ports other than 80 or 443 (WebVirtMgr, or virt-manager on another Linux box).

              No firewall?

              Sadly, nothing other than IPTables.

              You had your platform server attached directly to the Internet?

              Yeah, he mentioned that earlier. Sounds like he basically installed XS into a vultr like session.

              Close. Physical box hosted in somebody else's closet. 🙂

              And they wouldn't let you put a ER-L in front of the server?

              It's hosted with KimSufi (OVH), so, no. They wouldn't. Their job is to image the box and put it online and give me necessary details.

              Oh, well stop using them 😉

              I understand it can be a price issue - i.e. you're paying for 1 U today, and with a ER-L you'll have to buy 2 or more (they might make you buy a shelf, assuming you can get a 1 U shelf..
              and now you're at the 2U price instead of the 1 U price.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @dafyre
                last edited by

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

                I've found them both really easy 🙂

                XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

                How so?

                In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

                KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

                Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

                Yepp.

                Is there no web management for it then?

                Sure, there are options, but they can be run as VMs or on ports other than 80 or 443 (WebVirtMgr, or virt-manager on another Linux box).

                No firewall?

                Sadly, nothing other than IPTables.

                You had your platform server attached directly to the Internet?

                Yeah, he mentioned that earlier. Sounds like he basically installed XS into a vultr like session.

                Close. Physical box hosted in somebody else's closet. 🙂

                And they wouldn't let you put a ER-L in front of the server?

                It's hosted with KimSufi (OVH), so, no. They wouldn't. Their job is to image the box and put it online and give me necessary details.

                Oh, well stop using them 😉

                Why? They work so well, they're cheap, and I have my data backed up somewhere else.

                I feel like you just described them not working well, then say that they work well 😉

                What do they cost for that?

                dafyreD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • dafyreD
                  dafyre @scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                  Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

                  I've found them both really easy 🙂

                  XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

                  How so?

                  In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

                  KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

                  Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

                  Yepp.

                  Is there no web management for it then?

                  Sure, there are options, but they can be run as VMs or on ports other than 80 or 443 (WebVirtMgr, or virt-manager on another Linux box).

                  No firewall?

                  Sadly, nothing other than IPTables.

                  You had your platform server attached directly to the Internet?

                  Yeah, he mentioned that earlier. Sounds like he basically installed XS into a vultr like session.

                  Close. Physical box hosted in somebody else's closet. 🙂

                  And they wouldn't let you put a ER-L in front of the server?

                  It's hosted with KimSufi (OVH), so, no. They wouldn't. Their job is to image the box and put it online and give me necessary details.

                  Oh, well stop using them 😉

                  Why? They work so well, they're cheap, and I have my data backed up somewhere else.

                  I feel like you just described them not working well, then say that they work well 😉

                  What do they cost for that?

                  You assume I want something else in front of my box connected to the internet -- I don't. My idea of working well is can I access it when I want, and does it work when I click the Go button.

                  It's $25 a month 8-Core Intel / 16GB RAM / 2TB SATA / 100 mbit unmetered internet / 1 public IPv4.

                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @dafyre
                    last edited by

                    @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                    It's $25 a month 8-Core Intel / 16GB RAM / 2TB SATA / 100 mbit unmetered internet / 1 public IPv4.

                    That's not too bad. Of course, I'd argue that it would be way cheaper to get four people together, and get a "real" server in colocation and split it. Each of you getting way more than this.

                    dafyreD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • dafyreD
                      dafyre @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by dafyre

                      @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                      @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                      It's $25 a month 8-Core Intel / 16GB RAM / 2TB SATA / 100 mbit unmetered internet / 1 public IPv4.

                      That's not too bad. Of course, I'd argue that it would be way cheaper to get four people together, and get a "real" server in colocation and split it. Each of you getting way more than this.

                      Cheaper? Yes. Easier? Nah. I don't want 3 other people mad at me when reboot the host randomly.

                      It really isn't bad, and as far as I can tell, they've had amazing reliability at the facility.

                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • R3dPand4R
                        R3dPand4
                        last edited by

                        🙂

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • stacksofplatesS
                          stacksofplates @Dashrender
                          last edited by

                          @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                          @dashrender said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                          @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                          @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                          Having used both Xen and KVM, I gotta say that I find KVM to be much easier to work with.

                          I've found them both really easy 🙂

                          XenServer was easy, but just didn't mesh well with how I wanted it to work. KVM was a bit easier to get set up in my remote environment.

                          How so?

                          In my hosted lab, it wanted to take over my only public IP address. XAPI took over ports 80 and 443, so I couldn't run a web server or anything on those ports. I never was able to figure out how to change it -- I even asked here a time or two.

                          KVM went right in and gave me zero hassle.

                          Interesting.. What ports does KVM use for management? just typical SSH?

                          You can do just SSH. But QEMU has the option for HTTP/HTTPS as well.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @dafyre
                            last edited by

                            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                            @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                            It's $25 a month 8-Core Intel / 16GB RAM / 2TB SATA / 100 mbit unmetered internet / 1 public IPv4.

                            That's not too bad. Of course, I'd argue that it would be way cheaper to get four people together, and get a "real" server in colocation and split it. Each of you getting way more than this.

                            Cheaper? Yes. Easier? Nah. I don't want 3 other people mad at me when reboot the host randomly.

                            It really isn't bad, and as far as I can tell, they've had amazing reliability at the facility.

                            I bet that they are using something like SM Blades.

                            S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • S
                              StorageNinja Vendor @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by scottalanmiller

                              @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                              @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                              It's $25 a month 8-Core Intel / 16GB RAM / 2TB SATA / 100 mbit unmetered internet / 1 public IPv4.

                              That's not too bad. Of course, I'd argue that it would be way cheaper to get four people together, and get a "real" server in colocation and split it. Each of you getting way more than this.

                              Cheaper? Yes. Easier? Nah. I don't want 3 other people mad at me when reboot the host randomly.

                              It really isn't bad, and as far as I can tell, they've had amazing reliability at the facility.

                              I bet that they are using something like SM Blades.

                              Youtube Video

                              It's actually pretty cool.

                              dafyreD jmooreJ K 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                Ah, custom blades.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • dafyreD
                                  dafyre @StorageNinja
                                  last edited by

                                  @storageninja Nice find!

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Reid CooperR
                                    Reid Cooper
                                    last edited by

                                    Wow, this really is major news. I'll third that this might be the IT announcement of the year.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • FATeknollogeeF
                                      FATeknollogee
                                      last edited by

                                      Where are all those "Citrix'ites" that always puffed their chests talking 'bout how great XS was since AWS used it!
                                      I should go troll them on the XS boards!

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • jmooreJ
                                        jmoore @StorageNinja
                                        last edited by

                                        @storageninja said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                                        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                                        @dafyre said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                                        It's $25 a month 8-Core Intel / 16GB RAM / 2TB SATA / 100 mbit unmetered internet / 1 public IPv4.

                                        That's not too bad. Of course, I'd argue that it would be way cheaper to get four people together, and get a "real" server in colocation and split it. Each of you getting way more than this.

                                        Cheaper? Yes. Easier? Nah. I don't want 3 other people mad at me when reboot the host randomly.

                                        It really isn't bad, and as far as I can tell, they've had amazing reliability at the facility.

                                        I bet that they are using something like SM Blades.

                                        Youtube Video

                                        It's actually pretty cool.

                                        that is pretty cool. does the technician at the end really need a hard hat?

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                        • DashrenderD
                                          Dashrender
                                          last edited by

                                          huh - water cooling at the server level.

                                          travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • ObsolesceO
                                            Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Amazon AWS Leaving Xen for KVM:

                                            This is enormous news. This, more than anything, signals the end of the road for Xen. A very sad day.

                                            That is huge... how did I miss this the past few days?

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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