Re: Parler
Moving any service to bare metal is not that much of an issue. With some work, it can be accomplished. What is really hard is performance, scalability, reliability. This in my opinion is what AWS and cloud providers provide. On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 10:21 AM Töma Gavrichenkov wrote: > Peace, > > On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 9:09 PM Michael Thomas wrote: > > Yes, it's been obvious to anybody who's only paying even a little > > attention that AWS is trying to be build a walled garden. > > In my experience, moving off Amazon services isn't that much of a > trouble, especially if compared to moving off Azure. Cloud Active > Directory + Sentinel + PowerBI — and boom, your company is with Azure > for life. > > -- > Töma >
Cloud based Network monitoring service
Hello, Recently on this mailing list, I have seen requests for network monitoring tools. Service Fractal, a startup in its early days, is providing a cloud based network and security monitoring with focus on business outcomes Service Fractal is vendor-neutral (Cisco, HPE, Allied Telesis and many white box networking solutions), provides context-aware analytics and reduces cost of operations. The core technology is built on algorithmic intelligence. Service is configured for operational use in less than 30 minutes, available on a monthly subscription basis with no terms. List of supported hardware is available at https://www.servicefractal.com/solutions (scroll down) Currently, there is a *3-month free subscription *to their services - no card needed! If you are interested, please reach out to sales at servicefractal.com Thanks /Shivaram
Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?
I personally believe apps should not be emitting generic emergency alerts. Devices should - ex TV, mobile phone, etc. if one is watching Hulu, MLB, NFL, or any other app it should not matter as long as device is notifying the user. /Shivaram ::Sent from my mobile device:: > On Mar 9, 2019, at 12:27 PM, Seth Mattinen wrote: > >> On 3/9/19 12:03 PM, Sean Donelan wrote: >> Automatically geo-locating indoor smart speakers and smart TVs is more >> difficult, but if advertisers can get geolocation information from AT&T, >> Amazon, Apple, Google, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon, etc; why can't emergency >> alerts? > > > There's no technical reason emergency alerts can't be geo located. But > advertisers pay for it; emergency alerts aren't revenue generating.