Spring.io: Containers are great, but need to be simple to adopt

Spring.io offers containers as a service

Containers are all the rage but everyone does them differently

ElasticHosts founder Richard Davies launched another container-focused venture this week – Spring.io, a pay-as-you-use cloud service targeted primarily at Linux developers. Davies told BCN that while the volume around Docker and other container technologies is high, which is encouraging, their uptake will ultimately depend on how providers balance simplicity with performance.

Spring.io is a spinoff of Davies’ other venture, ElasticHosts, which still uses Linux containers but operates more like a traditional infrastructure as a service provider (customers need to subscribe to the service for set periods).

“We have been listening to the market and what we are hearing is that people are craving simplicity,” Davies said. “They just want to be able to sign up to a service without having to choose instance sizes or worry about over-paying, just as you would with your gas or electricity.”

The benefit containers offer over traditional virtualisation platforms is that they scale more closely in line with the resources an application needs, and they scale much more quickly. But most cloud services are provisioned in fixed virtual and / or physical increments that can only scale by adding or subtracting fixed-size VMs or hardware or both. This, Davies said, leads to massive amounts of waste in terms of asset utilisation (for the provider) and cost (for the consumer). It’s a ‘lost-lose’.

Spring.io uses the same underlying technologies as Docker and other Linux containers (cgroups, namespaces), but whereas they are mostly application containers with a focus on simplifying portability and managing dependencies in micro-services architecture, Springs.io offers operating system containers with a focus on usage-based billing and reactive auto-scaling.

Where most container as a service providers lean heavily upon scripting for scaling and deployment , or run containers within virtual machines, Springs.io supplies auto-scaling for load straight out of the box and requires no user API calls or JSON-juggling for their management or monitoring.

“Docker is exciting to developers struggling with shipping applications, we believe Springs.io is exciting to devops and sysadmins that want simple scaling for a reasonable price,” Davies.

Guest Blog: This Apple Engineer Prefers Parallels Mac Management

This is post was written by guest blogger Robert Kite. We are extremely excited and pleased to get to share his post as a special guest blog this week! Read on to learn about his experience choosing and using Parallels Mac Management. For customers who are looking to manage their Mac clients with their current SCCM deployment, […]

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One-Click Tuning for Parallels Desktop

Guest blog by Paul Christopher Nathaniel, Parallels Support Team Applications like QuickBooks, AutoCAD, Microsoft Office, SolidWorks, Photoshop, and 3-D games are all critical for certain groups of our users. Many of us rely on them every single day. Each application has its own system requirements and from time to time, the settings have to be […]

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New DISA Guidance

The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) has released three documents pertaining to cloud security. These documents hope to aid the Defense Department in securing the network against attacks. According to a report in C4ISR & Networks, the documents will include two new requirement guides and a new concept of operations. The goal of these documents is to prevent the disruption of cloud service provider-supported DoD missions. In addition, they will aid in creating a perimeter defense and monitoring architecture for applications hosted in commercial cloud environments.

The cloud access point (CAP) functional requirements document (FRD) calls for a line of defense between e Department of Defense Information Network (DoDIN) and Internet-based public cloud service offers. According to the documents, the first DISA-established CAP is a modified NIPRNet federated gateway.
DISA-Seal
Jack Wilmer, DISA infrastructure development executive, has told C4ISR & Networks, “A CAP being fully scalable and able to support the enterprise, to include the availability of the application protection enterprise-wide, is scheduled to be ready by early 2016.”

The documents also state, “As DoD strives to meet the objectives of the DoD CIO to maximize the use of cloud computing, the DoDIN perimeter must continue to be protected against cyber threats from external connections. The CAP will proactively and reactively prevent attacks against the DoDIN infrastructure, particularly traffic from mission applications that originates in the cloud service environment…there are many information assurance functions that may be implemented as detect and prevent measures to address the different types of external attacks”

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Springs.io claims to be first UK pure play container cloud service

(c)iStock.com/bugphai

Meet Springs.io. This container-based cloud infrastructure provider claims to offer the first pure-play container cloud service in the UK.

The company builds upon the auto-scaling Linux container technology from hosting provider ElasticHosts, whose CEO, Richard Davies, is the founder of Springs.io. One of the key facets of cloud computing is the ability to ‘pay as you go’ – but Davies argues this can be taken one step further. With billing based on actual usage rather than provisioned capacity, users could theoretically pay for just 1GB when a 4GB server is lightly used.

“We have been listening to the market and what we are hearing is that people are craving simplicity,” he said. “They just want to be able to sign up to a service without having to choose instance sizes or worry about over-paying, just as you would with your gas or electricity.”

The move plays into a greater confidence and maturation from companies grappling with cloud services, Davies explains, noting: “While some customers need greater support and configuration, many don’t, and we wanted to provide a service for users that are looking for a more simplistic offering.” However, for something such as configuring a cloud environment to automatically scale, many SMEs – who the Springs.io product targets – might not have that in-house.

“Springs.io is very clear and easy to navigate, and best of all it automatically scales and bills users based on their actual usage – so it really does the thinking for you,” added Davies.

Springs.io and ElasticHosts both utilise Linux, but the latter acts more like you would expect from traditional infrastructure as a service. In May, Davies – with his ElasticHosts hat on – wrote for this publication on the next generation of Linux containers which foreshadowed this move. Vertical scaling of containerised servers, he wrote, can handle varying load with no need to pre-estimate requirements and, using a water analogy, you can simply turn the tap on and off.

“This is a giant leap forward in commoditising cloud computing and takes it closer to true utilities such as gas, electricity and water,” he wrote. Springs.io appears to be the first step on that giant leap.

[slides] Big Data and the ‘Internet of Things’ By @CompTIA | @ThingsExpo #IoT #M2M #BigData #InternetOfThings

The true value of the Internet of Things (IoT) lies not just in the data, but through the services that protect the data, perform the analysis and present findings in a usable way. With many IoT elements rooted in traditional IT components, Big Data and IoT isn’t just a play for enterprise. In fact, the IoT presents SMBs with the prospect of launching entirely new activities and exploring innovative areas. CompTIA research identifies several areas where IoT is expected to have the greatest impact.

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[slides] A New Architecture for the Internet of Things By @JKirklan | @ThingsExpo @RedHatNews #IoT #M2M #InternetOfThings

Explosive growth in connected devices. Enormous amounts of data for collection and analysis. Critical use of data for split-second decision making and actionable information. All three are factors in making the Internet of Things a reality. Yet, any one factor would have an IT organization pondering its infrastructure strategy.
How should your organization enhance its IT framework to enable an Internet of Things implementation? In his session at @ThingsExpo, James Kirkland, Red Hat’s Chief Architect for the Internet of Things and Intelligent Systems, described how to revolutionize your architecture and create an integrated, interoperable, reliable system of thousands of devices.
He covered the transformative process taken by companies in moving from a two-tier to a three-tier topology for IoT implementations. He also discussed:
The benefits of a three-tier approach
The emergence of the controller tier as a pivot point for modern enterprise IoT architecture
Architecting your IT environment to achieve scalability, reliability and security

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Why Open Data Is Not an Overnight Sensation By @ABridgwater | @CloudExpo #Cloud

It’s time to talk more vociferously about open data.
A better headline for this piece would be: why open data is not an overnight sensation or indeed a turn of a dial or a flick of a switch, i.e., it is not something automatically achieved without some kind of longer term strategic drive, which, in itself, typically needs to be driven by a defined longer term strategic need.

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Akana Releases Envision | @CloudExpo @AkanaInc #API #Cloud

Akana has released Envision, an enhanced API analytics platform that helps enterprises mine critical insights across their digital eco-systems, understand their customers and partners and offer value-added personalized services.
“In today’s digital economy, data-driven insights are proving to be a key differentiator for businesses. Understanding the data that is being tunneled through their APIs and how it can be used to optimize their business and operations is of paramount importance,” said Alistair Farquharson, CTO of Akana.

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Tech News Recap for the Week of 7/20/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 7/20/2015.

Tech News RecapAnother big week of news on the security front.  We could see a spike in divorces after the Ashley Madison hack, and it also came to light that hundreds of thousands of vehicles are vulnerable and at risk of being hacked. In other news, Microsoft buys the cloud security firm, Adallom, and Google buys UI design firm Pixate.

 

Tech News Recap

Container management tools are a hot topic. Here are 10 things you need to know about Docker.

 

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist