Want to know how NetBeans and GlassFish provide a better Rails experience ?
I’ll be speaking at Silicon Valley Rails Meetup on Mar 31st (tomorrow), 7pm, more details here. It will also be a brief preview of my upcoming Rails Conf talk.
Click on the map below for location:
This is “LinkedIn Headquarters” and we’ll see you at 2nd Floor Kitchen and Open Area.
AWS Usage: Web site/Application hosting, Media distribution, Storage, Backup, Disaster Recovery, Financial apps, High-performance computing, Software development/testing
SmugMug CEO shared their usage of EC2 and S3 for SkyNet (fka Rubberband):
Millions of photos/day
BIG photos, upto 24MB, 48mpix
40+ terapixels processed/day
Peaky traffic on holidays/weekend (elastic)
Full HD processing: 1920 x 1080p
No capital costs, Elastic, Better taxes: No depreciation & amortization
Totally autonomous, make a decision (roughly once a minute) to turn on/off a worker, takes into consideration approx 50+ inputs such as historical data, type of job, queue status, recent activity
And then was the fun part where AWS Toolkit for Eclipse was announced. It was pretty cool to deploy a web application (JSPWiki in this case) to a local server and then the same application to a Tomcat cluster on EC2. And you can even debug after attaching to a running instance as well. Pretty cool! And it was certainly exciting to know that GlassFish is already on their roadmap
And then I spent rest of the day talking to attendees and preparing this blog! The GlassFish beanies were a huge hit all around the floor and we also distributed Hudson stickers.
The screencast #28 shows how to create simple applications and deploy them on GlassFish using Eclipse. More details about creating these applications is available here. The Clingan Zone also explained the highlights of the newly released bundle.
And BTW, if you have an earlier version of the plug-in, you can just update it as explained in TOTD #66.
Here are some quotes from a recent article talking about Oracle’s maintenance and support fees:
Before Oracle acquired BEA earlier this year, the company charged 18% to 20% for support and maintenance. Oracle increased those fees to meet its own structure and also raised list prices on most BEA products.
That didn’t sit well.
and
One Java-centric VAR, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said some of his BEA WebLogic customers are moving to alternative application servers just to get away from Oracle.
and
“What company comes in this climate and not only jacks up prices but support prices as well?” asked one frustrated BEA customer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
and
“Many SAP and Oracle customers intend to push back their maintenance fees,” he said. “Customers seek an option to just pay for tax and compliance updates without paying for future innovation. They are willing to pay for future modules when that time comes. If they can’t access such options, they would prefer third party options like Rimini Street for Oracle [E-Business Suite] and SAP’s applications.”
Have you been bitten by Oracle’s price raise ?
Interested in an industry-grade, highly performant, feature-rich, and open source alternative ?
This informative technical webinar explains the fundamentals of JRuby and how the NetBeans IDE makes developing/debugging/deploying Rails applications on GlassFish quick, fun and cost-effective.
The webinar starts 10am PT on Mar 31st, 2009 and can be accessed from a browser.
Peter and I presented on GlassFish at University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee last week. The slides were already made available to the attendees. And since the workshop offered for a charge, the slides will not be shared here Let us know if you’d like to conduct a similar workshop in your location.
The workshop ran from 8:30am until 4:00pm. Peter did a wonderful job of demonstrating GlassFish integration in NetBeans and Eclipse, an extensive GlassFish Enterprise Manager demo, Dynamic Languages slides, and multiple other things!
One of the interesting sessions was right after lunch when all the attendees candidly shared experience of their deployment environments and their reason for attending the workshop. The room had 40% NetBeans users and 70% Eclipse users. I’ve observed a continuous upsurge in the number of NetBeans users in the past few conferences. And it was certainly exciting to know that approx 50% are aware of GlassFish and 1/2 of them are already using for development. Most of them were attending to gain better understanding of GlassFish capabilities and then use it in their production environment. And then there were some who wanted to understand how GlassFish is a superior offering than others.
And guess what – even couple of attendees were already using it in production. Their main reasons for migrating from Tomcat to GlassFish:
NetBeans integration
Web-based Admin Console backed by a powerful “asadmin” CLI
They had no trouble migrating their application from Tomcat to GlassFish, just a minor tweak and the application worked seamlessly. Yet another happy user of GlassFish Hopefully everybody had an opportunity to revise or learn some new tricks from the talk. Here are some pictures taken during the workshop:
Here is some feedback from the attendees:
Great presentation on GlassFish today, there is more to that application server than I thought. (tweeted here)
and
#glassfish is pretty freaking cool, our company just isn’t ready for that level though. (tweeted here)
The hospitality of the workshop hosts was very welcoming starting from airport pick up/drop off, hotel pick up, dinner, and short tour of the city right after the talk. The arrangement during the workshop was pretty good however the presentation connector for Apple Air caused us some grief to begin with
I also had the opportunity to meet the local Campus Ambassador, a Ph D student at the University:
Personally, one of the highlights was bumping into Pandit Shiv Kumar Sharma, a world renowned Santoor player, during a dinner at a local Thai restaurant. Our workshop host (who happens to be Indian) mentioned that Pandit ji is peforming with Ustad Zakir Hussain, the most famous name and a living legend in the world of Tabla, in Milwaukee next morning. The local Indian community gathered to honor him and we happen to be sitting on the next table.
We had an extremely embarrassing moment when we approached him asking “Are you Ustaad Zakir Hussein ?”. He said “I’m not but he’ll be performing on the stage tomorrow”. For a moment we thought he was just tricking us but felt terrible when realized that we tagged him as the wrong person. Pandit ji has gained all the reputation one can fathom in the world of music and kept talking to us in a very polite manner. I always wonder there is so much to learn from these luminaries, but we certainly felt awful afterwards and apologized as well.
We almost decided to go to an Indian restaurant for dinner but glad we picked Thai instead. We might have met Ustad Zakir Hussain in the other restaurant You can check out their complete itinerary at momentrecords.com.
Enjoy one of his old videos:
And then one of the memoirs from Ustaad Zakir Hussein, (for Indian friends: remember “Wah Ustaad Wah” advertisement):