Introducing Microservice Builder (Beta)

Application development needs to adapt to enable faster innovation and business agility. According to an IDC survey, 60 percent of new applications will use cloud-enabled continuous delivery microservice architectures, DevOps, and containers.
Why are microservice architectures gaining traction? Because they provide an agile and stable way for companies to develop and deliver modern, lightweight and composable workloads. With microservices, businesses have the freedom to deploy across public, private and hybrid application environments. And they can effectively eliminate long-term commitments to any single technology.
IBM can help you get ahead of the microservices revolution with a new offering, Microservice Builder (Beta). The tool can help companies build and deploy containerized applications in a microservice framework.
Introducing Microservice Builder (Beta)
Microservice Builder (Beta) provides a complete approach with simple, step-by-step support that details how to create applications in a microservices framework. Our aim is to greatly simplify the software delivery pipeline that enables continuous delivery of Dockerized microservices. It provides developers with a frictionless application lifecycle from development through production.
With Microservice Builder (Beta), developers can easily learn about the intricacies of microservice apps, quickly compose and build innovative services and then rapidly deploy them to various stages through a pre-integrated DevOps pipeline.
Microservice Builder (Beta) includes programming model extensions to Java EE, defined by the Microprofile.io collaboration, for writing Java-based microservices. Containerized apps created using Microservice Builder can then be deployed to Kubernetes-orchestrated Docker environments either on-premises or in the public cloud.
How Microservice Builder (Beta) can benefit your business
Your business is likely looking for ways to shorten development cycles and reduce costs.  Five things Microservice Builder (Beta) can help you accomplish:

Leverage a continuous delivery pipeline to accelerate software delivery from weeks to days, and days to minutes
Support rapid hybrid and cloud-native application development and testing cycles with greater agility, scalability and security
Reduce costs and complexity with portability across IBM and other cloud providers including public, private and hybrid clouds
Diagnose and resolve application infrastructure issues, minimizing downtime and maintaining service level agreements (SLAs)
Easily connect existing applications to new cloud services—such as Watson Cognitive services—to discover actionable insights

Microservice Builder (Beta) features to explore
Ready to dive in and build? Microservice Builder (Beta) makes it easy to get started. We’ve included beta binaries to support building and testing environments for microservice applications. Using container services, you can easily deploy applications to Bluemix. And if something goes wrong, there’s log analytics and monitoring to help you diagnose problems more easily.
Finally, Microservice Builder (Beta) also provides access to IBM Spectrum Conductor for Containers, a Kubernetes-based Docker management system, to simplify deployment on a single server or a prebuilt Kubernetes cluster.
Don’t wait for the microservices revolution to reach your competitors. Get ahead of the revolution. Get started building hybrid and cloud-native applications in a microservices framework with Microservice Builder (Beta) by clicking here.
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Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

User Group Newsletter March 2017

User Group Newsletter March 2017
 
BOSTON SUMMIT UPDATE
Exciting news! The schedule for the Boston Summit in May has been released. You can check out all the details on the Summit schedule page.
Travelling to the Summit and need a visa? Follow the steps in this handy guide, 
If you haven’t registered, there is still time! Secure your spot today! 
 
HAVE YOUR SAY IN THE SUPERUSER AWARDS!

The OpenStack Summit kicks off in less than six weeks and seven deserving organizations have been nominated to be recognized during the opening keynotes. For this cycle, the community (that means you!) will review the candidates before the Superuser editorial advisors select the finalists and ultimate winner. See the full list of candidates and have your say here. 
 
COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP CHARTS COURSE FOR OPENSTACK
About 40 people from the OpenStack Technical Committee, User Committee, Board of Directors and Foundation Staff convened in Boston to talk about the future of OpenStack. They discussed the challenges we face as a community, but also why our mission to deliver open infrastructure is more important than ever. Read the comprehensive meeting report here.
 
NEW PROJECT MASCOTS
Fantastic new project mascots were released just before the Project Teams Gathering. Read the the story behind your favourite OpenStack project mascot via this superuser post. 
 
WELCOME TO OUR NEW USER GROUPS
We have some new user groups which have joined the OpenStack community.
Spain- Canary Islands
Mexico City &; Mexico
We wish them all the best with their OpenStack journey and can’t wait to see what they will achieve! Looking for your local group? Are you thinking of starting a user group? Head to the groups portal for more information.
 
LOOK OUT FOR YOUR FELLOW STACKERS AT COMMUNITY EVENTS
OpenStack is participating in a series of upcoming Community events this April.
April 3: Open Networking Summit Santa Clara, CA

OpenStack is sponsoring the Monday evening Open Source Community Reception at Levi Stadium
ldiko Vancsa will be speaking in two sessions:
Monday, 9:00-10:30am on &;The Interoperability Challenge in Telecom and NFV Environments&;, with EANTC Director Carsten Rossenhovel and Chris Price, room 207
Thursday, 1:40-3:30pm, OpenStack our Mini-Summit, topic &8220;OpenStack:Networking Roadmap, Collaboration and Contribution&8221; with Armando Migliaccio and Paul Carver from AT&T; Grand Ballroom A&B

 
April 17-19: DockerCon, Austin, TX

Openstack will be in booth

 
April 19-20: Global Open Source Summit, Beijing, China

Mike Perez will be delivering an OpenStack keynote

 
OPENSTACK DAYS: DATES FOR YOUR CALENDAR
We have lots of upcoming OpenStack Days coming up:
Upcoming OpenStack Days
June 1: Australia
June 5: Israel
June 7: Budapest
June 26: Germany Enterprise (DOST)
Read further information about OpenStack Days from this website. You’ll find a FAQ, see highlights from previous events and an extensive toolkit for hosting an OpenStack Day in your region. 
 
CONTRIBUTING TO UG NEWSLETTER
If you’d like to contribute a news item for next edition, please submit to this etherpad.
Items submitted may be edited down for length, style and suitability.
This newsletter is published on a monthly basis.
 
 
 
Quelle: openstack.org

Cloud-based transcoding system delivers low-latency video

How can thousands of people with different kinds of devices and different network connections watch the same video at the same time?
The answer lies in transcoding, the process of converting media files from one format to another.
Vantrix Corporation develops media-processing software for cable operators, broadcasters and content owners. The Vantrix Transcoder is a powerful, software-defined solution that cost effectively meets demand for video on any screen. The glass-to-glass system allows for capture, cloud processing and viewing in a low-latency manner. It adapts the video stream to users’ devices to ensure videos run seamlessly.
Watching broadcasts in near-real time
The worst thing for a video is latency — stalling or stopping. People get very frustrated.
Imagine watching a sporting event in which the real-time factor is of utmost importance. If there’s a delay, you might hear your neighbor screaming “Goal!” when you haven’t seen it yet. It’s a spoiler.
The ultra-high-density transcoding solution from Vantrix reduces the latency as much as possible because it’s scalable and deployed in the IBM Cloud.
A main driver for selecting IBM was global reach. Vantrix can deliver a packet, frame or video element within 200 milliseconds across the world. For viewers, it’s almost like being there.
A virtual-reality camera, no image stitching required
Vantrix developed its own 360-degree camera, which delivers a video feed that’s half spherical, similar to what people see with their eyes. The same cloud-based transcoding process is used to adapt this very large video stream to any user device, but to see the full video, viewers would use a virtual reality (VR) headset.
Most VR broadcasts use multiple lenses and have to “stitch” images together, which means they lose quality and in the live use case, introduce latency.
The Vantrix camera doesn’t require image stitching, so it can deliver higher-quality video, more quickly.
Watching sports with a VR headset
If viewers are watching sports with a VR headset, not only can they see the field or court, but they can also look sideways and see the bench with the players, or see fans. They’re not confined to the choice of the broadcast. It’s a more natural way to watch a game, because viewers can control their own experiences. They can look anywhere they want as long as they want.
With this format, broadcasters can deliver additional information. For example, viewers can call up a digital overlay on top of the video with statistics about players or another game being played concurrently.

Many big broadcasters are exploring ways to personalize their broadcasts. For example, they can customize ads. When someone is watching in VR, broadcasters have 100 percent of that person’s attention, so ads have much more impact.
With analytics, broadcasters could determine where viewers are looking so they can tell an advertiser where to move a logo to get more eyeball seconds as the original spot. That means more people see the ad and more revenue for the broadcaster.
Remote security monitoring
Another common application for Vantrix’s 360-degree camera is security. The camera captures far more activity than a traditional camera that doesn’t have “peripheral vision.”
The recording system has a buffer leading up to a trigger event, and the footage is recorded and stored safely in the cloud, meaning if the burglar destroys the camera, the video prior to the incident is already stored in the cloud.
Any trigger or event can be played back securely by whoever has the access and rights to look at the video, from wherever they are.
If the event happened in New York, for example, the transcoding service can stream it to L.A. With a fast Internet connection and strong cloud services, viewers won’t have a big delay in terms of from when it happened to when they can watch it.
Transcoding as a service
The Vantrix Media Platform software already has a very robust set of application programming interfaces (APIs). Vantrix used IBM Bluemix hybrid cloud development platform to both develop a multitenant version of its software and to fully integrate its APIs into the Bluemix ecosystem, enabling video transcoding as service for Bluemix developers.
Learn more about IBM Cloud streaming video.
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Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud