Pune OpenStack Meetup, July
Here are the two presentations from the Pune OpenStack Meetup earlier this week:
Contributing to OpenStack (Presentation slides HERE)
Neutron deep dive
Quelle: RDO
Here are the two presentations from the Pune OpenStack Meetup earlier this week:
Contributing to OpenStack (Presentation slides HERE)
Neutron deep dive
Quelle: RDO
Seit 2013 arbeitet Richard Garriotts Firma Portalarium an einem Nachfolger der Rollenspielreihe Ultima. Ende 2017 soll das Spiel nun erscheinen, eine erste Handlungsepisode kann bereits als Early-Access gespielt werden.
Quelle: Heise Tech News
The ultimate goal of advertising is to spark interest and elicit a of meaningful reaction from the audience. In the offline world, there is an abundance of ads because they’re not targeted. Think about a newspaper. Half of the pages are printed ads that most people don’t look at.
Digital marketing has the potential to be more targeted than print advertising, but it’s often just annoying. Web and mobile app users frequently can’t wait to close an ad and get back to their content as quickly as possible.
The better targeted ads become, the fewer ads must be served for advertisers to meet their goals. Users are no longer bombarded with ads. They simply see a few, very relevant and very targeted ads, which provide a good ad experience and create an environment where users find value because ads fit their needs.
But how do advertisers serve the right ads to the right people at the right time?
Maximum return on ad spending
AppLift has a data-driven solution called DataLift 360, which empowers advertisers to acquire and retain users. AppLift clients are primarily large app developers and game publishers who seek to grow their user bases.
They run ads through the DataLift 360 platform to inform users about new content in the apps or related products or offers. The solution is deeply integrated with advertisers’ customer data. It can detect what users do in the apps and why they use the apps. This data informs the ad buying decisions and helps advertisers maximize the return on their ad spending. DataLift 360 helps AppLift customers get hundreds of thousands of app installs across iOS and Android each day.
Powerful solution
DataLift 360 is provisioned in an IBM hybrid cloud infrastructure that includes both IBM Bluemix bare metal servers and virtual resources located in data centers around the world.
AppLift chose IBM Cloud because of its global presence and high performance, as well as the flexibility to turn servers on and off quickly to meet demand due to seasonal traffic peaks or increases in partner business.
While AppLift’s customers are fairly equally split between the Americas, EMEA and the Asia-Pacific region, the global infrastructure is key to supporting the users to whom the ads are served, whom could be anywhere in the world. When there’s an ad request, the user must be served immediately. AppLift must have service in physical proximity to where the users are to provide the low-latency, high-frequency environment advertisers demand. It’s a failure if a user opens an app and they’re supposed to see an ad but instead see a black screen or a loading screen. That’s a bad user experience.
Massive traffic
AppLift’s customers include a global network of more than 500 premium app advertisers. The company is provisioned to store and process more than 2 billion user profiles, which basically means it can cover every user who owns a smart phone worldwide. The company stores, processes and uses that data in the forming of the decisions.
DataLift 360 computes tens of billions of opportunities to serve ads every day, meaning it makes decisions regarding whether to serve an ad to a specific user, which ad to serve, and for which price it is willing to serve the ad. With the IBM Cloud technology supporting it, the solution can horizontally scale to more than one million queries per second if necessary.
Read the case study for more about AppLift and IBM.
Learn more about IBM Bluemix.
The post DataLift 360 serves up optimized ads with the help of IBM Cloud appeared first on Cloud computing news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud
An einer Finanzierungsrunde im Juli hat sich auch der Stuttgarter Autokonzern Daimler beteiligt.
Quelle: Heise Tech News
XBox, Nintendo Switch, Android, iOS und PC: Alle Spieler sollen künftig in Minecraft zusammenspielen können. Das Better Together Update führt auch neue offizielle Server und Elternkontrollen ein. (Minecraft, Microsoft)
Quelle: Golem
“Be Nice or Leave” — that’s one of the unofficial mottos of Bumble, the hugely successful dating app commonly referred to as “feminist Tinder.”
But many residents of the Bowie, the ultra-luxury Austin high-rise where the company had its headquarters until earlier this month, say employees of the company treated the building like their dedicated campus with little regard for the people who lived there and the staff who worked there — even though only three Bumble employees were on the residential lease and no one lived in the unit.
BuzzFeed News has learned that over the past year, as the company swelled in size, the two-bedroom apartment on the 31st floor that it had repurposed into a plush startup office became the focus of a cold war between Bumble employees, building staff, and residents who felt the company was unfairly dominating the luxury building’s amenities, including common spaces, a rooftop pool, and paid parking.
“The Bumble folks are generally obnoxious, entitled, and treat the Bowie like their corporate office,” said one resident, who spoke to BuzzFeed on the condition that he not be named.
The Bowie, a three-year-old, 37-story gleaming glass tower rising above downtown Austin, was in many ways a fitting location for Bumble, a company that has amassed 12.5 million users and risen to second in the lifestyle category in the App Store since being started by Tinder cofounder Whitney Wolfe after her acrimonious split from that company. Indeed, the company hosted the New York Times there for an interview ahead of a glowing story in March. The 380-unit building boasts the kind of luxuries you’d expect to find in a prosperous city’s finest rental building: a 24-hour concierge service, multiple fire pits, a dog grooming room, a coffee bar, and electric vehicle charging stations.
The only problem? According to an Austin code department spokesperson, the office, located in a building approved for use as a multifamily residential property, was a code violation. And the thriving startup was using facilities intended for Bowie residents as its own.
“They were using the whole floor like it was an office space.”
A copy of a code complaint filed with the Austin city government by a resident describes a company that could not be contained within the 1,200-square-foot apartment that Bumble referred to as “The Hive.”
“Issue?” the complaint reads. “Bumble headquarters in apartment building! This is a residential building … and this illegal corporate headquarters has been causing Havoc … They’re located on the 31st floor, have about 15 or 20 employees, therefore they use all the common spaces as a secondary office … One is supposed to be on a lease to use common areas, but they do not care … This is a very large company and they should have a real office instead of a code violating office.”
Over the past year, a former member of the building staff said, the front desk — staffed by a local concierge company — received multiple complaints a day about Bumble employees, often related to company employees using the 31st-floor common space for meetings and presentations.
In a statement, a Bumble spokesman wrote, “The 31st floor is where it all started and we throughly enjoyed our relationship with the residents. The building management was fully aware of our operations and never once issued us a complaint of any kind. And while it was never brought to our attention by management, we deeply regret any disturbance we may have caused at the building.”
Pinnacle Property Management Services, which currently owns the Bowie, declined to comment on this story. An inspection carried out by James Paxton, an Austin city code inspector, revealed that Bumble is owned by an LLC called Beehive Interests, which was registered by Whitney Wolfe in August 2014, with a corporate mailing address of 311 Bowie St., Apt. 3107 — the Bowie.
“They were using the whole floor like it was an office space,” said Lane Helveston, a Bowie resident who lived on the 31st floor. “They would be in my hallways. There were people roaming around the building who didn’t live there.”
Making matters worse, according to five Bowie residents, was the demeanor of the Bumble staff. One resident reported seeing a Bumble employee — on a conference call in the hallway — shush another resident who was showing her mother the building.
According to several residents, the deluge of complaints put Steve Hunt, then the building’s concierge, in the awkward position of enforcing rules about non-residents’ use of common areas, and acting as Bumble’s de facto doorman.
Since each apartment only came with two key fobs, Hunt had to let Bumble employees into the elevators on a daily basis. According to Hunt, new Bumble employees sometimes turned hostile in the Bowie lobby when he asked them what business they had in the building.
At times, according to multiple sources, the lobby seemed to belong to Bumble, with vendors ferrying Topo Chico mineral water and green juice up to the 31st floor and employees testing out new Snapchat filters on residents.
One Bowie resident described an incident in which a Bumble employee asked for his assistance while he was walking through the lobby. As he approached the Bumble employee, she held up her phone and informed him that he was on the “Bumble Kiss Cam,” at which point a second Bumble employee tried to kiss him.
“I said, 'that’s assault,'” the resident recalled. “That’s completely inappropriate. I’m in a private residence.”
Still another source of tension was the parking lot, where residents paid a monthly fee of more than $100 for a space. According to multiple sources, Bumble employees would frequently follow each other into the lot and take paid spots. Hunt, frustrated by having to run interference, started leaving signs in the lot reading “No Bumble Parking” and “Top Code Violators Under 30” with a picture of Wolfe — a mocking reference to the CEO's inclusion on the Forbes 2017 30 Under 30.
“Management never once issued us a complaint about Bumble team members parking in paid spots that were reserved for residents,” a Bumble spokesperson wrote. “As our demand for parking increased, we paid management the daily rate for the visitor lot and instructed our team to park there.”
Earlier this month, the conflict between residents, staff, and Bumble spilled out of the building when a former resident enlisted a friend in the notorious and deliberately offensive internet troll group GNAA to fight back. Last Monday, Twitter users reported that the Wikipedia pages for Amazon, Google, and Walmart redirected to a GNAA press release entitled “GNAA Reveals Cause to Evict Bumble from their Corporate Headquarters,” stating that Bumble’s Bowie office was in violation of its lease.
Nevertheless, last week Bumble moved out of the Bowie. The GNAA claimed credit, though according to Paxton, the code inspector, building management said that Bumble had voluntarily moved out at the end of its lease.
Bumble recently sent out invitations to an office-warming party, which will feature paddleboarding and yoga.
Wednesday, Wolfe offered Hunt, who left the building after it was sold to new management, a sizable gift on behalf of Bumble.
In an Instagram message reviewed by BuzzFeed News, Wolfe wrote to Hunt, “We will be sending you … $1,000 as a thank you for being our front desk manager.”
Quelle: <a href="Austin Luxury High-Rise Tenants Swiped Left On Bumble's Code-Violating HQ“>BuzzFeed
Die Sicherheit von Desktop-Umgebungen unter Linux könnte besser sein. Der Sicherheitsforscher und Google-Angestellte Matthew Garrett stellt deshalb Verteidigungsstrategien vor. Deren vollständige Umsetzung wird aber wohl noch Jahre dauern. Ein Bericht von Sebastian Grüner (Linux, Gnome)
Quelle: Golem
AMD will eine besonders kompakte Grafikkarten mit Vega-10-Grafikchip veröffentlichen. Die Nano-Version wurde bereits in Los Angeles gesichtet.
Quelle: Heise Tech News
Zum ersten Mal seit 1979 wird sich am 21. August in den zentralen US-Bundesstaaten eine totale Sonnenfinsternis ereignen. Behörden bereiten sich auf eine regelrechte Völkerwanderung in jene Gebiete vor, wo die Sonne komplett vom Mond verdeckt werden wird.
Quelle: Heise Tech News
Mit "Google Attribution" will der Konzern seinen Werbekunden zeigen, wie wirksam Onlinewerbung ist. Die Bürgerrechtsorganisation EPIC sieht jedoch ein Privatsphäre-Risiko.
Quelle: Heise Tech News