AWS License Manager is now available in GovCloud (US) Regions
AWS License Manager is now available in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions: AWS GovCloud (US-East) and AWS GovCloud (US-West).
Quelle: aws.amazon.com
AWS License Manager is now available in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions: AWS GovCloud (US-East) and AWS GovCloud (US-West).
Quelle: aws.amazon.com
Amazon Virtual Private Cloud Flow Logs (VPC Flow Logs) can now be delivered directly to Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) using the AWS Command Line Interface (CLI) or through your Amazon EC2 or VPC console, in the EU (Stockholm) and Asia Pacific (Osaka) AWS Regions. You can deliver VPC Flow Logs to both S3 and CloudWatch Logs.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com
AWS CloudFormation provides a common language for you to describe and provision all the infrastructure resources in your cloud environment. It allows you to use a simple text file to model and provision, in an automated and secure manner, all the resources needed for your applications across all regions and accounts.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com
AWS Server Migration Service (SMS) now offers support for migrating virtual machines (VMs) running in Microsoft Azure to the AWS cloud. The new capability makes it easier for you to migrate existing applications running in Microsoft Azure to the AWS cloud to take advantage of greater reliability, faster performance, more security capabilities, and lower costs.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com
Standing up a data pipeline for the first time can be a challenge and decisions you make at the start of a project can limit your choices long after the initial deployment has been rolled out. Often what is needed is a playground in which to learn about and evaluate the available options and capabilities in the solution space.
Quelle: Azure
Transparency is an important part of public safety projects. Officials must know what is happening in real time, as well as be able to collaborate with others involved in the project. To create a collaborative and transparent environment, security officials are reinventing their approach to public safety, especially regarding the protection of public buildings. While keeping public buildings safe, smart, and secure is a top priority, it’s also a constant challenge.
Recent advancements in cloud computing, intelligent edge, artificial intelligence, and data analytics create many new opportunities for Internet of Things (IoT) devices to improve public safety. However, the seamless framework must work together, and device makers often run into challenges with hardware, software, networks, security, and platform management.
In this post, we’ll explore how IoT initiatives are solving these top public safety concerns. To learn more, be sure to attend Microsoft’s upcoming IoT in Action webinar, IoT and the New Safety Net.
Safe: Using IoT for visitor lifecycle management
With cyber criminals able to clone a radio frequency identification (RFID) badge in seconds, security officials are increasingly turning to IoT technology to prevent unauthorized access to government and other public buildings. Instead of viewing logical (physical) security and cybersecurity as separate issues, SoloInsight, a Microsoft partner, uses a multi-layered behavior-based approach that secures both physical and cyber assets, including check-in, PACS, elevators, parking, loading docks, machines, workstations, applications, websites, documents, and payments.
By using SoloInsight’s Cloudgate, built on Microsoft Azure, organizations can use self-service kiosks in low-traffic areas to provide a higher level of security than previously possible. A supply chain management and logistics solutions company uses the platform to capture a picture of each employee entering the building. If an employee’s face is not authenticated, they cannot enter the building. A traditional system would allow entry if the person had possession of an easily cloned proxy card.
Smart: Improving operations and creating a positive user experience
Because IoT devices collect a wide range of data, security officials can use the information to gain real-time insights and protect data. Self-serve kiosks can remember previous visitors and employees and immediately grant access to the building, which increases satisfaction. Additionally, IoT visitor management systems can deactivate access to the network and data when a person physically leaves the building. By using systems that connect both the physical and logical components, you can ensure unauthorized personnel are not using someone else’s credentials.
Building management can also use data to make decisions that drive efficiency, such as predicting visitor and employee traffic patterns. For example, housekeeping and maintenance work can be scheduled at times when most employees in a section of the building are not at work. When devices are part of an overall IoT platform, such as Microsoft Azure, data collected from devices can easily be stored in the cloud, used with artificial intelligence to predict what will likely happen in the future and off-loaded from the cloud to IoT devices.
Secure: Collecting and protecting data
As IoT devices receive and store information, they often include operational and personally identifiable information (PII) data. This makes it essential for platforms to securely store and manage all data collected. The Microsoft Azure Sphere platform includes three components that work together to bring the promise of a secured, connected future to microcontroller unit (MCU) devices everywhere and includes three components that work together to lock down device security: the Azure Sphere MCU, the built-in Azure Sphere OS, and the turnkey cloud security service.
One of the biggest challenges with IoT technology is the number of devices and access points, which often include mobile devices. Security officials need the ability to monitor the health of all IoT devices in real time and remove compromised devices from the network. With the sensitive nature of PII, security officials find that they require a platform with strict privacy controls, authorization levels, and compliance tools. With IoT devices built on a secure platform that uses the latest technology, public buildings can transform into smart buildings while continuing to provide both physical and logical safely.
Coming April 25, 2019: Make public safety collaborative with IoT
Discover how collaborative IoT can improve public safety by registering for the IoT in Action webinar, IoT and the New Safety Net. Get insights from industry experts and Microsoft partner SoloInsight around how transparent frameworks create secure buildings.
Quelle: Azure
We are pleased to announce the general availability of the new Azure HDInsight management SDKs for .NET, Python, and Java.
Highlights of this release
More languages: In addition to .NET, you can now easily manage your HDInsight clusters using Python or Java.
Manage HDInsight clusters: The SDK provides several useful operations to manage your HDInsight clusters, including the ability to create clusters, delete clusters, scale clusters, list existing clusters, get cluster details, update cluster tags, execute script actions, and more.
Monitor HDInsight clusters: Manage your HDInsight cluster's integration with Azure Monitor logs. HDInsight clusters can emit metrics into queryable tables in a Log Analytics workspace so you can monitor all of your clusters in one place. Use the SDK to enable, disable, or view the status of Azure Monitor Logs integration on a cluster.
Script actions: Use the SDK to execute, delete, list, and view details for script actions on your HDInsight clusters. Script actions allow you to run scripts as Ambari operations to configure and customize your cluster.
Getting started
You can learn how to get started with the HDInsight management SDK in the language of your choice here:
.NET Getting Started Guide
Python Getting Started Guide
Java Getting Started Guide
Reference documentation
We also provide reference documentation that you can use to learn about all available functions in the HDInsight Management SDK.
.NET Reference Documentation
Python Reference Documentation
Java Reference Documentation
Try HDInsight now
We hope you will take full advantage of the HDInsight management SDKs for .NET, Python, and Java and we are excited to see what you will build with Azure HDInsight. Read this developer guide and follow the quick start guide to learn more about implementing these pipelines and architectures on Azure HDInsight. Stay up-to-date on the latest Azure HDInsight news and features by following us on Twitter #AzureHDInsight and @AzureHDInsight. For questions and feedback, reach out to AskHDInsight@microsoft.com.
About HDInsight
Azure HDInsight is an easy, cost-effective, enterprise-grade service for open source analytics that enables customers to easily run popular open source frameworks including Apache Hadoop, Spark, Kafka, and others. The service is available in 36 public regions and Azure Government and National Clouds. Azure HDInsight powers mission-critical applications in a wide variety of sectors and enables a wide range of use cases including ETL, streaming, and interactive querying.
Quelle: Azure
Der Glasfaser-Ausbau bis an die Straßenecke kostet 2.000 Euro pro Kunde, bis ins Haus sind rund 5.000 Euro fällig. Dennoch setzt Inexio verstärkt auf FTTH, auch wenn sich dem Kunden dafür nicht viel mehr berechnen lässt. (Festnetz, Telekom)
Quelle: Golem
Microsoft Azure is uniquely positioned to help you meet your compliance obligations. Customers need to identify risks and conduct a full risk assessment before committing to a cloud service, as well as comply with strict regulations to ensure the privacy, security, access, and continuity of their cloud environment and downstream customer data in cloud.
Quelle: Azure
Volkswagen will mit 5G in der Produktion flexibel große Datenmenge in die Fahrzeuge einspielen. Campusnetze könnten auch zusammen mit Netzbetreibern laufen. (VW, Telekom)
Quelle: Golem