際際滷shows by User: TCoupaye / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: TCoupaye / Tue, 06 Oct 2015 20:16:36 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: TCoupaye Towards the extinction of mega data centres? To which extent should the Cloud be distributed at the network edge? /slideshow/towards-the-extinction-of-mega-data-centres-to-which-extent-could-cloud-be-distributed-at-the-network-edge/53617043 2015ieeecloudnetkeynotetcoupaye-151006201636-lva1-app6891
Keynote by Thierry Coupaye at the IEEE International Conference on Cloud Networking, Niagara Falls, Canada, October 2015. Summary: Cloud computing emerged, a decade or so ago, from underused computing and storage ressources in Internet players mega data centres that were thought to be provided "as a service". As a result of this inception, Cloud is often considered as a synonym for massive data center, which somehow fuels a very centralised vision of (cloud) computing and storage provision. However, we might be at a time in which the pendulum begins to swing back. Indeed, several initiatives are emerging around a vision of more geographically distributed clouds where computing and storage resources are made available at the edge of the network, close to users, in complement or replacement of massive remote data centres. This presentation discusses, through some examples, the evolution of cloud architectures towards more distribution, the signs and stakes of these mutations.]]>

Keynote by Thierry Coupaye at the IEEE International Conference on Cloud Networking, Niagara Falls, Canada, October 2015. Summary: Cloud computing emerged, a decade or so ago, from underused computing and storage ressources in Internet players mega data centres that were thought to be provided "as a service". As a result of this inception, Cloud is often considered as a synonym for massive data center, which somehow fuels a very centralised vision of (cloud) computing and storage provision. However, we might be at a time in which the pendulum begins to swing back. Indeed, several initiatives are emerging around a vision of more geographically distributed clouds where computing and storage resources are made available at the edge of the network, close to users, in complement or replacement of massive remote data centres. This presentation discusses, through some examples, the evolution of cloud architectures towards more distribution, the signs and stakes of these mutations.]]>
Tue, 06 Oct 2015 20:16:36 GMT /slideshow/towards-the-extinction-of-mega-data-centres-to-which-extent-could-cloud-be-distributed-at-the-network-edge/53617043 TCoupaye@slideshare.net(TCoupaye) Towards the extinction of mega data centres? To which extent should the Cloud be distributed at the network edge? TCoupaye Keynote by Thierry Coupaye at the IEEE International Conference on Cloud Networking, Niagara Falls, Canada, October 2015. Summary: Cloud computing emerged, a decade or so ago, from underused computing and storage ressources in Internet players mega data centres that were thought to be provided "as a service". As a result of this inception, Cloud is often considered as a synonym for massive data center, which somehow fuels a very centralised vision of (cloud) computing and storage provision. However, we might be at a time in which the pendulum begins to swing back. Indeed, several initiatives are emerging around a vision of more geographically distributed clouds where computing and storage resources are made available at the edge of the network, close to users, in complement or replacement of massive remote data centres. This presentation discusses, through some examples, the evolution of cloud architectures towards more distribution, the signs and stakes of these mutations. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2015ieeecloudnetkeynotetcoupaye-151006201636-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Keynote by Thierry Coupaye at the IEEE International Conference on Cloud Networking, Niagara Falls, Canada, October 2015. Summary: Cloud computing emerged, a decade or so ago, from underused computing and storage ressources in Internet players mega data centres that were thought to be provided &quot;as a service&quot;. As a result of this inception, Cloud is often considered as a synonym for massive data center, which somehow fuels a very centralised vision of (cloud) computing and storage provision. However, we might be at a time in which the pendulum begins to swing back. Indeed, several initiatives are emerging around a vision of more geographically distributed clouds where computing and storage resources are made available at the edge of the network, close to users, in complement or replacement of massive remote data centres. This presentation discusses, through some examples, the evolution of cloud architectures towards more distribution, the signs and stakes of these mutations.
Towards the extinction of mega data centres? To which extent should the Cloud be distributed at the network edge? from Thierry Coupaye
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-TCoupaye-48x48.jpg?cb=1633337070 Thierry Coupaye is head of research on Internet of Things (IoT) inside Orange Labs. Prior to that, after he completed his PhD in Computer Science in 1996, he had several research and teaching positions at Grenoble University, European Bioinformatics Institute (Cambridge, U.K.) and Dassault Systems. He joined France Telecom in 2000 where he had several research expert, project manager, project and program director positions in the area of distributed systems architecture, autonomics, cloud computing and networking. He is the author of more than 60 refereed articles and has participated in multiple program and organization committees of conferences in these areas. He has been involved in se...