
Ken Yagen on Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Here at MuleSoft, every few months we take a couple days off and hold a company Hackathon. Usually these are individual efforts to build something unique and interesting using the technology and products that we create at MuleSoft. To kick off the new year, we decided to sponsor a team event and see if we [...]
Filed under: Mule ESB, Mule iON, Mule Studio, MuleForge, MuleSoft by Ken Yagen on Wednesday, January 11, 2012 | Social tagging: amazon > atlassian > aws > getsatisfaction > github > gmail > hackathon > ion > iPaaS > JIRA > salesforce > twilio > twitter
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Sweta Vajjhala on Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Security around public cloud offerings has always been a major point of concern (and controversy) for users. How do cloud providers protect customer data? How is log data protected? How is the surrounding infrastructure secured? We previous talked about how iON stays up and running even through EC2 outages. Today, we will talk about iON [...]
Filed under: Mule iON, MuleSoft, Tech Ramblings by Sweta Vajjhala on Wednesday, November 16, 2011 | Social tagging: amazon > aws > cloud > ec2 > ElasticSearch > ipsec > mongoDB > Mule iON > nginx > openswan > Secure Data Gateway > Security > SSH tunnel > upstart > vpc > vpn
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Sweta Vajjhala on Tuesday, October 18, 2011
High availability. Fault-tolerance. Redundancy. Region failover. These are all major features that users look for when determining which cloud platform to use. They are not, however, easy problems to solve when building a cloud platform. Previously, we discussed the technology surrounding Mule iON’s architecture. Now, we will take a deeper dive into these components and [...]
Filed under: Mule iON, MuleSoft, Tech Ramblings by Sweta Vajjhala on Tuesday, October 18, 2011 | Social tagging: amazon > Amazon S3 > aws > chef > cloud > EBS > ec2 > ElasticSearch > HA > iPaaS > mongoDB > Mule iON > redundancy > region failover > replication > scalr
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Kevin Depew on Monday, March 30, 2009
We have been running Galaxy successfully on our in-house servers and laptops for demo purposes for some time now and decided that having a running image of Galaxy on Amazon’s EC2 was the next logical step. Galaxy in the cloud gives us the opportunity to expose a running instance to a much wider audience than [...]
Filed under: Mule ESB, MuleForge, Tech Ramblings by Kevin Depew on Monday, March 30, 2009 | Social tagging: amazon > ec2 > governance > howto > performance
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