A Typo Took Down AWS, Google and Coursera Team Up to Offer Cloud Education and More in This Week’s News

Shalom Carmel Chief Information Officer at GlobalDots
4 Min read

AWS S3 Cloud Storage Crashed Because of Human Error

The cloud giant admitted that a human error is to blame for the AWS 4.5 hour long outage which impacted millions of customers last Tuesday. Issues started at 11.35am PST and lasted until 2.08pm PST, on February 28th impacting all AWS services running out of its North Virginia, US, data centre.

In their statement AWS said

How One AI-Driven Media Platform Cut EBS Costs for AWS ASGs by 48%

How One AI-Driven Media Platform Cut EBS Costs for AWS ASGs by 48%

“We continue to experience high error rates with S3 in US-EAST-1, which is impacting various AWS services.”

Among the impacted services were their on-premise-to-cloud connection mechanism, Storage Gateway, relational database Amazon RDS, Data Pipeline, Elastic MapReduce and many other. In an explanatory statement, AWS said the issues were caused by human error. Basically, an engineer pressed the wrong button when trying to take a small number of servers offline to make some fixes.

“One of the inputs to the command was entered incorrectly and a larger set of servers was removed than intended. The servers that were inadvertently removed supported two other S3 subsystems.”

Amazon apologized to its users and said they are taking necessary measures to make avoid similar inconveniences in the future. However, the crush triggered a wave of comments from industry experts and competitors. The outage has shown the massive footprint that AWS has, but also showed how much they need a hybrid component to their solution. Hybrid remains the best pragmatic approach for businesses who are working in the cloud, protecting them from downtime, money lost, and a number of other problems caused by outages like this one.

Amazon logo on the side of a modern glass building against a clear blue sky.

Read More:
TechCrunch, Cloud Pro

Google And Coursera Announced Cloud Training Partnership

Tech giant Google and online course platform Coursera announced a partnership aimed at accelerating the acquisition of cloud knowledge.
The courses will be taught by Google’s experts and are conceived to help both individuals and businesses. Louise Byrne, head of cloud training delivery at Google, said attendees will gather all the required skill and learn from the very people that developed the platform. The training courses will be addressing many cloud-related topics like operations, data analysis, cloud fundamental and machine learning. The first available course will be Big Data and Machine Learning within the Data Engineering on Google Cloud Specialization topic.

“It’s a major milestone in Coursera’s journey toward closing the global skills gap and empowering learners with career-relevant skills.”

Leah Belsky, VP of Global Business Development at Coursera.

Coursera’s cloud courses will be adapted to all levels of knowledge, ranging from beginners who are just starting to understand cloud, up to advanced cloud engineers. The company stated their courses will be especially useful for current and aspiring IT professionals and data engineers.

Logo of Google Cloud,featuring the words 'Google' in colorful letters and 'Cloud' in gray.

Read More:

Fortune, Cloud Pro

Akamai Ion Introduces Machine Learning Optimizations and Mobile SDK

Akamai released a new version of their Akamai Ion product. The web performance solution aims at providing an improved mobile experience through the addition of their Mobile App Performance SDK and the implementation of machine learning.

While Akamai has a proven track record as a leader in the CDN market, their grasp on the mobile sector has been relatively thin. With the newest release of Ion, Akamai will look to improve their position by tackling the challenges of mobile content delivery. Their main weapons are the two new additions: Automated Performance Optimization and Cellular Optimization.

“We believe this release of Ion marks the beginning of a new kind of powerful performance optimization”

Ash Kulkarni, Senior VP and General Manager of the Akamai Web Performance Business Unit.

The newest version of Akamai Ion offers a mobile SDK that enables developers to pre-position content to ensure consistency in situations of unclear network conditions and lost connections. The SDK also contains SureRoute for Cellular, a feature for reducing latency over the last mobile mile while providing custom metrics.

A hand holding a smartphone with colorful digital app icons emerging and spreading out in a vibrant display.

Read More:

Akamai, Bizety

Salesforce CEO Says Brexit Prevented Higher Revenue

Cloud computing giant Salesforce reported a full year revenue of revenue of $8.39 bn, with the last quarter reaching $2.29 bn at a 27% YoY growth. CEO Mark Benioff expressed his delight with the results while putting emphasis on Salesforce’s consistent growth

In 2004, when we went public, we had $46 mil in quarterly revenue. And now in the fourth quarter alone, we delivered $2.3 bn in revenue and, for this fiscal year, we are guiding to more than $10 bn.

Along with the excitement for the positive achievements, Benioff slammed on the Brexit situation claiming that the numbers would be even higher if it wasn’t for Brexit and subsequent instability of the British Pound. In their earning forecast for the next quarter Salesforce projected a 22-23% YoY growth in expected revenue, which translates to between $2.34 bn and $2.35 bn.

Exterior of a building featuring the Salesforce logo on a sunny day.

Read More:

Cloud Pro

IBM Q To Enable Commercial Quantum Computing

IBM announced their plans to build the first universal quantum computers intended for business and scientific use. However, official release dates have not yet been revealed. Either way, these ambitions are worth noting since quantum computing is expected to revolutionise the way large-scale computing is performed.

The product, called IBM Q, will likely deliver its quantum systems via IBM’s cloud Platform Bluemix. The company stated their initiative aimed at providing commercial quantum computing will be the very first of this kind within the industry.

Classical computers are extraordinarily powerful and will continue to advance and underpin everything we do in business and society. But there are many problems that will never be penetrated by a classical computer. To create knowledge from much greater depths of complexity, we need a quantum computer

Tom Rosamilia, senior VP of IBM Systems

Quantum computing will definitely make Analytics and Big Data disciplines more valuable and actionable. However, the security community has high concerns over the technology as it could render current cryptographic practices completely obsolete, meaning that new security technologies will have to be developed in order to offer adequate levels of data protection.

A sleek, modern IBM server system in a bright, minimalist environment.

Read More:

CNET, Cloud Pro

Latest Articles

Complying with AWS’s RI/SP Policy Update: Save More, Stress Less

Shared Reserved Instances (RIs) and Savings Plans (SPs) have been a common workaround for reducing EC2 costs, but their value has always been limited. On average, these shared pools deliver only 25% savings on On-Demand costs—far below the 60% savings achievable with automated reservation tools. For IT and DevOps teams, the trade-offs include added complexity, […]

Itay Tal Head of Cloud Services
21st November, 2024
Three Ways CISOs Can Combat Emerging Threats in 2025

73% of CISOs fear a material cyberattack in the next 12 months, with over three-quarters convinced AI is advancing too quickly for existing methods to combat it. But what can CISOs do to prepare for the coming wave – and access the resources they need to deal with this evolving threat landscape? To find out, […]

11th November, 2024
How Optimizing Kafka Can Save Costs of the Whole System

Kafka is no longer exclusively the domain of high-velocity Big Data use cases. Today, it is utilized on by workloads and companies of all sizes, supporting asynchronous communication between even small groups of microservices.  But this expanded usage has led to problems with cost creep that threaten many companies’ bottom lines. And due to the […]

Itay Tal Head of Cloud Services
29th September, 2024
Migrating Volumez RedHat VMs into Amazon Linux 2 for higher effective discounts rate of Saving Plan

A cloud data infrastructure company relied on extensive use of multiple instance types to test its products. But this made it difficult to optimize costs – a fact which had begun to impact their ability to scale the business.   The GlobalDots team helped the company identify and implement a new infrastructure configuration that both saved […]

Itay Tal Head of Cloud Services
19th September, 2024

Unlock Your Cloud Potential

Schedule a call with our experts. Discover new technology and get recommendations to improve your performance.

    GlobalDots' industry expertise proactively addressed structural inefficiencies that would have otherwise hindered our success. Their laser focus is why I would recommend them as a partner to other companies

    Marco Kaiser
    Marco Kaiser

    CTO

    Legal Services

    GlobalDots has helped us to scale up our innovative capabilities, and in significantly improving our service provided to our clients

    Antonio Ostuni
    Antonio Ostuni

    CIO

    IT Services

    It's common for 3rd parties to work with a limited number of vendors - GlobalDots and its multi-vendor approach is different. Thanks to GlobalDots vendors umbrella, the hybrid-cloud migration was exceedingly smooth

    Motti Shpirer
    Motti Shpirer

    VP of Infrastructure & Technology

    Advertising Services