Keywordsnbsp cloud computing domain those years cloud computing
Enomaly, a cloud computing company founded in 2003, was acquired by Virtustream, a corporate cloud provider, in 2012. A few days ago, Enomaly founder Reuven Cohen published an article on Forbes to count some of the early cloud computing Daniel.
The following is the full text of the article:
Recently, I was fortunate to be Infomationweek Charles Babcock as one of the early cloud pioneers. This is a great ranking that includes some of the early cloud blazers (including James Urquhart, David linthicum, Michael Crandell, John keagy, etc.). Although this is an impressive list, I still feel a few people are missing. Here are some of the early cloud computing I added to Daniel.
Moshe Bar
Moshe Bar is one of the most prolific entrepreneurs in the area of early virtualization and cloud computing. He was first known as the main developer and project manager of the Openmosix project. Founded in 2002, Openmosix is a free cluster management system that provides a single system image (SSI) feature, such as automatic assignment between nodes. It allows a program process (not a thread) to migrate to a device in a node network, which can run the process faster (process migration). He later started the Qlusters company, an early Open-source data-management agency, and later relied on the company to launch the Xen Virtual machine management program--xensource, which was sold to Citrix in 2007, at $700 million. And he was co-founder of Qumranet (the creator of KVM virtualization Technology), and Qumranet sold it to Red Hat at 107 million dollars a year later.
Kate Keahey
Kate Keahey was an early innovator in another cloud field, and she inspired my first generation Enomaly IaaS platform in 2004. She is a scientist at Argonne National Lab and a researcher at the University of Chicago researcher Computational Institute. Her research focuses on virtualization, policy-driven resource management, and various aspects of access to quality services in a grid environment. She led the Globus Toolkit virtual Workspace (renamed Nimbus) to provide a development approach to the dynamic deployment of virtual devices, which can be said to be the first real IaaS platform.
Khazret Sapenov
Khaz is an interesting person and is Enomaly's first employee, and his job is basically to develop some of the crazy ideas I want to come up with. Khaz was involved in the first commercial project to be deployed on Amazon EC2, including the cloud-centric video/3d rendering farm, designed for NBC Universal in September 2006, which is still the best example of a "cloud eruption" architecture even 7 years later. He has also created one of the earliest and largest user groups for cloud computing in Google and LinkedIn.
Fabrice Bellard
Programmer Fabrice Bellard is the most famous creator of FFmpeg and QEMU software projects, Fabrice Bellard Project has been in the International C Language Chaos Code Contest (IOCCC, the Analysys obfuscated Contest) was awarded two times. He is a great pioneer of modern hardware accelerating virtualization. Without his contribution, projects like OpenStack would not appear. He is often imitated and never surpassed.
Vladimir Miloushev
Miloushev is the co-founder of 3Tera and is the original CEO of the company. 3Tera was founded in 2004, 3Tera is the first commercial utility computing platform. Unfortunately, Miloushev died of a brain hemangioma in August 2007, aged 45. Barry X Lynn called him a "brilliant, extraordinary visionary".
In addition:
Marc Benioff--salesforce, founder of Dr. Jason Hoffman--joyent, founder of Tom Mornini, Lance Walley, Ezra Zygmuntowicz and Jayson Vantuyl --engine Yard founder Willem Van Biljon, Chris Pinkham, Christopher brown--Amazon EC2 founder Peter Pell-mell, Tim grance--The NIST author who defines cloud computing Vivek kundra--First Chief information Officer (CIO) of the United States
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