Friday, April 1, 2011

Simplweb Announces Cloud-based Version of its Joomla!

The world’s primary provider of Joomla, – Simplweb.com CMS as SaaS, embarked with a relaunch of its nonstop CMS website service for minor businesses on a new cloud-based platform. Joomla! Which is an esteemed open source content management system (CMS) – used to influence millions of website. Simplweb.com has improved its distinctive Joomla! Software-as-service (SaaS) – providing for small businesses by collaborating with Rackspace to facilitate instant deployable CMS sites on a cloud server environment.

SimpleWeb is an evolution from “one click installers” ordinary in most web hosts; it offers immediate Joomla site use to a cloud based server environment.  Every technical portion of the site is sufficiently managed including; code updates, security, backups and conservatory management.  The site also offers inclusive training and support on all phases of constructing a Joomla website.

Looking at these improvements, Simplweb is on the brink of becoming a majority player in the small business website arena, as said by founder of Simplweb.com Barrie North. And the surfacing Simpleweb’s new association with the RackSpace Cloud enhances our clients’ websites; simple to build, vastly scalable and entirely bulletproof, Barrie, alleges.

Barrie founded Simplweb in 2007 following a successful rapid in selling designs and facilitation of training for the highly praised Joomla! –CMS. The Top selling author of “Joomla – A User's Guide,” Barrie alleged a need for comprehensive, software-as-service (SaaS) subscription service facility that included first-class publishing platform software, proficient and customizable designs, expert training, scaleable hosting, hands-on support, and regular improvements as well as innovative features.

According to Barrie, as the nation’s economy warms up and small businesses goes back to marketing investment, this is where Simplweb.com comes in for both web designers and small business owners to make use of our easy, yet powerful service to make websites prompt, affordable, and with assistance of every walk of the way. We seek to help small businesses take benefit of this great software for their websites without necessarily including an IT department, according to Barrie.

Simplweb’s new infrastructure is created on one of the industry’s top innovative service providers, such as Texas-based RackSpace Hosting. By employing RackSpace’s flexible and rock solid cloud environment, thanks to Simplweb now each customer is now offered up to five individual websites that are all effortlessly hosted within a solitary user account.

As Simplweb’s users came up with demands of a multi-site feature, the new cloud environment now looks to have this incredibly scaleable. According to Barrie, each consumer can fabricate up to five websites valued at thousands of dollars each at a cost of one $24.95 a month subscription. “Websites can be built and deleted on the fly as desired,” Says Barrie.
In conjunction with its new infrastructure, Simplweb is relentlessly improving its other core 
proficiencies, including: 

  • Uncomplicated and efficient search engine marketing (SEM) aspects and training
  • An extensive range of specialized templates
  • Constantly improving features such as document management, blog comments, user directories, and many others
SimpleWeb’s recent system upgrades in addition to its reputation as a receptive teacher and devotee of small businesses, it stands out amid the sea of services rendering websites to clients, Barrie explained.  There one month free trial with limitless support also sets them apart.

Microsoft: Dying to Be an Open-Source Something! …But What?

Microsoft just cant stand the idea of being eliminated from an open source acquaintance company, and due to this, it has managed to pull some strides – evidently, since the days in of Steve Ballmer where he used to name Linux a cancer. However today, every person gives lip service to open source. It’s indeed difficulty to practice what you preach; but as we illustrate on our editorial on how to catch a glimpse of open-washing….
Microsoft has open-sourced diverse projects, including working with developers to carry out open source encoding languages on its operating systems and of late, it hired a senior executive of open source communities.

Michael Szul, an associate and developer at Barbella Digital say’s he used to be totally anti-Microsoft, he never had a Windows desktop. Today, according to Szul is considering acquiring Windows Phone 7 mobile phone to swap with his Android-based phone.

Szul alleges that although Microsoft dumped IronRuby and IronPython, it still has substantial support to the community. In fact, it has even maintained developer open to help the Mono team. Szul's complains as a developer are not as much of Microsoft's openness, and more of about how fractured its marketplace environment is among XBOX Live, MSN Marketplace Zune Marketplace, and many others.

Although having improved its footing in the developer community, it's still not in the same pace like other companies. Facebook, Apple, and Google form a few companies that command major open source contributions including popular projects such as the WebKit, Android and Apache Cassandra. So what has Microsoft built? –A cluster of open source ASP.NET code.

If Microsoft sees an endeavor from just having a great reputation of being a substantial player in the open source community, then it would push Microsoft further, not only to be seen as a player but to open-source something huge, and not late.

Looking at both sides of the coin what could Microsoft open-source that would have a huge enough impact?

Windows:
Of course this would be huge; however it will more or less certainly never take off. In fact, it's extremely huge as a source of revenue for Microsoft to risk cannibalize its sales – and allow other strong companies to package rival distributions. Another factor is that of all the proprietary elements licensed from other firms.

Conceivably, Microsoft could take some kind of an open core approach, still. And maybe some of those licensed elements could even provide for as the differentiators among the open source and proprietary editions of Windows. But even such a scenario, things seems unlikely.

Windows Phone:
This is also uncertain. Bearing in mind the amount of money Microsoft washed-out getting Nokia just to run Windows on its handsets, the company almost certainly isn't about to give it away at no cost,  not even open-source it. Microsoft has made even less possible by the reality that the Windows phone, desktop and the tablet OS are likely to fuse into Windows 8.

Internet Explorer:
This brings logic, apart from working with separating OS components from the browser, as well as dealing with approved technology. The other large browsers -Chrome, Firefox and Safari - are either based on open source software or open source, and Microsoft grants IE away in any case – But would it make any variation  whatsoever at this juncture if IE was open source?

ServiceOS:
Do you remember some time back in 2009 when Microsoft Research project was called Gazelle? As of now, it’s still vaporware; even though there's a strong case to open-sourcing it. Google Chrome Operating System is already showing considerable numbers of trickling into the marketplace, considering some other small fry browser-oriented OSs. Open-sourcing Internet Explorer well with this small OS would give Microsoft something it could bargain to netbook manufacturers as an option to Chrome. In the meantime, it would be adjusted particularly towards services such as Office 365 and Bing.

Now, would an open source ServiceOS bring any distinction at this point? It’s still uncertain. The company perhaps won’t see the need to open-source it either, taking into account that it was already able have vendors install Windows as a substitute of Linux on netbooks once. Considering the growing perception that tablets are the future; Microsoft already announced tablet approach in Windows 8.

This leaves us with Office, which I don’t see it happening!

What else remains? Possibly some components of Azure maybe open sourced? The Kinect SDK? The other key substitute we are likely to see is that Microsoft may create something totally new and open-source it.

More at OpenSourceBox.......

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Using Remastersys to Customize a Distro

Did you know you can use Remastersys to produce your own customized alternative version of a Debian installation or Ubuntu? Remastersys is simply an entirely system backup tool.  What you do essentially, you tailor a running system and craft an install disk that will rebuild it.  Those of you who have always desired to create your own distribution, you can’t imagine how easy this is to use. Lest just say for now its Tonybuntu…

With these instances all I suppose is that you’re rooting out your own personalized alternative version on Ubuntu 10.10, as there are hardly any extra steps involved in the formation of a Debian alternative version.

The procedure is very straightforward: What you do is that you install a Linux system, modify it, run Remastersys and then subsequently set up a customized installation disk that will rebuild that modified system. The installer carries out in the normal Ubuntu process, so any folders that were wondering about in your original home directory, for instance, won't be copied along. This also suggests that every program will be installed with fresh, unaltered backgrounds. There are, although, ways of including more customizations, that is – if you need to.

One useful way of working Remastersys is to utilize it with a VM for example –VirtualBox. This way, you mount Debian or Ubuntu inside a virtual machine; customize it, while Remastersys produces the installation disk. Presently, there is a 4GB maximum to the size of the ISO folder that it can produce, which should be adequate enough in most instances.

Once you have a new installation of Ubuntu ready, start by adding the Remastersys storage area to the file /etc/apt/sources.list

Then revive the package list by either typing sudo apt-get update or clicking on reload in Synaptic. Then you can now customize further by adding and taking off packages on the system. After you’ve had things and you’re satisfied with the way they are, run Remastersys. After you've installed it, through the use of package manager, which is just located below the Gnome system menu.

Here, you’ find a set of options to adjust the installation disk. And when you are all set, push on the “dist” option, along with much churning, an ISO file is formed. Make a note of the default target site for the ISO will be /home/remastersys/remastersys/, and not in the personal home directory of the key user.

If you have worked this out within a VM, you’ll have to institute some sort of file distribution in order to obtain the ISO file back onto your host PC so that you can copy it to a disk. Boot from the disk in the usual way and you'll be offered with a fairly distinctive set of install options. The installation itself employs the standard Ubuntu installer.

Of course this is just quick oversight of what Remastersys can provide in terms of creating custom installation media. It’s not only a complete system backup tool, but it also forms quite a number of scope for more customizations on the set of files that are burned during installation.