More than 15 percent of the Australian company’s infrastructure runs on an OpenStack-powered DreamHost Cloud.
“We started using OpenStack because we saw the value of segregating hardware resources and the opportunity to isolate and simplify the infrastructure configuration,” Manuel Sopena Ballesteros says.
Dozens of users will take the stage in Sydney to tell their stories about working with OpenStack. Catch them live or on video.
If it’s changing the world it’s probably powered by OpenStack — and many of those users will be at the Sydney Summit says Mark Collier.
Chris Morgan, cloud services team leader, on disappearing documentation and upstreaming long-term support releases.
The human resources leader deploys private clouds in every data center, with virtual machines (VMs) and bare metal.
The Italian telecom company uses OpenStack as the framework for its infrastructure-as-a-service public cloud.
Adobe’s Advertising cloud runs OpenStack in production across six data centers in the US, Europe and Asia says cloud platform manager Joseph Sandoval.
The Japanese telecom giant runs over 10,000 virtual machines, 1,000 hypervisors in eight regions. Two team members talk about what’s next and the importance of testing.
Belmiro Moreira, cloud architect, tells Superuser how the research center went from a few hundred nodes to 280,000 cores.