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Speaking of the aforementioned cloud money order phentermine (because how could a week go by without doing so), Bittman also shared his thoughts on the technology, its current state and how it fits into the RTI concept. RTI, he explained, is all about creating a service oriented infrastructure where IT is shared across users, divisions, applications and beyond. The ultimate realization of a cloud of money order phentermine resources where service requirements go in and services come out all transparently fits right into what RTI is looking to accomplish, but for now, believes Bittman, cloud money order phentermine is pretty much a way to achieve scale. There is a lot of smoke, he said, but little fire, as current (and recently announced) offerings simply lack the service level management and the policy enforcement capabilities needed for a mature, enterprise ready solution. However, he said, cloud money order phentermine certainly is “pointing toward the future” and certainly is a strategy to be aware of in the years to come. Personally, I'm inclined to agree with Bittman about the current state of cloud money order phentermine as it relates to doing it on a grand scale a la Google but I believe it will be a reality in the datacenter sooner than some might expect. IBM, for its part, understands that baby steps are necessary, and therefore is planning for its first Blue Cloud offering to be in the form of an IBM BladeCenter far from a Web scale collection of servers. What's more, solutions like Appistry's Enterprise Application Fabric (or GigaSpaces XAP or DataSynapse FabricServer, to name a few) already do a good job forming “clouds” and allowing for high availability, and they're improving every day when it comes to policy based automation and SLAs. Obviously, there is some work to be done along the lines of education and open standards before niche solutions like this become widespread, but I believe the foundation of cloud money order phentermine already has been laid. For those of you interested in scale, I would suggest reading our interview with ScaleOut Software founder and CEO William Bain. Distributed caching solutions are gaining in popularity, but not everybody is aware of all the players in the space; most of us tend to focus on the more well known vendors like GigaSpaces and Tangosol (now part of Oracle) and GemStone. However, other companies are doing their own things to deliver massive scale and low latency, and Bain does a nice job of differentiating ScaleOut from the others. I also should point to our special section, featuring two articles relating to the Open Grid Forum's activities at last month's SC07 conference. OGF is doing some great work toward achieving interoperability among both enterprise and production grids, and they showcased both initiatives in Reno. As I mentioned when the original announcements were made during the show, the grid market has come a long way by having major middleware and job scheduling solutions being able to interoperate. As for the rest of this week's issue, make sure to check out the following items, as well as any others that might be up your alley: “HealthAlliance Hospital Implements IBM Grid Archiving”; “ObjectWave Launches Data Caching Developer Framework”; “SAS, Sun Launch Datacenter BI Initiative”; “DMTF Creates Open Standard for Virtualization Management”; “Fujitsu, Citrix Cut Cost of Datacenter Scalability”; and “NCSA to Host Workshop on Datacenter Design.” Comments about GRIDtoday are welcomed and encouraged. Write to me, Derrick Harris, at . ... money order phentermine