Enomaly Announces support for the Google App Engine (Google in the cloud)
Apr 8th, 18:46 UTC
Enomaly announces Enomalism product support for Google App Engine which enables users to run their web applications on Google's global
cloud infrastructure.
Toronto, April 8th, 2008 - Together with Enomaly's open source Enomalism Elastic Computing platform, the Google App Engine enables application developers an easy to build, easy to
maintain, and easy to scale hosted environment free of traffic and data storage contraints. With App Engine, there are no servers to maintain: You just
upload your application, and it's ready to serve your users.
Google App Engine makes it easy to build an application that runs
reliably, even under heavy load and with large amounts of data. The
environment includes the following features:
- dynamic web serving, with full support for common web technologies
- persistent storage with queries, sorting and transactions
- automatic scaling and load balancing
- APIs for authenticating users and sending email using Google Accounts
- a fully featured local development environment that simulates Google App Engine on your computer
Google App Engine applications are implemented using the Python programming language. The runtime environment includes the full Python language and most of the Python standard library. You can learn more at: http://code.google.com/appengine/
The python based Enomalism platform is ideally suited as quick an easy way to get up and running on the google infrastructure. Enomalism is an open source web-based virtual infrastructure platform.
Designed to answer the complexity of managing globally disperse virtual server & cloud environments. Enomalism helps to automate the transition to a cloud computing environment by reducing an IT organizations overall development efforts. The easy to use platform can help with issues including deployment planning, load balancing, automatic VM migration, configuration management, capacity diagnosis and resource monitoring/metering and application deployment.
You can learn more at http://www.enomalism.com
(Submitted by George Bazos of Enomaly)
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