Client Login
Customer Support
United KingdomUnited Kingdom
BelgiumBelgium
DenmarkDenmark
GermanyGermany
Hong KongHong Kong
NetherlandsNetherlands
NorwayNorway
South AfricaSouth Africa
SwedenSweden
by John Engates on May 19, 2008

I wrote on the RackLabs blog over the weekend about our first Rackspace Developers Conference and I thought I’d post a pointer to it here on the Rackspace blog too. To make a long story short, we held a big conference here in San Antonio last week for all of the Rackers who develop software here at Rackspace. We’re thinking next time we’d like to invite some of our customers. Does this sound like something you’d be interested in attending?

Also, if you’re a developer and interested in joining Rackspace, we’d love to hear from you too. We’re looking for talented developers, especially those skilled in the Python and Java languages.

Bookmark and Share
by Matt Van Winkle on May 15, 2008

I’ve been at Rackspace for a while. People ask me from time to time to explain exactly what Fanatical Support is. Typically, I try my best to walk through the basics of our approach, philosophy, etc. The challenge has always been that it’s hard to do so without getting into the technical jargon. For most folks, this causes eyes to glaze over and typically buries the important information under a series of acronyms and such in the listener’s minds. So, recently, I’ve tried to find other examples – even outside of the Rack – to help paint the proper picture.

Rackspace doesn’t have the market cornered on great service in San Antonio. There are businesses, and more commonly, individual people that exhibit the same traits we look for in Rackers. Not only was a recent experience my family had an example of this, but it serves as an excellent, non-technical, illustration of what Fanatical Support really looks like. (read more…)

Bookmark and Share
by John Engates on May 12, 2008

Last week, Rackspace attended Gartner’s Midsize Enterprise Summit in Orlando, Florida to talk to CIOs about hosting. We were given the opportunity to speak at four “boardroom” sessions during the three-day event. Our goal was to tell attendees about Rackspace and how hosting is a great alternative to do-it-all-yourself IT. I presented our story to about 100 IT decision makers from companies all over North and South America and apparently made an impression.

Honestly, I didn’t even know there were awards to be won at the show, but on the last evening of the conference we attended dinner and an awards ceremony where Gartner presented awards that were voted on by the attendees. We won! We were awarded the Midsize Enterprise Summit’s Mid Market Innovation Award in the service category. (read more…)

Bookmark and Share
by Antony Messerli on May 7, 2008

John Engates, our CTO, recently posted an article about Rackspace and Data Center Efficiency. Having been a part of a lot of those discussions and initiatives, I wanted to briefly touch on what we’ve done specifically to help reduce our carbon footprint on our servers in our Datacenters.

Processor Technology:

AMD Opteron has played a big part in us being able to reduce power. There are several reasons for this. When Opteron came out, they decided to take a different approach and deviate from what was the standard architecture that Intel always used. They integrated the memory controller on the processor and were able to remove the Northbridge from the motherboard. Because of this, the memory was linked directly to the processor and eliminated the usual bottlenecks that the Intel Platforms experienced. This allowed them to stay on older technology memory instead of jumping to the next while maintaining competitive performance. Because of this, we’ve been able to maintain performance with the Intel Xeons while taking advantage of faster memory throughput, reduced power, and reduced cost. One great example of this is that the AMD Socket F platform uses DDR2 memory and has better performance in some cases against Intel Xeon platforms with Fully Buffered Dimms (which take about twice as much power per module). (read more…)

Bookmark and Share
by David Mitzenmacher on May 5, 2008

Today we announced the private beta of the much anticipated CloudFS, an Internet-based storage offering that was developed by Mosso and Racklabs. I’ve included a couple interesting excerpts from the press release below:

This file storage offering, CloudFS, allows developers to securely store a virtually unlimited amount of data on the web connected through Rackspace’s infrastructure. At the conclusion of the beta program, the new storage offering will be available as a stand-alone service or as part of Mosso’s cloud hosting solution at competitive storage, bandwidth and transaction pricing. In addition, Rackspace customers will benefit from free local transfers between CloudFS and their managed hosting servers. The ability to tie a scalable and low-cost storage engine to Rackspace’s customized managed hosting environment is unique in the hosting industry.

Mosso is seeking applicants to participate in a private beta program as well as encouraging developers to build tools and services around CloudFS. Developers and businesses interested in the private beta can visit www.mosso.com/cloudfs to apply starting May 5, 2008.

Pricing for CloudFS is strictly pay-for-what-you-use. Current plans target the pricing for storage to start at $0.15 per gigabyte, upon release, including replicated copies for data protection. This competitive rate allows developers to scale their storage-related projects seamlessly and affordably.

The storage platform will be accessed via a ReSTful web services API and language-specific API’s (.NET, Java, PHP, Ruby, Python). CloudFS will support language-specific libraries, giving customers confidence that they can quickly and easily store data and run applications in a business-class, standards-based environment.

Check out John Engates’ post on the Racklabs blog for an interesting behind the scenes look at the development of CloudFS.

Bookmark and Share

You are currently browsing the The Official Rackspace Blog blog archives for May, 2008.
You can subscribe to this feed via RSS to receive updates when this content changes.

For more articles, click here to view our Press Releases.

For more articles, click here to view our News Articles.
  • Peter Yun: That was a memorable event for the community of Windcrest, NEISD, but I wasn’t able to see or visit...
  • Drew: I too was down for 1 hour, 12 minutes. I was never made aware there was going to be maintenance nor was I aware...
  • EdgeTech: What is the disaster recovery strategy for your cloud solutions?
  • Bentley: We had a downtime of 3 hours in our case (not 5 min). This is the not the first time this has happened. In...
  • Bryan Henderson: I was not greatly affected by 90 minutes of downtime, but was significantly bothered by the lack of...
Come Meet Our Experts in Dallas, Texas
We'll have Rackspace experts on site to share their knowledge and answer your questions.
Learn More
No More Servers
Stop buying servers for your business.
Learn Why