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Dan Farber is the editor in chief of CNET News. He has covered technology for more than two decades, and he previously served as editor in chief of ZDNet, PC Week and MacWeek. Outside the Lines explores the intersection of business and technology.
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http://blog.gardeviance.org/2008/04/run-rabbit-run-rabbit-run-run-run.html
Second, whoever created the graphic has no clue. To start with Google App Engine just launched and is in beta, so it can hardly be considered 'leading' cloud software platform yet. Then there are the Social Graph API, Google Gadgets, Google Gears, GWT and Mashup Editor, none of which have anything to do with the App Engine and could be used just as well with the Amazon platform. Hopefully, CNET will find a writer with a clue to write a real comparison and maybe throw in some other alternatives such as Joyent which powers a good chunk of the facebook plugins.
Google has got the jump on all the other providers who have basically sat on their laurels for too long. Good article, neutral and well written. Dion's graphic despite ruffling feathers is spot on.
Best.
alain
- by perkin22 May 4, 2008 7:41 PM PDT
- Wow, talk about missing the target on this one. Hey, it GAE supports most of Django and your own coding, WAF is provided for convenience. For application programmers, a datastore is very easily abstracted (like Django does) to make the code portability trivial to other database enviornments. Dumping data from big table and moving it to SQL is trivial. The relationships in your diagram make little sense. What the heck are talking about here?
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(9 Comments)Maybe web application software frameworks and cloud computing require a different expertise that the Digital Camcorder reviews. If you don't really understand what your are reviewing, maybe it would be best to review something else? (I am trying to be as polite as possible).