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http://www.fr-batterie-portable.com


http://www.fr-batterie-portable.com/dell.html
 

Battery for DELL XPS 13


By Zdziarski at 2017-08-07 23:29:21

The big loser in all this is Google's Chrome browser. It may be the most popular browser out there, but Chrome is notoriously resource-hungry and can take up a lot of power and processing cycles. Other browser manufacturers know this and are increasingly using the issue as a stick to beat Google's browser with.Will it work? That remains to be seen. It's too early to know if Opera's battery saving tech is pushing its market share out of the single digits, and while the latest stats on Edge look good, it's doubtful they'll be a big selling point for people considering upgrading to Windows 10 in the future. HP is working on a worldwide recall of laptop batteries for the usual reason: they might overheat and catch fire.The batteries shipped with a bunch of different HP and Compaq-branded models sold between March of 2013 and August of 2015, including HP ENVY, Compaq Presario and HP Pavilion. Batteries sold as spares or replacements are also included in the recall.Since there are a lot of different barcode numbers covered by the recall, HP has posted software to check whether a unit has an at-risk battery, here.DockerCon StorageOS is a UK-based startup offering simple and automated block storage to stateless containers, giving them state and the means to run databases and other applications that need enterprise-class storage functionality without the concomitant complexity, rigidity and cost.


It runs as a container in a Linux system and provides plug-ins for other containers to use that give them easy, programmatic access to stateful storage services.The company was founded by CEO Chris Brandon, CTO Alex Chircop, product management VP Simon Croome, and engineering VP James Spurin. It is Brandon's fifth startup, others he has worked with being GreenBytes and Xsigo – both bought by Oracle – where he led the technical teams.Chircop has been global head of storage platform engineering at Goldman Sachs and head of infrastructure platform engineering at Nomura International; about as strong a traditional enterprise IT background as you could wish for.Croome led global engineering teams at Fidelity and Nomura, and web development at UBS in London. Spurin was previously the block storage product manager for Goldman Sachs and the technical lead for storage engineering at Nomura. We see lots of experience in enterprise IT and storage here.These four got together and after a year's discussion of product technology needs, architecture and design, set up StorageOS in 2015, with private investor support.What they want to provide is an enterprise-class storage platform that is simpler, faster, easier, and lower-cost to use than legacy IT storage, which they characterise as needing storage admins, slow, complex, costly and rigid. They want to provide automated storage provisioning to containers which can be instantiated and torn down many thousands of times a day.



Brandon says the company is deliberately not located in Silicon Valley, which venture capitalists expect, because Silicon Valley has an insular environment. There is lots of innovation in London, England, where several other container-focussed startups exist.The founder's thesis is that manually provided and managed storage is obviously not practical for containerised and DevOps-type environments. So, Brandon said, We built a toolset for people to store data in containers.It is agnostic about the underlying platform: bare metal, containerised, virtualised server or the cloud. The company says StorageOS, the product, is an ultra-low entry point, full enterprise functionality storage array that is integrated with VMware, Docker, AWS, and Google Cloud.StorageOS is focussed on containers for now because that is where the largest initial opportunity is located. It has four focus areas in the container arena:The product works like this: it installs as a container under Linux or a containerised OS such as CoreOS. It locates the storage accessible by its host node: direct-attached, network-attached and cloud-attached, and connected nodes. This is aggregated into a virtual, multi-node pool of block storage. Volumes are then carved out for accessing containers, (thinly) provisioned, mounted, and a database can be loaded and started. This is done in single-digit seconds, typically 2 or 3.Accessing containers use a StorageOS plug-in from Docker or Kubernetes to see the StorageOS container, and have their storage provisioning automated, accelerated and simplified.


The back-end storage itself is not accessed unless data needs to be read or written.On top of this basic provisioning there are bells and whistles adding enterprise storage-class functionality:Brandon says: There is a lot of power in the rules engine – far beyond what a traditional storage array would provide.StorageOS encourages performance by running storage for databases that runs on the same node as the app and provides local caching.The QoS comes in two forms. Basic QoS is about not exceeding thresholds for IOPS and throughput while enterprise QoS is more sophisticated, using a fair use scheduler to balance out QoS across different services and remedy the noisy neighbour problem. With the QoS features, Brandon says, admins don't have to hand-tweak containers.This set of features is variably distributed across a free edition of the software and two paid-for editions:Freemium – download at no cost and run on, for example, a laptop, and experiment with product.
Professional Version adds clustering, high-availability and caching in DRAM and flash (acceleration), deduplication, compression.
Enterprise Edition Professional Feature provides replication, encryption, migration and QoS.
Volume-based pricing will also be available.



StorageOS provides cost-reduction for public cloud users. For example, with replication in Amazon you have a compute instance running in the source environment and a second running in the target environment. With StorageOS, data is replicated to the target with no need for any compute instance there, until a fail-over occurs. This saves money.StorageOS is not limited to use by containers – it being a general and software-defined storage provisioning platform for virtualised servers and the cloud. It will have iSCSI and Fibre Channel support added, being a general software-defined storage product if customers want to treat it that way. The beta product is being released now and here is what it broadly looks like:Support for free software version customers will involve a forum and email, while paid-for customers can buy next-day and 24x7 4-hour support services.StorageOS has joined the Linux Foundation and is a board member of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), where it is involved in setting up a Storage SIG and has a Kubernetes plug-in. It has also been accepted as a Docker Alliance Partner.

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