Handshake account, because i like to live dangerously.
We're going to need data centers, like Gab. They're going to go for registrars, DNS, WAF, SSL certs, and infrastructure. If they can boot Parler off AWS, it's the first one in a stream of many others. Ultimately we're going to be rolling our own. Forewarned is forearmed.
Open-source software to get reading up on:
- https://www.eucalyptus.cloud/
- https://www.opendcim.org/
- https://www.openstack.org/
- https://opennebula.io/
- https://rancher.com/
- https://ceph.io/
- https://www.appscale.com/
- https://about.gitlab.com/
- https://min.io/
- https://mattermost.com/
- https://www.signserver.org/
- https://openvpn.net/cloud-vpn/
- https://grafana.com/
- https://nextcloud.com/
- https://www.cloudfoundry.org/
How do you figure all this out if you've never done it before, without your own data center? Ahaa.
Raspberry Pi: https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-vwkdICXwFmc/V5F7gv-O0KI/AAAAAAAAD_A/3pLLWS5ahMQhi4AwsONzQQVV63L8i2BLgCLcB/s1600/pistack-1.jpg
A Pi is $60 (ish). A 32GB SD card for it is $8. Putting together 20 of these on a switch simulates a metal rack in a real data center. Get that running, and you can scale it up in a warehouse when a few cunning pedes decide to set one up. With router, USB power cables and Eth cables, you're looking at $2000-ish for a training rack. Or $1000 for a smaller one of 10. FB packs up to 64 drives into each tray, but the principle is the same.
Your aim with the private rack is to allow people to log in to your cloud stack, and deploy their own VPC over your 20 Pi devices as if if were their own single HDD.
All AWS does is rip off open source software like Postgres, TensorFlow, and OpenNLP anyway.
Other interesting things:
- https://zeronet.io/
- https://webtorrent.io/desktop/
- https://z.cash/technology/zksnarks/
- https://github.com/signalapp
- https://cryptojs.gitbook.io/docs/
- https://github.com/tiangolo/nginx-rtmp-docker
Once you have that one done, go up a level and set up Hadoop on them. Parallel processing, baby.
EDIT: added Rancher
Handshake account, because i like to live dangerously.
We're going to need data centers, like Gab. They're going to go for registrars, DNS, WAF, SSL certs, and infrastructure. If they can boot Parler off AWS, it's the first one in a stream of many others. Ultimately we're going to be rolling our own. Forewarned is forearmed.
Open-source software to get reading up on:
- https://www.eucalyptus.cloud/
- https://www.opendcim.org/
- https://www.openstack.org/
- https://opennebula.io/
- https://ceph.io/
- https://www.appscale.com/
- https://about.gitlab.com/
- https://min.io/
- https://mattermost.com/
- https://www.signserver.org/
- https://openvpn.net/cloud-vpn/
- https://grafana.com/
- https://nextcloud.com/
- https://www.cloudfoundry.org/
How do you figure all this out if you've never done it before, without your own data center? Ahaa.
Raspberry Pi: https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-vwkdICXwFmc/V5F7gv-O0KI/AAAAAAAAD_A/3pLLWS5ahMQhi4AwsONzQQVV63L8i2BLgCLcB/s1600/pistack-1.jpg
A Pi is $60 (ish). A 32GB SD card for it is $8. Putting together 20 of these on a switch simulates a metal rack in a real data center. Get that running, and you can scale it up in a warehouse when a few cunning pedes decide to set one up. With router, USB power cables and Eth cables, you're looking at $2000-ish for a training rack. Or $1000 for a smaller one of 10. FB packs up to 64 drives into each tray, but the principle is the same.
Your aim with the private rack is to allow people to log in to your cloud stack, and deploy their own VPC over your 20 Pi devices as if if were their own single HDD.
All AWS does is rip off open source software like Postgres, TensorFlow, and OpenNLP anyway.
Other interesting things:
- https://zeronet.io/
- https://webtorrent.io/desktop/
- https://z.cash/technology/zksnarks/
- https://github.com/signalapp
- https://cryptojs.gitbook.io/docs/
- https://github.com/tiangolo/nginx-rtmp-docker
Once you have that one done, go up a level and set up Hadoop on them. Parallel processing, baby.