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WHTop → 📋 News → Microsoft Adds New Regions to Azure Government
Oct, 2016 : Microsoft Adds New Regions to Azure Government
📅 - Microsoft has long offered government agencies a special version of its cloud computing platform, Azure. Now, Microsoft is expanding their government services with the launch of a Department of Defense versions of Office 365 and Azure.
Microsoft also announced that Azure Government is expanding and offering South West (Arizona) and South Central (Texas) regions by 2017.
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📅 - AWS Educate to Provide Students, Educators Cloud-Based Learning - Amazon Web Services (AWS) recently launched AWS Educate, part of its worldwide initiative to give educators and students alike a new method for cloud-based learning and career selection.
As technology continues to depend and rely on the cloud for storage and communication capabilities, AWS Educate will help students and teachers work together to find career paths for students based on the new Cloud Career Pathways. Cloud Career Pathways include 25 content modules that students can take at their own pace to find entry-level jobs with the skills they learn in training.
Read more here.
📅 - Silicon Valley Outspends the Banks in Washington - Silicon Valley has jumped into the spotlight as they have outspent Wall Street about 2-1 in Washington. Over the last eight years of the Obama Administration, the technology industry has planted itself firmly in Washington. Mark Zuckerberg hung out with the president, along with others and all the big companies are spending like crazy this election.
Lobbying efforts have been in full swing with companies, such as Google and Facebook spending plenty of money in government. It's estimated that tech firms spend $49 million on lobbyists in Washington last year and the largest banks only spent about $19.7 million.
Across the Eastern U.S. on Friday, Internet service had been disrupted for many people.
Dyn posted a message on it's website explaining the situation, “Some customers may experience increased DNS query latency and delayed zone propagation during this time. Our engineers are continuing to work on mitigating this issue.”
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📅 - Google Makes Nomulus Open Source - Nomulus, Google's cloud-based registry platform for TLDs, has gone open source. Google released the code for Nomulus under the Apache 2.0 license.
Nomulus runs on the Google App Engine and is backed by Google's NoSQL Cloud Datastore. Nomulus was started in 2011.
According to Google, Nomulus manages multiple TLDs and supports all TLD functions.
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📅 - Cameras from Chinese Firm Were Used to Take Down the Internet - A security camera maker in China has admitted their products were used for the cyber-attack recently taking down internet access for millions across the globe. The hackers used CCTV cameras from the Hangzhou Xiongmai Technology Co. to take down the internet with malware. This was announced in an email statement from the company.
The attack took down Spotify, Twitter, PayPal and other major sites for a period of time. This shows how hackers can use a number of different online gadgets to attack the internet.