IT and business line managers, developers and anyone
interested in learning more about how to contribute to, build and deploy
the OpenStack Trove database as a service project can participate in
OpenStack Trove Day, August 19, 2014 in Boston.
The day will feature an overview of the Trove project,
practical advice on managing both relational and NoSQL databases on
Trove platform and real-world discussions of Trove in use at companies
including eBay and HP. The day will also touch on other data related
topics in OpenStack including the use of Hadoop on OpenStack and a panel
discussion of data management in Amazon, OpenStack and traditional IT
environments. There will also be a talk on OpenStack from an investor’s
perspective.
Trove is the open source, community-developed database as a
service (DBaaS) component of the OpenStack cloud platform. DBaaS is a
way for IT managers within large enterprises and cloud service providers
to offer on-demand, self-service database capabilities to people within
their organization. This enables IT workers and business managers to
create databases on an OpenStack cloud instance without database
management experience.
“After four years, OpenStack is firmly established as the
leading enterprise-ready cloud platform and there is now a clear need
and desire in the market for offering database as a service on private
clouds,” said Ken Rugg, CEO and founder of Tesora. “We’re thrilled to be
hosting the very first OpenStack Trove Day as a forum for the community
to come together to learn and discuss what is real now and what is
possible for DBaaS on OpenStack.”
About OpenStack Trove Day
What: A full day conference dedicated to DBaaS on OpenStack
Where: Boston Marriott, Cambridge, 2 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, MA 02142
When: August 19, 2014, 8:00 AM – 5:00PM
Who: Hosted by Tesora
Sponsors include: Basho, Canonical, EnterpriseDB, HP Vertica, Mirantis, Percona, Red Hat and SkySQL
Presenters/speakers from: Basho, Bluebox, Canonical,
General Catalyst Partners, eBay, HP, HubSpot, Mirantis, MongoDB, Oracle,
Percona, Red Hat, SkySQL, Symantec, Tesora