https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/overview?topic=overview-zero-downtime
> How does IBM Cloud ensure zero downtime?
Definitely not this month, fellas.
EDIT: Why I don't use that word on statuspage postings.
Nó dùng Watson AI của IBM để dịch mày.
Ngôn ngữ thì nó hỗ trợ cả tiếng Triều Tiên và Bồ Đào Nha: https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/language-translator?topic=language-translator-translation-models#list-languages-supported
Ibm db2 has community edition, which is free for local installs on small machines. Less than 4 cores and 16 gb of memory, no data cap, no time limit, and is available as a docker image. Also free is db2 lite on the ibm cloud. The limit there is a data size one (200 mb, I think), and concurrent connections, and if you do not use it for 30 days. They shut it down.
https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/visual-recognition?topic=visual-recognition-release-notes
"16 October 2020
You can no longer create a Lite plan instance of the Visual Recognition service. "
There are 2 ways to manage access to apps in IBM Cloud. That tutorial demonstrates how to replicate an application from the Identity and Access Management (IAM) model to the Cloud Foundry management model. You wouldn't normally need to create an alias unless you wanted to do this.
Aliases are connections that hold references to remote resources across the platform. They're useful for application management facilitating interoperability and re-use. In this case, the alias is a connection between the IAM-managed service and the Cloud Foundry service and the connection reference will be visible in your CF org or space. If you wanted, you could create connections between your IAM service in multiple CF region, orgs, or spaces.
More information on aliases and managing connections here:
https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/cloud-foundry-public?topic=cloud-foundry-public-connect_app
SA shows as a data centre however not a global location. That could be why you are unable to select when doing a server config. It could require a different process to utilise as its not a commonly used location.
I'm happy to reach out to the creator of the workshop (an Eastern European sales team) to understand why they put in this comment about Firefox, however this is clearly not an official statement from IBM Cloud nor is it correct.
A "Cloud" is a very multi-faceted solution; any user of AWS, Google, Azure, etc. will recognize that, and so there is no one place to say what your browser support is for every aspect of your cloud, but clearly IBM Cloud has no requirement on a specific browser. The designers and UX teams of the base IBM Cloud UI design open sourced a framework which is fully cross-browser supported and tested called the Carbon Design System. Several subsections of the IBM Cloud docs, when necessary, detail cross-browser support minimum levels (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge..), like this support document. It would be silly to develop a web-based UI to be used by millions of users that required a single browser solution to operate correctly.
Happy to take any other criticism of IBM or IBM Cloud; I know we have plenty of haters, but be assured there is no anti-Firefox movement in the cloud unit as so many people use the official IBM-configured Firefox on their provided Macs, Windows, and Linux systems.
You sign up for an API key on their site.
https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/watson?topic=watson-iam
Don't try to use someone else's you find online, that will get both you AND them banned.
Many cloud services give you a small amount of usage free, you might have to pay if you have a lot of data you want to process.
I believe nothing particularly fancy is used in industrial setting. Most of the solutions tend to look something like this https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/services/assistant?topic=assistant-getting-started
there's a very basic overview of the current architecture for IBM Cloud here: https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/infrastructure/network-infrastructure?topic=network-infrastructure-quemu-basic-virtual-machine
It's a pretty standard KVM-based OSS stack, but they do have a lot of "special sauce" wrapping it up on the management side so it's probably a good mix of proprietary stuff as well. Compared to other places at IBM, Cloud seems like a growth area and a good place to grow and get more experience, but it's a large organization and really comes down to what team you end up on. Definitely worth inquiring a bit more on that aspect if you're on the fence.
I figured it out after searching and experimenting some more. https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/services/cloud-monitoring/retrieve-metrics?topic=cloud-monitoring-retrieve_data_api#retrieve_data_api https://cloud.ibm.com/apidocs/monitoring-metrics-api#retrieve-metrics-from-a-space I'm going to use these to pull metrics into an external Grafana server. Since this information was hard to find, I may write a tutorial for this.
Sure thing! Here's some doc links just for reference:
Good luck!
> In public cloud Google has GKE, Azure has AKS, and so on.
Adding to this, I'm not sure of the other providers since my work is w/ IBM, but I know IBM offers a free one-node kube cluster and paid clusters are charged hourly (I think the smallest worker nodes are 11 cents an hour).
https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/containers?topic=containers-getting-started#container_index