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GCP puts the Cloud Pod on Ice – Episode 54


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Your co-hosts kick off their first regular news episode of the year with Consumer Electronics Show 2020, Google Cloud Next 2020 and Justin’s Oracle adventure.

A big thanks to this week’s sponsors:

  • Foghorn Consulting, which provides full stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure.
  • Blue Medora, which offers pioneering IT monitoring integration as a service to address today’s IT challenges by easily connecting system health and performance data —  no matter its source — with the world’s leading monitoring and analytics platforms. 
  • This week’s highlights
    1. Amazon flexes its tech at the Consumer Electronics Show with an automotive exhibit.
    2. Use coupon code GRPABLOG2020 for $500 off your ticket to Google Cloud Next 2020.
    3. Justin does a bit of investigative journalism to understand Oracle’s new boot volume backup announcement.
    4. Amazon Web Services (AWS) at the Consumer Electronics Show 2020 — Cars and CAs

      Those attending the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last week saw Amazon show off the practical uses of AWS technology and machine learning at their automotive exhibit. The exhibit includes an array of demonstrations from an in-vehicle digital assistant to car-to-home integrations to a fleet of autonomous cars in China. We’d like to see this sort of in-vehicle technology have constant cloud connectivity, where software updates can continue to be pushed out.

      And speaking of updates, you may have already seen a notification or email for AWS’s upcoming 2019 certificate authority. From the article:

      “If you are using Amazon Aurora, Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS), or Amazon DocumentDB (with MongoDB compatibility) and are taking advantage of SSL/TLS certificate validation when you connect to your database instances, you need to download & install a fresh certificate, rotate the certificate authority (CA) for the instances, and then reboot the instances.” -Jeff Barr

      Yeah, it’s a chore and it sucks to do, but if you use it and you don’t update your CA, you’ll have an outage. Is doing this once every five years really so bad?

      Lastly, in all AWS regions except China, you can now use Private DNS names to access your AWS PrivateLink based services. We’re happy to see it.

      Azure Recaps Cost Management for 2019

      While Azure’s been quiet since Christmas, their cost management program manager published an article this week recapping the tools they’ve released over the last year to help you monitor and optimize the costs of your cloud operation

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      tcp.fmBy Justin Brodley, Jonathan Baker, Ryan Lucas and Matt Kohn