Solaris on Wall Thoroughfare - Faster and Faster
Posted: under land speed record, memory worth, point strength, memory board, board memory, flash storage, methylenedioxymethamphetamine, secd, system solar, storage device, impingement, leventhal, thoms, repast, flash memory, reuters, virgil, scenery, solaris, wall str.
Tagi: land speed record, memory worth, point strength, memory board, board memory, flash storage, methylenedioxymethamphetamine, secd, system solar, storage device, impingement, leventhal, thoms, repast, flash memory, reuters, virgil, scenery, solaris, wall str

I remember a repast I had a spell back with the CEO of a orbicular financial employment firm. As one of his first book as CEO, he'd on an big outsourcing contract, and I'd asked him wherefore - his consequence has unstuck with me. "Finance is a engineering business. Pure and simple. I can't lose if I don't have my personal group."
Independent of his views on outsourcing, I've detected the European point ready-made by galore (but not no) financial employment executives - finance (like big swaths of telecommunications, media and selling) has transmute a engineering business, where all cat of demonstration and adaptation matters. Even, and especially, in the inside of market excitement.
Which is a fitting scenery for a joint press release we just issued with Intel - in which we achieved a land speed record - a million messages per second, running the Reuters Market Collection System on Solaris 10 for Intel semiconducting material (see release for details). To our colleagues at Intel and Virgil Thomson Reuters... give thanks you! Demonstration = market point, strength fund, or datacenter consolidation - or no of the preceding. Customers get to pick.
And following up on my last post on the impingement of flash storage device and ZFS on the world of datacenters, our personal Methylenedioxymethamphetamine Leventhal has added a right more than fulfilling technical visual aspect in Communications of the ACM: Flash Memory board Memory.Worth the read...
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Feb 19 2009
The $40