New Open-Source Tool Makes it Easy to Tap Into Docker, the Cloud’s Next Big Thing

Your new app is brilliant; the code youve spent six months writing is beautiful. But when you upload it from your laptop to the web server, it just doesnt work. You know why: your laptops is configured slightly differently than the server, and now youre now going to have to spend hours maybe days figuring out what you need to change to make it run properly.

This is one of the biggest headaches for software developers. Its something that a popular piece of open source software called Docker can help alleviate. And now Docker has a helper of its own, an open-source project called Panamax that makes it easier to use Docker on the cloud.

Docker packs applications into software containers, which contain everything required to run the application. This makes it much easier to move an application from a developers laptop to a server, or to migrate the app from one server to another. Since its first public release in January 2013, the software has been downloaded over 8.7 million times and attracted over 553 contributors. There are now over 10,000 Docker related projects on the code hosting and collaboration platform GitHub.

But even though Docker makes it easier to run apps in the cloud, setting up the cloud that those applications will actually run on is still a pain. Thats because even though its simple to have two or more Docker containers on the same server talk with each other, enabling communications between containers that are spread across multiple servers is a bit of a nightmare. You can do it, but its something of a dark art, says Lucas Carlson, the founder of the cloud computing company AppFog, which was acquired by CenturyLink last year.

Thats why Carlsons team at CenturyLink built Panamax, a new open source tool designed to make it a snap to build and maintain Docker clouds.

Panamax is based around bundles of Docker containers called templates, which are pre-configured sets of apps that are ready to communicate with each other. For example, if you wanted to run a WordPress blog on your Docker cloud, you could install a Panamax template that includes both the WordPress application and the required database server. Once a template has been created, it can be instantly deployed with the Panamax interface.

In many ways, Panamax resembles a platform-as-a-service or PaaS much like Heroku, Google App Engine, or a growing number of Docker-based systems like Flynn and Deis. But Carlson says Panamax isnt a PaaS. I already built a PaaS, and I dont want to build another one, he says. Instead, he describes Panamax as a cloud builder. You could even use it to install a PaaS on your server, if you wanted.

Panamax already has many supporters in the container community, including Docker itself. I think its pretty exciting, says Docker vice president of services James Turnbull. Panamax helps with service composition and its very point and click which is awesome as a front-end to Docker.

Its very point and click which is awesome as a front-end to Docker

In some ways, Panamax looks like it could compete with Docker, the company. After all, selling premium management and configuration tools is a standard way to build a business around open source cloud technologies. But Dockers vice president of services James Turnbull says the company has different objectives from Panamax.

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New Open-Source Tool Makes it Easy to Tap Into Docker, the Cloud’s Next Big Thing

Enriching experiencefor Kazakh students

The Hindu Students from Kazakhstan undergoing internship at the International Centre for Free and Open Source Software in Thiruvananthapuram. Photo: C. Ratheesh Kumar

From the Central Asian republic of Kazakhstan to Kerala, it has been a journey of discovery and enrichment for Aisula Izmailova, Alfiya Kulmukhanova, Akzharkyn Izbassarova, and Aibek Ryskaliyev.

Far from the biting cold and harsh summer heat of their homeland, the four engineering students from Nazarbayev University are elated over the mild climate in Kerala and their first exposure to free software during their six-week internship programme at the International Centre for Free and Open Source Software (ICFOSS) here.

Ask them about their project work and they open up immediately, explaining their efforts to develop a Smartphone application that will enable visually challenged people to navigate obstacles.

We are just days away from completing the development of the mobile app, says Aisula. Designed to run on a Smartphone worn on the waist, the application makes use of the built-in camera on the device to capture and analyze visuals and derive an internal map of the layout of the area in front of the person. The user is alerted to obstacles in his path by a tone that changes in pitch and frequency depending on the proximity of the impediment.

The project is built around the Open Source Computer Vision (OpenCV) library, the most popular toolkit available for computer vision and related domains, says Satish Babu, Director, ICFOSS, who is mentoring the students along with Alex James, faculty at Nazabayev University. It makes use of the open source library to analyse visuals and identify objects.

Dr. James, who hails from Thiruvananthapuram, was instrumental in getting the students to do their internship at ICFOSS.

Aibek is confident that the app could be further developed at a later stage to benefit more people with impaired faculties. Apart from the Linux free operating system, the English-speaking students, all undergraduates majoring in Electrical and Electronics Engineering, have also had their first exposure to the Java software platform. On completion of the course, they plan to take up jobs in the communications industry, the most promising sector in Kazakhstan.

Named after the long-time president of Kazakhstan, the Nazarbayev University is located in Astana, the countrys capital.

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Agencies train librarians in software application

The Librarians Registration Council of Nigeria on Friday said that it was making efforts to bridge the skills gap in information and communication technologies among librarians.

Its effort, it said, was in collaboration with the National Information Technology Development Agency.

To this end, the two organisations stated that they had organised a workshop on application of Free and Open Source Software in library operations.

According to them, the workshop was aimed to arm librarians with skills to become key players in the Information and Communication Technology sector, able to deploy and apply the ICTs to improve the lot of all information seekers.

The Registrar and Chief Executive Officer of LRCN, Dr. Victoria Okojie, said the council was committed to ensuring that information professionals in Nigeria were at par with their counterparts in developed countries of the world.

It is in line with this wider picture that the council considered it appropriate to partner with the foremost public IT organisation, NITDA, in seeking to equip Information professionals and managers with competencies and skills that would enable them to choose and work with free and open source software in their libraries, Okojie said.

She said that financial resources available to libraries were not sufficient, hence only very few could afford to provide proprietary software to users.

The LRCN registrar stated that free and open source software is free, accessible and easy to maintain, but stated that most librarians were not informed of their availability and lacked requisite skills to deploy the facilities.

This skills-gap is what the workshop seeks to fill. Our desire is to train the over 4000 certified librarians in Nigeria if the resources are available, she said.

Our correspondent gathered that the workshop organised by the two bodies explored the possibilities FOSS offers for modernising Nigerian libraries and to facilitate information sharing and also strengthen technical capacity in deploying FOSS tools such as DSpace, Greenstone, Koha and CDS/ISIS.

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Agencies train librarians in software application

An interview with Michael Tiemann, founder of the first open source software company – Video


An interview with Michael Tiemann, founder of the first open source software company
5 Aug 2014 Audio: - http://opensource.com/business/14/8/interview-michael-tiemann-red-hat - http://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1622 CREATIVE COMMONS ATT...

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Is Open Source Software (Such as WordPress) The Best Choice for my Business – Video


Is Open Source Software (Such as WordPress) The Best Choice for my Business
Choosing the correct website and online presence technology for a business can be a frustrating and uniquely upsetting challenge. Understanding options and t...

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What Immigration did with just $1m and open source software

The Department of Immigration has showed what a cash-strapped government agency can do with just $1 million, some open source software, and a bit of free thinking.

Speaking at the Technology in Government forum in Canberra yesterday, the Department's chief risk officer Gavin McCairns explained how his team rolled an application based on the 'R' language into productionto filter through millions of incoming visitors to Australia every year.

Despiteworking forone of the largest bodies in Canberra - and one of the most security conscious - McCairns put his endorsement firmlybehind the use of open source.

'R'is a software languagedesigned for for statistical computing and graphicsthat runs on a wide variety of UNIX platforms, Windows and MacOS.

The systematic risk alert system that McCairns oversaw is nowin full production in every airport in Australia. The whole project took just $1 million and12 months.

"We developed an approach based on phases of prototype, pilot and production. It was based on the idea of trying stuff for nothing or very cheap, McCairns said

Our first pilot cost just $50,000. That was to get a consultant to teach us how to drive the open source software."

The application works towards the department's ultimate goal of having less passengersqueueing for an immigration official in an airport and more being processed to come into Australia quickly and easily, by trawling through thousands of visa applications for suspect anomalies.

Australia's working holiday visa scheme receives some 290,000 applications each year.In 12 monthsthe R-developed system threw uproughly 1000 anomalous applications, McCairns said, leadingeventually to 69 visas being declined or cancelled on further investigation.

The system also helps withthe identification of drug mules and their contacts using email IP addresses and data matching.

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What Immigration did with just $1m and open source software