
The Cloud Pod wins second place for the Jedi contract – Ep 45
10/30/19 • 42 min
The DOD awards the coveted Jedi contract, the MS ignite Draft, Earnings season and more this week on The Cloud Pod.
Sponsors:
- Foghorn Consulting – fogops.io/thecloudpod
Follow Up Topics
- Pentagon awards controversial $10 billion cloud computing deal to Microsoft, spurning Amazon
- Even after Microsoft wins, JEDI saga could drag on
General News/Topics
Earnings Season
- Microsoft’s cloud shines again as it easily tops earnings targets, but Azure slows
- Despite AWS cloud growth, Amazon shares sag on lower forecast
- Google Cloud fails to lift Alphabet enough to please investors
AWS
- 200 Amazon CloudFront Points of Presence + Price Reduction
- Native Container Image Scanning in Amazon ECR
- AWS Global Accelerator Now Supports EC2 Instance Endpoints
- Updates make Cloud AI platform faster and more flexible
- Advancing Customer Control in the Cloud
- Swipe right for a new guide to PCI on GKE
- Bring Your Own IP addresses: the secret to Bitly’s shortened cloud migration
- What’s happening in BigQuery: New features bring flexibility and scale to your data warehouse
Azure
- Preview: Server-side encryption with customer-managed keys for Azure Managed Disks
- New in Stream Analytics: Machine Learning, online scaling, custom code, and more
MS Ignite Draft
Jonathan
- Digital Assistant to compete with Alexa or Google Home.
- 3 more Azure Regions in US
- More or Improved tooling for Devops Community
Peter
- Istio for AKS
- 1 more region in Canada
- Visual Studio Online
Justin
- Azure Portal Redesign
- Sagemaker/Databricks like Competitor.
- Oracle on Stage
Lightning Round (Jonathan 12, Justin 16, and Guest 4):
The DOD awards the coveted Jedi contract, the MS ignite Draft, Earnings season and more this week on The Cloud Pod.
Sponsors:
- Foghorn Consulting – fogops.io/thecloudpod
Follow Up Topics
- Pentagon awards controversial $10 billion cloud computing deal to Microsoft, spurning Amazon
- Even after Microsoft wins, JEDI saga could drag on
General News/Topics
Earnings Season
- Microsoft’s cloud shines again as it easily tops earnings targets, but Azure slows
- Despite AWS cloud growth, Amazon shares sag on lower forecast
- Google Cloud fails to lift Alphabet enough to please investors
AWS
- 200 Amazon CloudFront Points of Presence + Price Reduction
- Native Container Image Scanning in Amazon ECR
- AWS Global Accelerator Now Supports EC2 Instance Endpoints
- Updates make Cloud AI platform faster and more flexible
- Advancing Customer Control in the Cloud
- Swipe right for a new guide to PCI on GKE
- Bring Your Own IP addresses: the secret to Bitly’s shortened cloud migration
- What’s happening in BigQuery: New features bring flexibility and scale to your data warehouse
Azure
- Preview: Server-side encryption with customer-managed keys for Azure Managed Disks
- New in Stream Analytics: Machine Learning, online scaling, custom code, and more
MS Ignite Draft
Jonathan
- Digital Assistant to compete with Alexa or Google Home.
- 3 more Azure Regions in US
- More or Improved tooling for Devops Community
Peter
- Istio for AKS
- 1 more region in Canada
- Visual Studio Online
Justin
- Azure Portal Redesign
- Sagemaker/Databricks like Competitor.
- Oracle on Stage
Lightning Round (Jonathan 12, Justin 16, and Guest 4):
Previous Episode

The Right to Bare ARM Chips – Ep 43
Sponsors:
Foghorn Consulting – fogops.io/thecloudpod
- Ryan Lucas (@ryron01) fills in for Peter as we review the latest batch of cloud news. AWS re:Invent 2019 is just a month away and there’s no shortage of announcements this week either.
This week’s highlights
- AWS re:Invent 2019 session catalog is live. If you haven’t gotten into the panels you want, you’ll have to get on a waitlist. We’re also considering a podcast meetup! Please let us know if you’d be up for that. Reach out on Twitter or through the contact form.
- Look at migrating from Oracle. It may take some time and effort to accomplish, but the savings Amazon’s had are results that bear an attempt at repeating.
- You might be in luck if you have an open-source project. AWS is offering promotional credits to promote certain open-source work. Amazon completes massive migrations from Oracle After moving 75 petabytes of data involving 100+ teams, Amazon has finished migrating the last database of their first-party programs from Oracle to AWS services. The slashes in operational costs and latency may have the Amazon teams happy, but Oracle will definitely be watching to see if their other customers will be tempted to follow suit. A 90 percent reduction in cost would be an enticing prospect to switch providers of any service, and half the latency is nothing to sneeze at either. Amazon looks to be taking some of those savings and turning them right back around into more projects. Of note, they will be offering promotional credits to those working on open-source projects, especially if you are working in Rust. If you manage to get a whole year of funding through Amazon that will mean more time working on what you really care about and less trying to keep the grants coming in every quarter or, worse, every month. Rounding out AWS news, we discussed four other stories:
- VPC security groups come to Firewall Manager. Finally. You’d think this would be included day one, but at least it’s here now. Maybe soon it’ll be updated to include federated access?
- New M5n/R5n EC2 instances will offer up to 100 Gbps networking speeds. If you need to move around larger sets for machine learning, for instance, the price is reasonable.
- EC2 instances will also be available in Arm-based bare metal form. The bare metal probably won’t grant much of an efficiency edge anymore, but hey, maybe it will help meet especially strict compliances.
- AWS announced that another 18services hav
Next Episode

CloudWatch detects The Cloud Pod as an Anomaly – Ep 44
Peter goes Absent With Out Leave – AWOL. Redhat can’t save IBM’s earnings, AWS starts detecting anomalies, Google adds 100-Gbps direct connect links to their data centers, and Azure gets FHIR-Y. We also take a few somber minutes to talk about the passing of Mark Hurd, Oracle’s former Co-CEO. Plus the world famous lightning round.
Sponsors:
- Foghorn Consulting – fogops.io/thecloudpod
Follow Up
Topics General News/Topics
- Oracle’s Mark Hurd, who was on medical leave, has died at 62
- Despite Red Hat boost, IBM misses revenue targets ?
- Defense Secretary Mark Esper pulls out of JEDI cloud computing contract review
AWS
- Amazon CloudWatch Anomaly Detection
- Now Available – Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS) on VMware
- Containers and infrastructure as code, like peanut butter and jelly
- Amazon joins the Java Community Process (JCP)
- Improve your connectivity to Google Cloud with enhanced hybrid connectivity options
- Leave no database behind with Cloud SQL for SQL Server
Azure
- Microsoft unveils two open-source projects for building cloud and edge applications
- Announcing the general availability of larger, more powerful standard file shares for Azure Files
- Azure API for FHIR® moves to general availability
Lightning Round (Jonathan 11, Justin 16, and Guest 4):
If you like this episode you’ll love
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