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Using Amazon's AWS to host a VFP app in the cloud
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General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Installation, Setup and Configuration
Environment versions
Visual FoxPro:
VFP 9 SP2
OS:
Windows 7
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01568536
Message ID:
01569053
Views:
72
During a hurricane when your power is off a week, "could based" might as well be "pie in the sky" when you don't have web access. I can still run a computer on battery. Have you noticed that the industry doesn't address issues such as this or am I the only one that is noticing that? And it's just not hurricane's, it could be war/attacks and a lot of things as well.

I still have clients who live in communities that only have dialup. Lot's of issues still out there that make us a long way from being cloud friendly. Some can't even get Sat web access if they wanted to due to the side of the mountain/forest they are on.

Off my soap box (till next time.....:) )

>>>PMFJI and for very naive question. How would VFP app work in a cloud? From Rick Strahl's message it would like having a VM box somewhere in the "cloud". But what I don't understand is, if the VM is not on the customer LAN, how do users load VFP application?
>>
>>Depends on what you're trying to do. If you're running a Web Server that you want to host - everything just lives on that box and the server runs there like a physical machine would. For Web apps this is a good way to go...
>>
>>For other types of apps that same model doesn't work so well unless you have some remote access technology (remote desktop or Citrix etc.) to allow people to access the machines remotely and run on the desktop. I wouldn't think that VMs would be the best fit for this though because virtualization does have a performance impact and you typically want all the hardware you can afford for any kind of large remote access technology. A real physical heavy duty box probably wouldn't be a bad call for this sort of thing...
>>
>>But in general - software is going to the Web/Cloud and that's really where VMs make much more sense because the app is a server that's self contained and you really don't care (as long as you got enough horsepower) whether it's running on a physical box or a VM. Running on a VM has the advantage that you can copy it and it can automatically be scaled up with multiple copies if required.
>>
>
>I am intrigued by your statement that "software is going to the Web/Cloud." Not because I disagree with you, because you already know I respect you as much as anyone in this industry. It just gets my attention that you say it. That's where you really think things are headed? Maybe I better rethink this whole thing. Up to now I have regarded the cloud as just another Microsoft "marketecture" designed to increase revenue. I do not want to be slow on another paradigm shift.
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