Twitter Tests Doubling Its Character Limit To 280

A 140-character tweet (left) and one with 280 characters (right).

Twitter

Twitter’s 140-character limit could soon be toast.

The company is considering nixing its long-defining constraint in favor a new limit: 280 characters.

The change, which Twitter is currently testing globally with a small group, would apply to tweets in every language except Japanese, Chinese, and Korean — which already allow you to say more with fewer characters.

“We want every person around the world to easily express themselves on Twitter, so we're doing something new: we're going to try out a longer limit, 280 characters, in languages impacted by cramming,” Twitter said in a blog post.

The test is sure to provoke a strong reaction among Twitter’s hardcore users, who have a long history of reacting strongly to changes in the service’s fundamentals, such as Twitter’s decision to transform the timeline from reverse chronological order to one that’s algorithmically sorted.

“We understand since many of you have been Tweeting for years, there may be an emotional attachment to 140 characters – we felt it, too. But we tried this, saw the power of what it will do, and fell in love with this new, still brief, constraint,” Twitter said its blog post. “We want to try it out with a small group of people before we make a decision to launch to everyone.”

When Jack Dorsey became Twitter CEO in 2015, he declared a willingness to rethink the entire product to make it more appealing to the masses. “We continue to show a questioning of our fundamentals in order to make the product easier and more accessible to more people,” Dorsey said in a July 2015 earnings call. He’s followed through on the promise, adding live video, introducing the algorithmic timeline, changing “faves” to “likes,” creating personalized article recommendations based on Twitter users’ networks, and more. A new character limit would follow the pattern.

Dorsey’s strategy has produced mixed results so far. Since he made the declaration about questioning Twitter’s fundamentals, the company’s stock has lost approximately half its value. But Twitter has added more than 10 million users since then.

The same tweet in different languages

Twitter

In Japan, whose language allows people to convey complex thoughts in a small number of characters, Twitter has outpaced Facebook. The company is clearly seizing upon lessons learned there as it tests these longer tweets. “Our research shows us that the character limit is a major cause of frustration for people Tweeting in English, but it is not for those Tweeting in Japanese,” Twitter said. “In all markets, when people don’t have to cram their thoughts into 140 characters and actually have some to spare, we see more people Tweeting.”

Quelle: <a href="Twitter Tests Doubling Its Character Limit To 280“>BuzzFeed

Now You Can Encrypt LDAP Communication with AWS Directory Service for Microsoft Active Directory

Starting today, you can encrypt Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) communication between your applications and AWS Directory Service for Microsoft Active Directory, also known as AWS Microsoft AD. Many Windows and Linux applications use LDAP to read and update information about users and devices, including personally identifiable information (PII). Now you can enable LDAP over Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)/Transport Layer Security (TLS), also called LDAPS, to encrypt your LDAP communications end to end. This helps you protect PII and other sensitive information exchanged with AWS Microsoft AD over untrusted networks.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon QuickSight now allows users to create analyses from dashboards and import custom date formats

Amazon QuickSight users can now create analyses from dashboards within their account. This allows users to quickly create customized views of dashboard content by modifying existing visuals or adding new visuals. New users may utilize this capability to get started quickly by creating QuickSight analyses from dashboards shared with them. For data administrators, this capability reduces requests for customizations of dashboards and enables faster onboarding of users to QuickSight. 
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon Cognito Integrates with Amazon Pinpoint to Add Analytics for User Pools and Enrich Pinpoint Campaigns

Today, we added an integration between Amazon Cognito User Pools and Amazon Pinpoint to provide analytics for Cognito User Pools and to enrich the user data for Pinpoint campaigns. Amazon Cognito User Pools provide user directories that makes it easy to add sign-up and sign-in to your mobile or web application. Amazon Pinpoint provides analytics and targeted campaigns to drive user engagement in mobile apps using push notifications. Using Amazon Pinpoint Analytics, you can track User Pool sign-ups, sign-ins, failed authentications, daily active users (DAUs) and monthly active users (MAUs). This feature will thus enable user based analytics within Amazon Pinpoint. You can drill into the data for different date ranges or attributes like device platform, device locale, app version etc. You can also set up user attributes specific to your app using the Pinpoint SDK. These can then be used to segment your users on Pinpoint and send them targeted push notifications, emails, and SMS text messages. 
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Facebook Can't Say Whether Russians Bought Election Ads In France And Germany

German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks with Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg.

Frank Rumpenhorst / AFP / Getty Images

Facebook cannot say for certain whether profiles or pages connected to Russia purchased ads during the French and German election campaigns, a company official told BuzzFeed News.

The official said Facebook has yet to dedicate substantial investigative resources to potential ad buys in the French and German election campaigns because it has been focused on the effort in the United States.

“We've been focused on the look back here in the US given the ongoing investigations by both the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, but also because of what the special is counsel is looking at as well,” said the official, who spoke on condition that they not be named.

This highlights how much remains unknown about possible Russian efforts to target voters with election ads in the US and elsewhere. Facebook has acknowledged that the more than 3,000 ads run in the US may not constitute all Russian-purchased messages. The company also can't say for sure whether or not similar ad purchases were made during the recent French or German elections.

Last week CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a Facebook live that the company has “not yet found a similar type of effort in Germany” when it comes to ads. The official echoed that, saying, “To date, we have found no significant coordination of ad buys or political misinformation targeting Germany from known clusters in Russia.”

One reason could be that as of now the company's resources are primarily focused on its investigative effort in the US. This is because “criminal and ongoing investigations [about the election] don't exist in other countries,” the official said.

The official emphasized that Facebook improved its ability to identify and remove fake accounts ahead of the French and German elections, which they said lowers the risk of interference. In April the company announced it had removed 30,000 fake accounts in France. In August, German media reported that Facebook had deleted “tens of thousands” of accounts prior to the start of federal elections.

However, Reuters later revealed that Russian intelligence agents created more than 20 Facebook accounts in France “to conduct surveillance on Macron campaign officials and others close to the centrist former financier as he sought to defeat far-right nationalist Marine Le Pen and other opponents in the two-round election.” That predated the account removals and raises questions about whether Russian agents or other entities may have bought ads to target voters prior to the removals.

David Ramos / Getty Images

In Germany, where the election ended on Sunday, politicians remain concerned about a lack of disclosure from Facebook regarding possible attempts to influence the vote.

Renate Künast, a member of German Parliament for the Greens who chairs the Committee of Legal Affairs and Consumer Protection, said the company's voluntary disclosures to date do not satisfy concerns about foreign ad buys and related issues.

“Facebook plays a new role for citizens comparing candidates. Therefore, voluntary reporting by Facebook is not enough,” she told BuzzFeed News.

Künast called on the company and the German Federal Office for Information Security to release more details about how they cooperated to thwart attempts to influence the election, and what they did and did not find.

A spokesman for the German Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection told BuzzFeed News it has not discussed or received information about possible Russian-bought election ads from Facebook. The spokesman said Facebook “should be [focused on ensuring] that its infrastructure is not misused by such ads.”

BuzzFeed News contacted the office of French President Emmanuel Macron for comment but did not receive a reply.

BuzzFeed Germany worked with Who Targets Me to crowdsource targeted political ads shown to Germans on Facebook during the election. The project gathered an estimated 800 political ads and did not identify any from questionable or Russian sources.

The Facebook official said ads bought by a known Russian troll farm in the US were part of a unique effort that appears to be different from what was seen in France and Germany.

“The Internet Research Agency accounts were connected and were acting in a coordinated fashion,” the official said. “In France those accounts violated Facebook policy when it comes to authenticity.”

Echoing the current mood in the US, Künast, the German politician, said Facebook's stepped-up efforts regarding security and misinformation may be too late to avoid regulation.

“Zuckerberg now, again, tries everything in the last minute to avoid any regulation. I think it is not so easy,” she said.

Quelle: <a href="Facebook Can't Say Whether Russians Bought Election Ads In France And Germany“>BuzzFeed

CaaS Campfires Around The Wild Wild West

The post CaaS Campfires Around The Wild Wild West appeared first on Mirantis | Pure Play Open Cloud.
As more gas is continually thrown on the already exciting fire of adoption for all-things-containers, it seems to be the Wild Wild West out there in the race to provide services around the container ecosystem, specifically in the emerging market of Containers-as-a-Service (CaaS). There is no shortage of alternatives: new companies, old companies, big companies, small companies, public cloud companies, private cloud companies as well as managed services companies. Everyone is racing west to stake their claim in how developers can more easily adopt, deploy and best harness the flexibility of containers. So what is an enterprising container-user supposed to do? Seems best to join around the campfire with one of the prevalent camps of thought most suitable to you.

First, some context

Containers have been around for decades. My initial interaction with them was last century, no kidding. I was the product line manager for Solaris Resource Manager, a precursor to the kernel-based Solaris Containers in Solaris 10 (R.I.P. Solaris, how sad). Containers were terrific for running multiple applications within the same OS image while providing isolation and control of the various system resources. And then came VMware with virtualization, originally enabling server consolidation, flexibility in guest OS images, and over time the addition of advanced features along with other benefits that hit the IT industry by storm and never looked back. Funny, what’s old is new, containers are in vogue again.

The main difference, in my opinion, between containers then and now comes down to the primary intended user. Back then containers were decidedly for IT operations, to allow multiple applications to run in the same OS image by throttling resources accordingly. They were designed and intended for use after applications were developed. Now containers are intended to be used by developers to be able to package applications and their dependencies for easier deployment. They are designed and intended for use while applications are being developed as well as during application deployment and lifecycle management.

But what about CaaS and the camps?

Containers-as-a-Service enables developers to create and control their own container-based clusters without having to get into the complications of containers and container management system details. In essence, CaaS allows developers to focus on the development and packaging of their applications while also allowing IT operations to easily provide containers to developers. To this end, in the Wild Wild West there are many approaches to CaaS, each with multiple companies circling their wagons around different camps of thought. Here are a few:

The “single public cloud” camp comprises all the main public cloud providers. This camp professes that your needs can be met with one brand of public cloud by using their CaaS offering together with other cloud services in their portfolio. If you intend to commit to your favorite public cloud of choice, you will be well served by this camp.

The “for emerging companies” camp focuses on the needs of smaller companies with a commensurate development team, perhaps half a dozen to a dozen. Between the technology and/or the business models, these tend to focus on an easy off-premises onramp for a limited number of cloud resources. Some are managed offerings while others are not. If you fit this scale profile, you’ll be happy in this camp.

The “private and proprietary” camp offers containers as an extension to a legacy environment based on proprietary software. CaaS in this camp may be focused on-premises with some off-premises public cloud capabilities, and is trying to bridge an older deployment model with that of the cloud-native container model. If you are committed to the legacy model and also want some CaaS, this camp may be a fit for you.

You are always welcome at our camp

Mirantis is moving westward with a very flexible approach to containers and CaaS. Mirantis Cloud Platform has supported OpenStack VMs, bare metal resources and Kubernetes on bare metal from day one. Bare metal K8s on MCP are operator-initiated clusters, and now MCP optionally adds CaaS to enable developers to self-manage Kubernetes clusters across AWS and MCP OpenStack.

If you like choice in container deployment, you will like our camp. Not only can you run on-premises bare metal containers, but now you can also run on-premises CaaS within MCP OpenStack VM instances. In addition, CaaS enables the use of K8s on AWS instances to round out a true multi-cloud environment managed by the same toolchain. That’s right, Mirantis, the company known for private cloud, is embracing the public cloud. And not just AWS either, more choice in public cloud is coming soon.

If you like modern cloud-native principles, you will like our camp. Kubernetes was designed for cloud-native deployments and DevOps deployment practices. So was MCP. Through DriveTrain, MCP was designed from the ground up for continuous delivery of incremental change. MCP CaaS utilizes the DriveTrain toolchain to allow developers to create, resize and destroy K8s clusters through a simplified Web user interface. Don’t run your containers on an antiquated environment that wasn’t designed for the cloud-native world.

If you like flexibility in delivery models, you will like our camp. We can manage MCP and your CaaS environments for you with OpsCare, or you can manage them yourself with enterprise support from Mirantis ProdCare or LabCare. Ensuring you start off with the highest success possible, OpsCare allows you to focus on application development and deployment while Mirantis focuses on your multi-cloud environment with up to 99.99% SLAs. Through a Build, Operate, Transfer model we also afford you the flexible decision as to if and when you would prefer to take over operations.

The choices are yours. The software is 100% open source. Meanwhile, there’s no need to rough it, I’m going to put another log on the fire and hope you join our camp.

To learn more about CaaS and the new offering from Mirantis, join us on Tuesday, October 17 for a webinar, “Containers-as-a-Service: It’s not just a buzzword anymore.”

p.s. This seemed fitting…here I am in my “Dude Wagon” when I was about 4 or 5 years old. So long, partners!

The post CaaS Campfires Around The Wild Wild West appeared first on Mirantis | Pure Play Open Cloud.
Quelle: Mirantis

Mirantis Launches Multi-Cloud CaaS with AWS Support

The post Mirantis Launches Multi-Cloud CaaS with AWS Support appeared first on Mirantis | Pure Play Open Cloud.
Newly released Mirantis Cloud Platform expands beyond private clouds to run Kubernetes on the public cloud

SUNNYVALE, CA – September 26, 2017 – Mirantis today is making it easier than ever to manage hybrid clouds across Amazon Web Services (AWS), OpenStack, and even bare metal, launching the latest Mirantis Cloud Platform (MCP) with a new capability to enable multi-cloud self-service Kubernetes clusters through Containers-as-a-Service (CaaS), improving container deployment and adoption for developers and operators alike.

MCP CaaS supports the use of K8s on OpenStack instances on-premises, AWS instances, or both; with additional public cloud options coming soon. The newly released MCP includes a web-based interface for managing Kubernetes clusters, making it intuitively easy for developers to immediately create and control their own Kubernetes based containers.

Like all other components within MCP, the new CaaS offering takes advantage of the DriveTrain lifecycle management (LCM) toolchain, enabling enterprises to standardize on a single open standards-based tool for both OpenStack and multi-cloud Kubernetes, improving ease of use across public and private clouds.

“With many new open source tools constantly being introduced into the vibrant container ecosystem every month, CaaS platforms are becoming increasingly complex to operate,” said Boris Renski, Mirantis CMO and co-founder. “Building on our experience operating OpenStack for customers like AT&T and VW, we plan to continue introducing new container services to our managed open cloud portfolio as open source projects behind them become more mature.”

The newest MCP release also includes enhancements to StackLight, its suite of Operations Support System (OSS) tools, and expanded update/upgrade capabilities for DriveTrain, its toolchain for Lifecycle Management (LCM).

StackLight now includes a new DevOps portal that provides a holistic view of the MCP environment. This new aggregated toolset significantly reduces the complexity of Day 2 cloud operations through services and dashboards around a high degree of automation, availability statistics, resource utilization, capacity utilization, continuous testing, logs, metrics and notifications.

DriveTrain enables new upgrades to Ocata, OpenContrail and also supports the latest Kubernetes version.

As the leading provider of Managed Open Clouds, Mirantis works with iconic global brands that are asking for a CaaS solution based on open source software and free from vendor lock-in, to accelerate their ability to innovate. Mirantis is bringing this new offering to market as a crucial component of an enterprise’s hybrid cloud and digital transformation strategy.

As one of the fastest-growing open source projects, Kubernetes use is expected to explode as companies increasingly evolve towards cloud-native software development. This course and certification ensures enterprises feel more secure when hiring a certified partner or developer. Cloud computing skills have progressed from being niche to mainstream as the world’s most in-demand skill set. The OpenStack User Survey shows Kubernetes taking the lead as the top Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) tool, while 451 Research has called containers the “future of virtualization,” predicting strong container growth across on-premises, hosted and public clouds.”

PRICING AND AVAILABILITY
Available now by contacting Mirantis, MCP CaaS pricing begins at $14,000 for a block of up to 1000 instances suitable for 20 users. For more information and to learn more about the newest MCP release, read our blog post covering the MCP enhancements.

About Mirantis
Mirantis delivers open cloud infrastructure to top enterprises using OpenStack, Kubernetes and related open source technologies. The company is a major contributor of code to many open infrastructure projects and follows a build-operate-transfer model to deliver its Mirantis Cloud Platform and cloud management services, empowering customers to take advantage of open source innovation with no vendor lock-in. To date, Mirantis has helped over 200 enterprises build and operate some of the largest open clouds in the world. Its customers include iconic brands such as AT&T, Comcast, Shenzhen Stock Exchange, eBay, Wells Fargo Bank and Volkswagen. Learn more at www.mirantis.com.

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Contact information:
Joseph Eckert for Mirantis
jeckertflak@gmail.com
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Quelle: Mirantis