The new Google Cloud region in Delhi NCR is now open

In the past year, Google has worked to surface timely and reliable health information, amplify public health campaigns, and help nonprofits get urgent support to Indians in need. Now, we are continuing to focus on helping India’s businesses accelerate their digital transformation, deepening our commitment to India’s digitization and economic recovery. To support customers and the public sector in India and across Asia Pacific, we’re excited to announce that our new Google Cloud region in Delhi National Capital Region (NCR) is now open. Designed to help both Indian and global companies alike build highly available applications for their customers, the Delhi NCR region is our second Google Cloud region in India and 10th to open in Asia Pacific. What customers and partners are sayingNavigating this past year has been a challenge for companies as they grapple with changing customers demands and economic uncertainty. Technology has played a critical role, and we’ve been fortunate to partner with and serve people, companies, and government institutions around the world to help them adapt. The Google Cloud region in Delhi NCR will help our customers adapt to new requirements, new opportunities and new ways of working, like we’ve helped so many companies do in the region: InMobi scaled a personalized AI platform to support 120+ million active users. “With the arrival of the Google Cloud Delhi NCR, InMobi Group sees the opportunity to continue closing the gap between our users and products,” says Mohit Saxena, Co-founder and Group CTO of Inmobi. “Glance, especially, has been serving AI-powered personalised content to over 120 million active users. We can’t wait to continue giving them truly meaningful experiences that are speedy, scale well, and are relevant to them, by expanding the use of our current tools working on Google Cloud with the opening of a new region.”Groww now supports a sizable user base. “Google Cloud provides great technology that enables us to build and scale infrastructure to millions of users, and the new Google Cloud region in Delhi NCR will continue to help more businesses and startups in India access powerful cloud-based infrastructure, products and services,” says Neeraj Singh, Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer, Groww.HDFC Bank is positioned for the future. “At HDFC Bank, we are harnessing technology platforms to both run and build the bank. As we progress to be future ready, the objective is to invest in future technologies that give us scale, efficiency and resiliency. Towards this the Google Cloud region in Delhi NCR will enable us to enhance our resiliency and help us in building an active-active design framework for our new generation applications on cloud,” says Ramesh Lakshminarayanan, CIO, HDFC Bank.  Dr. Reddy’s Lab built a modern data platform with Google Cloud. “At Dr Reddy’s, we pride ourselves in helping patients regain good health, acting quickly to provide innovative solutions to address patients’ unmet needs and in accelerating access to medicines to people worldwide. Our Google Cloud-powered data platform is helping us realize these objectives and we welcome Google’s investment in the new Delhi NCR region as helping us and other businesses in India make further contributions to our social and economic future,” says Mukesh Rathi, Senior Vice President & CIO, Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories.“To survive the disruption caused by the pandemic and to succeed in the long term, organizations need to become digital natives, so they can be more agile, explore new business models and build new capabilities that boost resilience. A cloud-first strategy plays a key role in enabling businesses to do this,” said Piyush N. Singh, Lead – India market unit & lead – Growth and Strategic Client Relationships, Asia Pacific and Latin America, Accenture. “Harnessing the potential of cloud requires the right data infrastructure and this expansion by Google Cloud will undoubtedly help Indian enterprises in their digital transformation journeys.”A global network of regionsDelhi NCR joins 25 existing Google Cloud regions connected via our high-performance network, helping customers better serve their users and customers throughout the globe. As the second region in India, customers benefit from improved business continuity planning with distributed, secure infrastructure needed to meet IT and business requirements for disaster recovery, while maintaining data sovereignty.Click to enlargeWith this new region, Google Cloud customers operating in India also benefit from low latency and high performance of their cloud-based workloads and data. Designed for high availability, the region opens with three availability zones to protect against service disruptions, and offers a portfolio of key products, including Compute Engine, App Engine, Google Kubernetes Engine, Cloud Bigtable, Cloud Spanner, and BigQuery. Supporting India’s recovery with training and educationGoogle and Google Cloud will also continue to support our customers with people and education programs. We’re investing in local talent and the local developer community to help enterprises digitally transform and support economic recovery. Through the India Digitization Fund, we expanded our efforts to support India’s recovery from COVID-19—in particular, through programs to support education and small businesses. In addition to expanding internet access, and investments to help start-ups accelerate India’s digital transformation, we’ve grown our Grow with Google efforts. Businesses can access digital tools to maintain business continuity, find resources like quick help videos, and learn digital skills—in both English and in Hindi.Helping customers build their transformation cloudsGoogle Cloud is here to support businesses, helping them get smarter with data, deploy faster, connect more easily with people and customers throughout the globe, and protect everything that matters to their businesses. The cloud region in Delhi NCR offers new technology and tools that can be a catalyst for this change. To learn more, visit the Google Cloud locations page, and be sure to watch the region launch event here.Related ArticleGCP arrives in India with launch of Mumbai regionThe first Google Cloud Platform region in India is now open for you to build applications and store your data.Read Article
Quelle: Google Cloud Platform

Docker Captain Take 5 – Lucas Santos

Docker Captains are select members of the community that are both experts in their field and are passionate about sharing their Docker knowledge with others. “Docker Captains Take 5” is a regular blog series where we get a closer look at our Captains and ask them the same broad set of questions ranging from what their best Docker tip is to whether they prefer cats or dogs (personally, we like whales and turtles over here). Today, we’re interviewing Lucas Santos who has been a Docker Captain since 2021. He is a Cloud Advocate at Microsoft and is based in São Paulo, Brazil.

How/when did you first discover Docker?

My first contact with Docker was in 2015 when I worked at a logistics company. Docker made it very easy to deploy applications in customer’s infrastructure. Every customer had a different need and a different architecture that needed to be taken into account, unfortunately I had to leave the company before I could make this real. So I took that knowledge to my next company where we deployed over 100 microservices using Docker images and Docker infrastructure.

What is your favorite Docker command?

I would say it’s “pull”. Because it makes it look as if images are incredibly simple things. However, there’s a whole system behind image pulling and, despite being simple to understand, a simple image pull contains a lot of steps and a lot of aggregated knowledge about containers, filesystems and so much more. And this is all transparent to the user as if it’s magic.

What is your top tip you think other people don’t know for working with Docker?

Some people, especially those who are not familiar with containers, think Docker is just a fancy word for a VM. My top tip for everyone that is working with Docker as a fancy VM, don’t. Docker containers can do so much more than just run simple processes and act as a simple VM. There’s so much we can do using containers and Docker images it’s an endless world.

What’s the coolest Docker demo you have done/seen ?

I think I don’t have a favorite, but one that really stuck with me all those years was one of the first demos I’ve seen with Docker back in 2016 or 2017. I won’t remember who was the speaker or where I was but it stuck with me because it was the first time I was seeing someone using CI with Docker. In this demo, the speaker not only created images on demand using a Docker container, but also spinned up several other containers, one for each part of the pipeline. I had never seen something like that before at that time.

What have you worked on in the past 6 months that you’re particularly proud of?

I’m proud of my work with my blog and even prouder of my work in the KEDA HTTP Add-On (https://github.com/kedacore/http-add-on) team. We’ve developed a way to scale applications in a Kubernetes cluster using KEDA native scalers. One of the things that I’m proudest is of the DockerCon community room for the Brazilian community, we had an amazing engagement and this was one of the most amazing events I’ve ever helped to organize.

What do you anticipate will be Docker’s biggest announcement this year?

This is a tricky question. I really don’t know what to hope for, technology moves so fast that I literally hope for anything.

What do you think is going to be Docker’s biggest challenge this year?

I think one of the biggest challenges Docker is going to face this year is to reinvent itself and reposition the company in the eyes of the developers.

What are some personal goals for the next year with respect to the Docker community ?

One of my main goals is to close the gap between the people who are still beginners in containers, and those who are experts because there is too little documentation about it. Along with that I plan to make the Brazilian community more aware of container technologies. I can say that my main goal this year is to make everyone understand what a Docker container is, deep down.

What talk would you most love to see at DockerCon 2021?

I’d love to see more Docker integration with the cloud and new ways to use containers in the cloud.

Looking to the distant future, what is the technology that you’re most excited about and that you think holds a lot of promise?

I think one of the technologies that I’m most excited about is the future of containers. They evolve so fast that I’m anxious to see what it’ll hold next. Especially in the security field, where I feel there are a lot of things we are yet to see.

Rapid fire questions…

What new skill have you mastered during the pandemic?

Patience, probably. I started to learn IoT, Electronics, Photography, Music and a lot of other things.

Cats or Dogs?

Cats

Salty, sour or sweet?

Salty

Beach or mountains?

Mountains

Your most often used emoji?

 
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