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Paris Business Directory
304 pages
Paris Business Directory

Web Agencies Name: aditel: Services: web design Web site: www.aditel.com Audience: ... Amen Name: amen Services: web hosting Web site: www.amen.fr Audience: ...
About this book
Paris business directory contains over one thousand active web links to enable in-house travel planners, tour operators, relocation agents, day trippers and other visitors, plan their stay in Paris. The links are compiled on the basis of timely downloads, the ease of web navigation, usability, the possibility of online transaction and divided into the following sections: Business framework City Hall institutions Travel facilities Finance and venture capital funding Estate agents and relocation firms Business services Serviced business offices High tech incubators French and English language learning centers Business intelligence agencies Corporate hospitality Exhibition organizers & events Seminars and conferences centers Restaurants, bars and cafés Shopping centers and gift shops English language bookshops Business networking

This Is Your Brain on Joy, A Revolutionary Program for Balancing Mood, Restoring Brain Health, and Nurturing Spiritual Growth
240 pages
This Is Your Brain on Joy, A Revolutionary Program for Balancing Mood, Restoring Brain Health, and Nurturing Spiritual Growth

... who help you feel relaxed and affirmed. Many people feel safer when hosting a group in their own home, so volunteer to do this if it's your cup of tea. ...
About this book
A break-through guide to help people experience lasting joy by restoring brain health.What does the latest research in brain science and brain imaging say about our ability (or inability) to experience joy and happiness? Is our lack of joy a sin problem or a brain problem? In this life-altering book, Dr. Earl Henslin reveals that to enjoy our lives to the fullest, to become more loving, more Christ-like, we need to become more capable of healing and nourishing our brains. Many problems, long thought of as spiritual in nature--anger, depression, mood swings, anxiety, addictions--are often the result of a sick brain that cannot comprehend a good and loving God. This Is Your Brain on Joy shares exciting new findings in neuroscience that are spiritually sound, showing us how to care for our brains so we not only more effectively use them to glorify God but also experience His love.

Relocating global cities, from the center to the margins
226 pages
Relocating global cities, from the center to the margins

Brussels is also hosting other international public institutions (eg, NATO, Western European Union, Benelux, Eurocontrol), which significantly contribute to ...
About this book
Drawing on eight case studies from key cities on the periphery of global cities literature, Relocating Global Cities argues that all cities are globalizing in important ways. Case studies of Frankfurt, Johannesburg, Bangkok, Manila, Tampa, Sydney, Brussels, and Caracas provide the basis for an alternative theoretical approach to global city formation. Reconciling a market-based understanding and an agency-based understanding of global cities, a set of expert contributors proposes that globalization and cities are mutually constituted by the global political economy engaging with transnational and local agents. A foreword by noted sociologist Saskia Sassen introduces readers to the book's theme of searching for the global in the urban.

Change Your Brain, Change Your Body, Use Your Brain to Get and Keep the Body You Have Always Wanted
384 pages
Change Your Brain, Change Your Body, Use Your Brain to Get and Keep the Body You Have Always Wanted

About this book
THE KEY TO A BETTER BODY—in shape, energized, and youthful—is a healthy brain. Based on the latest medical research, as well as on Dr. Amen’s two decades of clinical practice at the re­nowned Amen Clinics, where Dr. Amen and his as­sociates pioneered the use of the most advanced brain imaging technology, Change Your Brain, Change Your Body shows you how to take the very best care of your brain.With fifteen practical, easy-to-implement solutions involving nutritious foods, natural supplements and vitamins, positive-thinking habits, and, when neces­sary, highly targeted medications, Dr. Amen shows you how to:* Reach and maintain your ideal weight* Soothe and smooth your skin at any age * Reduce the stress that can impair your immune system* Sharpen your memory* Increase willpower and eliminate the crav­ings that keep you from achieving your exercise and diet goals* Enhance sexual desire and performance* Lower your blood pressure without medication* Avoid depression and elevate the...

Jewish action Jewish action

And my davening was like Neilah, the Closing Service on Yom Kippur, every single day." Levy feels honored to be hosting the Amen group. ...

Five competitive differentiators for cloud services

Cloud computing providers have a difficult marketing challenge, in my opinion. Think about it–no matter what service model or deployment model a provider is delivering, they must differentiate their service while meeting the “commodity” needs of as many customers as possible. It would seem these businesses are stuck between providing least common denominator service capabilities and being accused of intentional customer lock-in.

From a customer perspective, it is equally challenging when one is “looking for servers and storage” and must choose between a bunch of services that essentially run Linux or Windows and store your files. How does one choose? How do the cloud providers set themselves apart in the customers’ eyes?

Unfortunately, I’ve been inundated of late by an increasing number of cloud service announcements that lack any sense of differentiation. Hosting providers are announcing “on-demand server capacity billed on a pay-as-you-go basis.” Platform vendors are simply announcing what language they support, and how much they charge for services. Software-as-a-Service vendors have the easiest job to differentiate service, as they can do so based on functionality alone if they wish, but even there some vendors struggle to differentiate themselves by anything other than the fact they run as a cloud service.

This has to change. Forrester’s James Staten is telling us that clients are getting “cloud weary.” I believe a lot of this has to do with the ridiculousness of “cloudwashing” that we’ve seen for some products and services, and the relative monotony of pitches for things are arguably cloud services, especially in the IaaS space.

Below is a list of five key categories of competitive differentiation for cloud computing. It is not a complete list, nor do I think all vendors would look at this question in the same way. However, if you are looking to acquire cloud services, these are the elements I think you start with as you evaluate any service, be it SaaS, PaaS, or IaaS. If you are selling these services, consider this an outline for your next requirements document.

Ease of operations. Yeah, I could have kept things simple and just said “ease of use,” but “use” in the cloud computing service sense is much more than how humans interact with the system. For instance, how does a company with hundreds of applications in the cloud strewn across a dozen or more vendors monitor and manage those applications to manageable service levels?

And yes, phenomenal user interfaces will set some providers apart from others, but it will be the “behind the scenes” interfaces–such as APIs, publish and subscribe event streams, transparency and auditability systems, etc.–that will make the most significant differences between providers.

Will many of the aspects of “ease of operations” be standardized? Sure. The Open Cloud Computing Interface (OCCI) is an example of an attempt to deal with a large part of this challenge. However, differentiation will still be possible through extensions, quality of features and–yes–some custom interfaces.

Configurability. One of the things about today’s best-known cloud computing environments is that they are essentially infrastructure and software architecture frameworks that dictate a lot about the application architectures that can be built on them. For example, the Amazon Web Services Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) allows each server to be on one widely shared network. No separation of management traffic from DMZ traffic here (at least not explicitly from the point of view of the OS).

No, application architects are instead forced to consider how they would build and operate their application in the infrastructure architecture given them. Good books have been written with this in mind, but ultimately the complexity of the problems we wish to solve with information technology will dictate the amount of configurability we require from our infrastructure systems–even if they are delivered as a service by a third party.

The low-hanging fruit here for IaaS vendors are things like network architectures, data storage options, server options and so on. Also useful here are services that enhance the infrastructure, like security systems, message queueing, and storage tiering.

Performance. One public relations contact I got recently was quite interesting. A hosting company sent me an email indicating that they have an increasing number of customers coming to them from AWS, and finding that their applications actually perform better in the former than the latter. I haven’t confirmed the truth of that claim, but it is an interesting claim nonetheless.

Processing speed, memory speed, storage access, read and write speeds, latency, bandwidth–these are all things that are tunable by the cloud provider, either through technology acquisition, or through superior engineering and operations expertise. And, as with servers and storage, the fastest speeds per dollar spent will generally win.

I would not be surprised if we saw a cloud performance war, similar to the RDBMS benchmark wars, especially in the IaaS category (though it would make sense in the PaaS and SaaS categories as well).

Reliability and security. I debated combining these two elements, as they represent different aspects of the same concept. However, that core concept–risk mitigation–is at the heart of so much of the decision over whether public cloud services are better than private data centers, that I think they will often be viewed through the same lens.

Companies will need time to demonstrate differentiation in both of these categories, but features can be introduced today to increase the transparency of both operations and security in any provider. Redundant distributed data stores, “early warning” DDoS detection events, auditability APIs; these are all features that would “open the kimono” in a controlled fashion and increase customer’s ability to trust that their provider has made the protection and availability of their data and functionality a core competency.

Customer service. After I wrote my closing post for the “big rethink” series, Kevin Magee, COO of ZeroTouch IT, wrote a post in which he noted several additional predictions for the effect of cloud computing on IT. Most notably, he pointed out that cloud will change “[h]ow Vendor Relationship Management will become a key discipline in IT organizations.” Amen, brother, and I completely agree.

In a tongue-in-cheek post from early 2008, I noted that system administrators should “get good at waiting on hold for customer service representatives.” In reality, there is truth to that, but the providers have a lot of room to craft that experience.

One thing they can do is advance the technical leading edge in terms of customer self-service and operations transparency. (Hmm. Has anyone else noted how often ‘transparancy’ comes up in this discussion.) I noted some ideas about this in a previous post. Smart providers will find others.

Cloud computing is one of those truly disruptive market opportunities that makes or breaks companies. The winners will find ways to differntiate. Those that don’t almost certainly can’t win. So, please, no more press releases that fail to differentiate in any meaningful way.

11/14/2009, #43, 4th Quarter 2009

&Nbsp;     Clergy and lay representatives from seven dioceses in The Episcopal Church, as well as six bishops with Episcopal jurisdiction, met in Charleston, S.C. on November 3-4, 2009 to consider ways they might assist each other in more effectively reaching their communities and the world for Christ. More specifically, in keeping with General Convention resolution B030, which encouraged domestic Dioceses within The Episcopal Church to enter into missional relationship, this meeting encouraged the dioceses to consider what resources they can share with each other and work more closely to further the Gospel mission. Evangelizing and reaching the unchurched; catechizing and discipling the converted; assisting members in generational faithfulness; renewing, strengthening and growing existing parishes; and planting new congregations to reach their communities with the Gospel were the areas of greatest interest.       2. Sponsoring a large venue three day event in Dallas, September 23-25, 2010. This event will be for the purpose of encouraging, empowering, emboldening and equipping missionally focused individuals, congregations and dioceses, as well as providing resources to assist each other to be more effective in reaching their communities for Christ and his Church.       Lord, we thank You for all the good reports that we are getting pertaining to the Mudge's mission in Peru. Thank You that the Holy Spirit is working through Father Shaw and Mother Julie and Lydia Mudge. Thank You for your Joy that they spread at the seminary and at the Mission of Ascension and in the Diocese of Peru. Thank You for all those to whom they minister: the seminary students, the ex-pat youth, other clergy and all of the people. May they all experience the fruit of Your Holy Spirit, especially Love, Peace and Joy. Amen. http://mudgeperureport.blogspot.com/