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  2. Amazon S3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_S3

    Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) is a service offered by Amazon Web Services (AWS) that provides object storage through a web service interface. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Amazon S3 uses the same scalable storage infrastructure that Amazon.com uses to run its e-commerce network. [ 3 ]

  3. Amazon Machine Image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Machine_Image

    Launch permissions that control which AWS accounts can use the AMI to launch instances; A block device mapping that specifies the volumes to attach to the instance when it's launched; The AMI filesystem is compressed, encrypted, signed, split into a series of 10 MB chunks and uploaded into Amazon S3 for storage. An XML manifest file stores ...

  4. DaviX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DaviX

    DaviX is an open-source client for WebDAV and Amazon S3 available for Microsoft Windows, Apple MacOSX and Linux.DaviX is written in C++ and provide several command-line tools and a C++ shared library.

  5. Amazon Web Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Web_Services

    Early AWS "building blocks" logo along a sigmoid curve depicting recession followed by growth. [citation needed]The genesis of AWS came in the early 2000s. After building Merchant.com, Amazon's e-commerce-as-a-service platform that offers third-party retailers a way to build their own web-stores, Amazon pursued service-oriented architecture as a means to scale its engineering operations, [15 ...

  6. Timeline of Amazon Web Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Amazon_Web...

    CloudFormation is an early example of a declarative Infrastructure as Code tool. [41] 2010: Sep 2: IAM (security) AWS launches identity and access management (IAM) – Preview Beta. [42] 2010: November: Product: Amazon announces that Amazon.com has migrated its retail web services to AWS. [43] 2010: December 5: Product (Internet delivery)

  7. Comparison of distributed file systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_distributed...

    Some researchers have made a functional and experimental analysis of several distributed file systems including HDFS, Ceph, Gluster, Lustre and old (1.6.x) version of MooseFS, although this document is from 2013 and a lot of information are outdated (e.g. MooseFS had no HA for Metadata Server at that time).

  8. AOL Mail limits on sending bulk mail - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/aol-mail-limits-on-sending...

    In order to protect people from receiving spam emails, AOL sets limits on how many messages can be sent at one time. Learn more about the sending limits.

  9. Disk quota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_quota

    Example of qgroup (quota group) of a Btrfs filesystem A disk quota is a limit set by a system administrator that restricts certain aspects of file system usage on modern operating systems . The function of using disk quotas is to allocate limited disk space in a reasonable way.