OpenShift and MongoDB - NoSQL in the Cloud in Minutes, for Free!

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Recorded

Time Zone Converter

Looking for MongoDB in the cloud, but want a fast, free and easy way to get started? Then join us for an hour-long technical webinar with Nosh Petigara and Mark Atwood. In this webinar you’ll learn the fundamentals of how MongoDB's document-oriented data model and query language work. We'll also explore the use cases and applications best suited to take advantage of MongoDB’s scalable and high-performance characteristics. Next, we’ll show you how with a simple sign up and a few minutes of your time, you can spin up an instance, deploy an application plus some popular admin tools, tail logs and execute snapshots using OpenShift’s client tools.

OpenShift is Red Hat’s platform-as-a-service for building, deploying and scaling applications in the cloud. Everything you'll see in the webinar you'll be able to replicate on your own, step by step. In just a few minutes you’ll have a functional MongoDB-backed application running in the cloud. If you are interested in learning how MongoDB works, when to use it and how to get it running in the cloud for free, this webinar is for you.

Speakers:

Nosh Petigara, Director of Product Strategy – 10Gen
Nosh Petigara is Director of Product Strategy at 10gen, the company that sponsors and provides commercial support for the open source project MongoDB. Prior to 10gen, Nosh headed product management for OATSystems. He has an MBA from INSEAD and a Bachelor’s and Master’s in Computer Science from MIT.

Mark Atwood, OpenShift PaaS Evangelist - Red Hat
Mark  Atwood has been an advocate of and contributor to open source from  since the time that the only large projects were GNU Emacs and GCC. His  technology interests include Cloud Computing and NoSQL. He is the patch queue shepherd for MySQL Drizzle.  He has been the Community Manager for  Eucalyptus Systems, the Director of Community Development for Gear6 Memcached, and a Senior Technology Advisor for Network.com at Sun Microsystems. He is a coauthor of the OAuth Core specification.  He has helped design and code large self-configuring internet networks,  including a widely deployed net-connected CATV consumer appliance, a large public PSTN voicemail social system, and a military intel decision support system. He makes his home in Seattle, with an annual trip to his home in Black Rock City.

Email*

 

First Name*

 

Last Name*

 

Country*

 

Address*

 

City*

 

State/Province*


Postal Code*

 

Company*

 

Job Title*

 

Phone*

 

Department*

 

I understand Red Hat often uses authorized business partners to best serve its customers, particularly in the public and education sectors. Red Hat may share my contact information with those partners.*