“Life Image Announces New Value-Added Solution that Further Enhances the Google Cloud Healthcare API to De-Identify Patient Information in Medical Imaging Data - Bio-IT World” plus 2 more |
- Life Image Announces New Value-Added Solution that Further Enhances the Google Cloud Healthcare API to De-Identify Patient Information in Medical Imaging Data - Bio-IT World
- Google Cloud adds microservices management, serverless to its Anthos platform - ZDNet
- Google will unveil the Pixel 4 and other new hardware on October 15 - TechCrunch
| Posted: 26 Jun 2019 12:00 AM PDT [unable to retrieve full-text content]Life Image Announces New Value-Added Solution that Further Enhances the Google Cloud Healthcare API to De-Identify Patient Information in Medical Imaging Data Bio-IT World Life Image *Service* Achieves Highly Accurate, Highly Scalable, Enterprise-Class Results When Combined with the Google Cloud Healthcare API ... |
| Google Cloud adds microservices management, serverless to its Anthos platform - ZDNet Posted: 16 Sep 2019 07:45 AM PDT Google is building out its Anthos platform to connect microservices and offer fully managed serverless workloads. Anthos is a platform designed to address platform as a service needs for developers as well as hybrid cloud deployments for enterprises. Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian outlined Anthos at Google Cloud Next in April and pitched it as a digital transformation platform for enterprises. Jennifer Lin, Product Management Director for Google Cloud, said the platform is gaining momentum among early adopters and customers in banking see Anthos as a way to standardize their Kubernetes environments. "We are modernizing them in place," said Lin, who noted that some sectors can't move data to the cloud due to regulations. Anthos is a way to bring Google Cloud's scale to their internal clouds. Cloud Run brings enterprise workloads to serverless | Top providers 2019: A multi-cloud spin | Cloud providers: A buyer's guide | Google Cloud Next: Everything you need to know about the new strategy Add it up and Anthos is quickly being built out. Lin said the platform is aimed at three stakeholders in the cloud process: Developers, cloud service administrators and IT execs who are looking to modernize infrastructure. Google Cloud isn't disclosing customer numbers for Anthos, but the focus is on building a beachhead of use cases and partners. Anthos has more than 40 partners including integrators, software and hardware firms. At launch, Anthos had 30 partners. Lin added that Anthos Service Mesh, the microservices platform, is critical to orchestrating workloads. ![]() Anthos Service Mesh, which is in beta, is designed to connect, secure, monitor and manage microservices. Anthos Service Mesh is built on Istio application programming interfaces and features one administrative dashboard to track application traffic. Google Cloud Platform: An insider's guide (TechRepublic download) | Vendor comparison: Microsoft Azure, Amazon AWS, and Google Cloud (Tech Pro Research) The other key addition to Anthos is Cloud Run, also in beta. Cloud Run for Anthos is a managed service for serverless computing. The ability to run Anthos in a serverless state means developers can write code on Knative without advanced Kubernetes knowledge. Cloud Run for Anthos can run workloads on Google Cloud on on-premises. In addition, Anthos added automation and organization specific policies to Anthos Config Management and Binary Authorization to ensure that only verified images are integrated into the application build process. More multicloud: |
| Google will unveil the Pixel 4 and other new hardware on October 15 - TechCrunch Posted: 16 Sep 2019 09:24 AM PDT Google will reveal the next Pixel in greater detail at an event happening October 15 in New York, the company confirmed via invites sent to media today. We already know the Pixel 4 will be revealed at this event, because Google has already dropped some official images and feature details for the new Android smartphone, but we'll probably see more besides, given that the invite promises "a few new things Made by Google." Here's what we know so far about the Pixel 4: Everything. Well okay, not everything, but most things. Like it'll use Google's cool Soli radar-based gesture-recognition technology for both its updated face unlock and some motion controls. Infinite leaks have shown that it'll have a body design that includes a single color/texture back, what looks like a three-camera rear cluster (likely a wide-angle, standard and zoom lens) and a 6.23-inch OLED display on the XL with image resolution of 3040×1440, with a 90Hz mode that will make animations and scrolling smoother. It also has rather large top and bottom bezels, a rarity for smartphones these days, but something that Google apparently felt was better than going with a notch again. Plus, it has that Soli tech and dot projectors for the new face unlock, which might require more space up top. In terms of other hardware, there are rumors of a new ChromeOS-based Pixelbook, plus new Google Home smart speakers. We could also see more of Stadia, Google's cloud gaming service that launches in November. Google also could show off additional surprises, including maybe Chromecast updates, or an update to Google Wifi to take advantage of the newly certified Wi-Fi 6 standard. Basically, there could be a lot of surprises on hand, even if the Pixel 4 is more or less a known quantity, and we'll be there to bring you all the news October 15 as it happens. |
| You are subscribed to email updates from "google cloud images" - Google News. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
| Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States | |


No comments:
Post a Comment