Vendors
boost performance, customization of Web, e-comm sites
By April Jacobs
Network World, 08/07/00
In separate announcements, Web-hosting firms Exodus and Digital
Island say they will introduce new services designed to let users
speed up and more effectively customize their Web and e-commerce
sites.
Exodus partnered with CacheFlow to deliver a service that lets
users lease cache devices. The devices will sit in front of its
Web servers and speed content delivery. For Exodus' hosting customers,
the service will provide the benefits of server-side caching without
having to spend a lot of money on hardware.
Exodus can also do the work necessary to get the caches running
- which means setting up the policy software that decides which
content gets placed on the devices. Exodus says it can get a customer's
Web or e-commerce site up in three days.
The CacheFlow devices sit within the customers' server farms located
on Exodus' hosting sites. The cache works by redirecting inbound
traffic from a router or Layer 4 switch to the cache, which then
serves site data directly from its main memory to end users.
Cindy Borovick, an analyst at market research firm IDC in Framingham,
Mass., says the service is likely to appeal to companies launching
e-commerce sites because it will let them get a quick start with
little investment, and they won't have to hire new staff to install
and maintain the site - Exodus takes care of that.
Exodus plans to offer the service later this month but hasn't
set pricing.
Digital Island's new service, called TraceWare 3.0, is based on
TraceWare software from Digital Envoy. TraceWare 3.0 will let users
personalize content based on where they are asking for it.
Digital Island says it is targeting users with Web and e-commerce
sites that have regional or global locations, such as retailers.
The service will also let users deliver personalized streaming
media depending on a user's location.
Digital Island is keeping mum on exactly how TraceWare software
works, but did say its software is being patented. The company
says the software can reside on customers' Sun Solaris or Windows
NT-based servers hosted at the company's data centers. Digital
Island will also put the software on servers it uses to provide
customers with streaming services at its various data centers.
Digital Island plans to offer the service beginning in October
and hasn't determined pricing.
Digital
Island
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