A sad-faced engineer leads it round the back of the barn. A single shot rings out
Richard Speed Fri 29 Jan 2021 // 14:13 UTC Share
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With a certain inevitability, Microsoft has wielded the axe on the preview of Azure Service Fabric Mesh, before the technology even had a chance to trouble General Availability.
Launched back in July 2018, the theory was that developers would delight in the ability to pop their containerised apps into the managed cloudy service without having to worry about VMs, storage or network configuration.
The theory went that one could easily scale services up and down either automatically or manually. A great developer experience was on offer, with the promise of a lift and shift to containerise and scale existing applications and modernise existing cloud services with a jump to Service Fabric Mesh.
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03:51 PM
Seqster, which develops tools for patient-generated longitudinal health records – incorporating EHR information, genomic profiles, wearable device data and more – has launched the most recent version of its platform on Microsoft Azure cloud.
WHY IT MATTERS
Seqster Platform v7.1 is a HIPAA- and FDA 21 CFR PART 11-compliant multi-cloud platform. It features new security, scalability and customization capabilities, according to the San Diego-based company. The platform, which connects users to more than 3,000 health systems nationwide. It s also compliant with new CMS and ONC 21st Century Cures Act rules.
With help from Azure, Kubernetes and Istio, Seqster can now automate the deployment and scaling of its app containers without the need for DevOps. It also offers encryption for data in transit among resources and enhanced logging for observability and policy adherence, according to the company.