October 19th, 2011 by Arjan Olsder Posted in Analysis & Editorial | No Comments »
At BlackBerry DevCon, RIM announced their newest OS called BBX. A rather unexpected move as most of the world was still expecting QNX (running on the PlayBook) to be ported straight to RIM’s smartphones.
As RIM states, BBX is the best of both worlds. BBX has been designed from the ground up and will make full use of RIM’s cloud services (which Europeans are very found off since last week). The platform will allow both Native, HTML5 development (WebWorks), Adobe Air/Flash and BlackBerry Runtime for Android Apps.
Rim Mixes BB OS and QNX Into BBX
At BlackBerry DevCon, RIM announced their newest OS called BBX. A rather unexpected move as most of the world was still expecting QNX (running on the PlayBook) to be ported straight to RIM’s smartphones.
As RIM states, BBX is the best of both worlds. BBX has been designed from the ground up and will make full use of RIM’s cloud services (which Europeans are very found off since last week). The platform will allow both Native, HTML5 development (WebWorks), Adobe Air/Flash and BlackBerry Runtime for Android Apps.
Congratulations
Your first AWS Elastic Beanstalk Node.js application is now running on your own dedicated environment in the AWS Cloud
This environment is launched with Elastic Beanstalk Node.js Platform
What’s Next?
- AWS Elastic Beanstalk overview
- AWS Elastic Beanstalk concepts
- Deploy an Express Application to AWS Elastic Beanstalk
- Deploy an Express Application with Amazon ElastiCache to AWS Elastic Beanstalk
- Deploy a Geddy Application with Amazon ElastiCache to AWS Elastic Beanstalk
- Customizing and Configuring a Node.js Container
- Working with Logs