On Thu, Mar 8, 2012 at 1:29 PM, John Hinton <webmaster@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > It seems however that the definition is an online infrastructure which may: > provide applications > provide file storage > calendar > contacts > collaboration > communication > among a number of other things > > and that these services are all available to 'users' on the cloud via: > servers > desktops > laptops > tablets > phones > > As for how many servers? Well that is a matter of how many users you > have, loads, storage capacity and just about anything else a single or > bank of servers might do. > > At the moment, our business has 4 people in four different locations and > we want to better share our work. Seems like file shares are one aspect, > but perhaps some applications, certainly collaboration and I really > don't like putting stuff on Google. I see at least one of these allows > you to run OpenOffice through the browser. I haven't really done a lot > of research into this yet and really all I wanted was some ideas for a > simple open source cloud software that was preferably friendly to CentOS. > > Also, this would be a good exercise in learning a bit more of what is > out there that our clients might wish to use. No, I'm not building a > system where anyone in the world can sign up, nor for a fortune 500 > company, nor even one much smaller. Just for us at the moment, and > perhaps do a bit of sharing to our clients from time to time. > > I have so far found eyeOS and am also looking at ownCloud. Thanks Devin > for that link. You can do traditional shared files over a VPN across sites. You might look at ClearOS as a starting point for that and an imap server that everything should be able to access. It is going to be hard to beat google for online apps, though - or even a good webmail interface. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos