Orlando Chapter Meeting - Introduction to the Hybrid Cloud
Orlando , USA
12901 Science Drive
Itinerary:
Dinner: 6:00 PM
Chapter Business: 6:15 PM
Guest Speaker: 6:30 PM
RSVP: Eventbrite by 5 PM Tuesday the week of the meeting.
Membership:
You are invited to become a member of INCOSE (go to https://www.incose.org/about-incose/incose-membership/incose-membership) but the meeting is open to all; you do not need to be an INCOSE member to attend.
Cost:
None. Dinner is provided courtesy of chapter membership with RSVP.
Speaker:
Gilda Alvarez
About the Presentation:
The Hybrid cloud is allowing workloads to move between private and public clouds as computing needs and costs change. Hybrid cloud gives businesses greater flexibility and more data deployment options. The key to creating a successful hybrid cloud is to select the right hypervisor and wide-area network solution. I will explain the emerging technologies that are going to be leading the world of Big Data and different options available to build an optimal hybrid cloud solution.
About the Speaker:
Gilda Alvarez graduated from The University of Central Florida with MIS and Computer Science degrees. She has over a decade of experience in Enterprise Information Technology for several Fortune 500 companies. She has specialized in database design, implementation, and optimization with an emphasis on high availability and business continuity. She has designed and performed security audits, database health-checks, capacity planning, resource utilization analysis and database migrations and Big Data implementations for organizations like IBM, Disney, IRS, US federal defense agencies, Deloitte and many others.
She’s a big advocate of technical and leadership education in her community. She leads the information technology committee for ALPFA (Association of LATINO Professionals for America in Orlando as well as a Chapter Leader for PASS (Professional Association of SQL Server). These associations have allowed her to bridge the gap of IT Technical skills in the Latino community and mentor many Latino women in data technologies. Founder of “Latinas in Data” she strongly believes in the importance of education and representation to build an inclusive and diverse culture for Latinas. “Diversity is getting invited to the party and Inclusion is getting asked to dance."