Difference between revisions of "Google Cloud Platform timeline"

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== 2019 ==
 
== 2019 ==
 
* '''April 2019''' - Google Cloud Run (fully managed) Beta release<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/serverless/announcing-cloud-run-the-newest-member-of-our-serverless-compute-stack/|title=Announcing Cloud Run, the newest member of our serverless compute stack|website=Google Cloud Blog}}</ref>
 
* '''April 2019''' - Google Cloud Run (fully managed) Beta release<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/serverless/announcing-cloud-run-the-newest-member-of-our-serverless-compute-stack/|title=Announcing Cloud Run, the newest member of our serverless compute stack|website=Google Cloud Blog}}</ref>
* '''April 2019''' - [[Google Anthos]] announced<ref name="auto2"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/janakirammsv/2019/04/14/everything-you-want-to-know-about-anthos-googles-hybrid-and-multi-cloud-platform/|title=Everything You Want To Know About Anthos - Google's Hybrid And Multi-Cloud Platform|first=Janakiram|last=MSV|website=Forbes}}</ref>
+
* '''April 2019''' - [[Anthos]] announced<ref name="auto2"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/janakirammsv/2019/04/14/everything-you-want-to-know-about-anthos-googles-hybrid-and-multi-cloud-platform/|title=Everything You Want To Know About Anthos - Google's Hybrid And Multi-Cloud Platform|first=Janakiram|last=MSV|website=Forbes}}</ref>
 
* '''November 2019''' - Google Cloud Run (fully managed) General availability release<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/serverless/knative-based-cloud-run-services-are-ga/|title=Knative-based Cloud Run services are GA|website=Google Cloud Blog}}</ref>
 
* '''November 2019''' - Google Cloud Run (fully managed) General availability release<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/serverless/knative-based-cloud-run-services-are-ga/|title=Knative-based Cloud Run services are GA|website=Google Cloud Blog}}</ref>
  

Revision as of 07:48, 6 December 2021

2020

2019

  • April 2019 - Google Cloud Run (fully managed) Beta release[1]
  • April 2019 - Anthos announced[2][3]
  • November 2019 - Google Cloud Run (fully managed) General availability release[4]

2018

  • February 2018 - Google Cloud IoT Core becomes generally available[5]
  • February 2018 - Google announces its intent to acquire Xively[6]
  • February 2018 - Cloud TPUs, ML accelerators for Tensorflow, become available in Beta[7]
  • May 2018 - Gartner names Google as a Leader in the 2018 Gartner Infrastructure as a Service Magic Quadrant[8]
  • May 2018 - Google Cloud Memorystore becomes available in Beta[9]

2017

  • February 2017 - Cloud Spanner, highly available, globally-distributed database is released into Beta[10]
  • March 2017 - Google acquires Kaggle, world's largest community of data scientists and machine learning enthusiasts[11]
  • April 2017 - MIT professor Andrew Sutherland breaks the record for the largest ever Compute Engine cluster with 220,000 cores on Preemptible VMs.[12]
  • May 2017 - Google Cloud IoT Core is launched in Beta[13]
  • November 2017 - Google Kubernetes Engine gets certified by the CNCF[14]

2016

  • February 2016 - Google Cloud Functions becomes available in Alpha[15]
  • September 2016 - Apigee, a provider of application programming interface (API) management company, is acquired by Google[16]
  • September 2016 - Stackdriver becomes generally available[17]
  • November 2016 - Qwiklabs, an EdTech company is acquired by Google[18]


2015

  • January 2015 - Google Cloud Monitoring based on Stackdriver goes into Beta[19]
  • March 2015 - Google Cloud Pub/Sub becomes available in Beta[20]
  • April 2015 - Google Cloud DNS becomes generally available[21]
  • April 2015 - Google Dataflow launched in beta[22]
  • July 2015 - Google releases v1 of Kubernetes; Hands it over to The Cloud Native Computing Foundation
  • August 2015 - Google Cloud Dataflow, Google Cloud Pub/Sub, Google Kubernetes Engine, and Deployment Manager graduate to GA[23]

2014

  • February 2014 - Google Cloud SQL becomes GA[24]
  • May 2014 - Stackdriver is acquired by Google[25]
  • June 2014 - Kubernetes is announced as an open source container manager[26]
  • June 2014 - Cloud Dataflow is announced in preview[27]
  • October 2014 - Google acquires Firebase[28]
  • November 2014 - Alpha release Google Kubernetes Engine (formerly Container Engine) is announced[29]

2013

  • May 2013 - Google Compute Engine is released to GA[30]
  • August 2013 -  Cloud Storage begins automatically encrypting each Storage object's data and metadata under the 128-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES-128), and each encryption key is itself encrypted with a regularly rotated set of master keys[31]

2012

  • June 2012 - Google Compute Engine is launched in preview[32]

2011

  • October 2011 - Google Cloud SQL is announced in preview[33]

2010

2008

  • April 2008 - Google App Engine announced in preview[35]

Related

  • AWS timeline
  • November 2015 - Bebop is acquired, and Diane Greene joins Google[36]

See also

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.. Source: wikipedia

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  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named auto2
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  22. "Google Opens Cloud Dataflow To All Developers, Launches European Zone For BigQuery". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2018-09-08.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
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