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Tarzan 2

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If you’ve been following my blog over the past few years, you might remember an old project I was working on back in early 2005 called Tarzan. At the time, the only Amazon web service was their e-catalog (e-commerce) service, and that was was Tarzan specialized in.

I ended up scrapping the project around the same time as Geoffrey came to me and said that he wanted to help work on another one of my little side projects, SimplePie. Of course, as most of the web development community knows, SimplePie has gone on to be wildly popular and Tarzan essentially bit the dust.

Fast-forward two years, and I’ve started my own company, WarpShare. I’ve spoken before about the frustrations I’ve had trying to find and download music, movies, and TV shows with high quality, no DRM, with excellent metadata, all for cheap or free. “Legal” is nice, but not required. I believe many of us feel the same way. So I went on to start a company where one of the focuses is to do almost exactly this, except that the “legal” became required instead of optional, and where all parties involved can get what they want. But I’m not here to talk about that.

We knew that an undertaking of this kind of magnitude would require quite a bit of infrastructure, lots of data processing, and huge databases for cheap or free (we’re a pre-VC funding startup). Amazon’s new “cloud computing” initiative to the rescue! I’ll let you read up on Amazon Web Services on your own, but I ended up deciding to resurrect the old Tarzan project as something entirely new.

That currently-in-development software will, when officially released, be known as Tarzan 2.0. I’ve already spent some time talking about it, so if you’re interested in this new “cloud computing” thing (including storage-in-the-cloud and lightweight-databasing-in-the-cloud) and you’re a PHP developer, take a moment to give Tarzan a look. I think you’ll like it.

Ryan Parman

is an engineering manager with over 20 years of experience across software development, site reliability engineering, and security. He is the creator of SimplePie and AWS SDK for PHP, patented multifactor-authentication-as-a-service at WePay, defined much of the CI/CD and SRE disciplines at McGraw-Hill Education, and came up with the idea of “serverless, event-driven, responsive functions in the cloud” while at Amazon Web Services in 2010. Ryan's aptly-named blog, , is where he writes about ideas longer than . Ambivert. Curious. Not a coffee drinker.