{"id":942,"date":"2016-10-25T19:00:44","date_gmt":"2016-10-25T19:00:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.migenius.com\/?p=942"},"modified":"2020-11-02T21:30:22","modified_gmt":"2020-11-02T21:30:22","slug":"realityserver-on-nimbix","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.migenius.com\/articles\/realityserver-on-nimbix","title":{"rendered":"RealityServer on Nimbix JARVICE 2.0"},"content":{"rendered":"
The number of cloud service providers offering NVIDIA<\/a> GPU resources is increasing and in today’s article we will show you how to get started using RealityServer with Nimbix<\/a>. migenius has deployed several of its customer projects on the Nimbix platform and it offers some unique advantages such as containerised environments (instead of virtualisation), fast start-up times and usage charged by the minute instead of by the hour. On Nimbix migenius has set-up a pre-configured RealityServer environment for you, keep reading to learn how to sign up for Nimbix services and get RealityServer up and running.<\/p>\n Note:<\/strong> This article has been updated to show the current instructions for using the new JARVICE 2.0 Nimbix service.<\/p>\n On Nimbix, much like other providers you have two different methods you can use to orchestrate services, a graphical dashboard<\/a> and an API<\/a>. In this article we will cover the graphical dashboard method, you will notice however that the dashboard periodically provides JSON data to you, this data shows you what you will need to submit using the API\u00a0if you decide to use it later on. Most customers start with the graphical dashboard to get familiar with the offering and then build some level of automation around the API\u00a0alternative.<\/p>\n The slide deck below runs you through the various steps involved in signing up for Nimbix services and getting your RealityServer task up and running. Please note that everything in this article is based on running RealityServer on Linux.<\/p>\n\n\n