We're not going to have faster processors. Instead, making software run faster in the future will mean using parallel-programming techniques. This will be a huge shift. The Economist, « Parallel bars »

G-WAN (~100 KB) makes it a breeze, by transparently parallelizing legacy procedural code:

› Unique Value

G-WAN is much smaller, faster and safer than the next best:

  • Web servers,
  • Web application servers,
  • Web acceleration servers,
  • KV stores & noSQL databases.

G-WAN scales with 4-5x less CPU & RAM resources and serves 3-4x more requests than Lighttpd or Nginx.

› Parallelism Made Easy

G-WAN makes existing procedural source code and libraries scale with:

  • zero-configuration,
  • first-class continuations,
  • wait-free (no delay, no locks),
  • async. client BSD socket calls.

DNS lookups are asynchronous in all libraries and C, C#, Java, Js, or PHP scripts used from G-WAN.

› Leveraging Legacy

Build the multi-Core future with scripts using your programming language:

  • C, C++, asm (inline or not),
  • Objective-C / Objective-C++,
  • Google Go, Javascript,
  • Python, Lua (more soon)

G-WAN makes C/C++ libraries fly:

#pragma link "sqlite3"

G-WAN powers the next-generation, massively-scalable "EON PaaS" (Platform as a Service), which is capable of deploying the latest Web 2.0/3.0 Applications, and supporting a variety of development frameworks.

To do more, buy more servers, or upgrade your LAN and use G-WAN, the only Web server able to scale on multi-Core CPUs.

The critical resource in a modern economy is not food, but power. When power is restricted for whatever reason, governments have to decide which users have priority: factories, hospitals, shops or consumers. [...] Developed economies have not experienced this sort of thing on a regular basis since the 1970s. But that could be the outcome if they are forced into default. The Economist, « The return of rationing »