Nuestro Amor (English: Our Love) is the second studio album by Mexican pop band RBD. The album was released on September 22, 2005 in Mexico, selling over 127,000 in its first seven hours of release, and 160,000 in the first week, enough for being certified platinum. It was eventually certified 3× Platinum+ Gold. In the U.S, the album was released on the 4th of October 2005 and peaked at number 88 on the Billboard 200. It also spent three weeks in a row at #1 in the Billboard's Latin Albums Chart. The album was released in Spain on October 30, 2006 and has been certified 2× Platinum.
As of 2011, "Nuestro Amor" has sold 12 million copies worldwide, making it RBD's best selling album. A Diamond Edition was released, included the original 14 tracks, plus an interactive CD including wallpapers, videos, screensavers, plus 2 new unreleased tracks. Also, a Portuguese edition of the album was recorded, see Nosso Amor Rebelde.
The album was nominated for a Latin Grammy in 2006.
RBD was a Mexican musical group that gained popularity from Televisa's teen series Rebelde, and found international success from 2004 until their separation in 2009. RBD has sold over 17 million digital downloads and over 56 million albums worldwide in four years since their formation, 2 million albums in the United States, making them the most successful Latin pop group of all time.
The members are popular Mexican singers and actors Anahí, Alfonso Herrera, Christian Chávez, Christopher von Uckermann, Dulce Maria and Maite Perroni. The main writers and producers for the project were Carlos Lara (aka D.J. Kafka), Lynda Thomas (aka Polen Thomas) and Max di Carlo (aka Karen Sokoloff).
The band was officially formed on October 30, 2004, and on August 15, 2008, RBD announced through a press release that they would disband in 2009.
Their first album Rebelde, was released on November 11, 2004 by EMI. The first four singles ("Rebelde", "Sólo Quédate En Silencio" "Sálvame"), "Un Poco De Tu Amor" were all number one hits in Mexico.
In computing, Ceph is an object storage based free software storage platform that stores data on a single distributed computer cluster, and provides interfaces for object-, block- and file-level storage. Ceph aims primarily to be completely distributed without a single point of failure, scalable to the exabyte level, and freely available.
Ceph replicates data and makes it fault-tolerant, using commodity hardware and requiring no specific hardware support. As a result of its design, the system is both self-healing and self-managing, aiming to minimize administration time and other costs.
The CephFS (filesystem) implementation lacks standard file system repair tools, and the Ceph user documentation does not recommend storing mission critical data on this architecture because it lacks disaster recovery capability and tools.
Ceph employs four distinct kinds of daemons:
RBD may refer to: