October 13, 2013 Off

Cirrity Launches Desktops as a Service (DaaS) With Secure, Compliant Cloud

By David

Grazed from MarketWire.  Author: PR Announcement.

Cirrity, the secure and compliant cloud services provider, has added Desktops as a Service (DaaS) to its cloud-based solutions.  Cirrity’s DaaS solution provides a complete virtual workspace from the cloud, delivering Windows desktops and applications as an easily managed, unified cloud service. Powered by industry-leading Desktone technology — a multi-tenant, grid-based platform purpose-built for cloud-hosted desktops — Cirrity’s DaaS solution eradicates the barriers to virtual desktop adoption and enables a risk-free, incremental evolution of the next-generation workspace.

"Cirrity’s DaaS solution improves desktop accessibility and security while also supporting disaster recovery strategies," says Andrew Albrecht, COO of Cirrity. "If employees rely on desktops located in the office but physically can’t get to their computers, the disruption to business operations is immediate. With Cirrity’s DaaS solution, the desktop resides in Cirrity’s secure, compliant cloud infrastructure built on enterprise-class hardware. Employees can access their desktop from any device, anywhere, anytime."…

October 13, 2013 Off

How Often Do You Ask Your Customers What They Think About your SaaS?

By David

Grazed from Business2Community.  Author:  Revital Libfrand.

In the competitive world of SaaS, where great software products are provided in a relatively low fee subscription model, many companies focus heavily on users’ acquisition and the cost of acquisition & support that is associated with such customers. As a result, almost all processes requiring interaction with the customers have become automated.

This leads to one of the major challenges SaaS companies are facing nowadays: customer churn. Thousands of new customers mean nothing, if hundreds or more give up on the company and leave at the same time…

October 13, 2013 Off

Why Crowdsourcing is the Next Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from Wired.  Author: Alpheus Bingham.

Few would dispute the enormous impact that cloud computing has had on the technology and business landscape during the past decade. In 2001, the approach to hosting business applications on the emerging web wasn’t even remotely proven and, in fact, had failed because the first generation of web-hosted application service providers (ASPs) got it all wrong.

But over the course of a decade, what we now call cloud-based or software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications has taken the world by storm and become mainstream. Today, cloud computing is an umbrella term that applies to a wide variety of successful technologies (and business models), from business apps like Salesforce.com, to infrastructure like Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), to consumer apps like Netflix. It took years for all these things to become mainstream, and if the last decade saw the emergence (and eventual dominance) of the cloud over previous technologies and models, this decade will see the same thing with crowdsourcing…

October 13, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Who is Liable for a Data Breach?

By David

Grazed from CFO.  Author: Alissa Ponchione.

Seeing an opportunity to make workflow more efficient, residents and physicians-in-training at Oregon Health & Science University started using cloud-computing service Google Drive to keep everyone up to date on patient information. After a faculty member discovered the staff was using the cloud service, the university launched an investigation, and it found that Drive documents held health data from 3,044 of its patients.

Although Google Drive is password protected and has security measures in place, the university did not have a contract agreement with the cloud provider to use or store OHSU patient health information. By disclosing patient information in the cloud, the university violated the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, which requires doctors to keep patient information private and secure…

October 13, 2013 Off

Rackspace Sees All Companies Moving to the Hybrid Cloud

By David

Grazed from SiliconHills.  Author: Editorial Staff.

All of Rackspace’s customers will be hybrid cloud customers in the future, said Gerardo Dada, the company’s product marketing leader.  San Antonio-based Rackspace, which calls itself the Open Cloud company and co-founded with NASA the Open Stack operating system, has seen its cloud computing business skyrocket in the past few years.

The cloud lets customers operate a “network of remote servers hosted on the Internet to store, manage, and process data, rather than a local server or a personal computer.”  Rackspace faces competition in the hybrid cloud market from Amazon Web Services, the number one leader, and other players such as Microsoft, HP Cloud and IBM’s SoftLayer…

October 13, 2013 Off

Cloud Software is Changing the Face of IT

By David

Grazed from Piston.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Cloud software is changing the way IT departments run. IT is no longer the “owner” of technology in the enterprise. As Rick Vanover put it, “the ‘server admin’ we have known over the years is a job description that is seriously at risk.” With cloud software providing an increasingly self-serve computing environment, the IT department will have to change. Thoran Rodrigues writes in Tech Republic about how this is going to happen.

Rodrigues points to a fundamental shift in corporate IT from capital intensive data center build-outs to cloud-based software hosting. Whether the cloud is running as a private cloud, a hybrid cloud, or a public cloud, the truth remains that the IT department no longer has iron control over all computing in the enterprise…

October 11, 2013 Off

ThousandEyes Peers Into Cloud Performance

By David

Grazed from NetworkComputing. Author: Ethan Banks.

While outsourcing applications or infrastructure to the public cloud relieves IT of some operational burdens, IT still has to monitor that infrastructure. Companies often overlook the complexity of troubleshooting a cloud app integrated with local infrastructure. If there’s a performance problem, is it the cloud provider? A congested link on the Internet path between the application and the consumer? A problem on the LAN?

How does one find the root cause without the provider and IT department pointing fingers at each other? This is the problem that ThousandEyes wants to address. ThousandEyes was founded in January 2010 to address the challenge of network performance management in the cloud era. I saw a presentation from ThousandEyes at Network Field Day 6, and have also played with a trial version of the service…

October 11, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: IBM Solves Virtual Machine ‘Noisy Neighbor’ Problem

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Charles Babcock.

IBM, the original inventor of virtualization in computing, has patented a method of moving virtual machines around dynamically to ensure each has the amount of network bandwidth that it needs. The technique can be used to load balance large conglomerations of virtual machines from a bandwidth perspective, instead of server CPU and memory perspective.

By shifting virtual machines that need more access to network bandwidth away from virtual machines that are already making heavy use of it, the virtual environment is used in a more efficient and intelligent way, approximating fuller use of all resources. In effect, IBM has announced that Patent #8,352,953, its method for "dynamically provisioning virtual machines," has solved what Netflix defined on Amazon Web Services as the "noisy neighbor" problem…

October 11, 2013 Off

Enterprise software vendors face deflation: Advantage SaaS

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Larry Dignan.

Legacy enterprise software vendors are caught in a deflationary pricing cycle, but there are multiple nuances worth noting. In a research report on pricing model disparities, Cowen & Co. analyst Peter Goldmacher found:

  • Data management tools such as Hadoop and NoSQL can save customers 70 percent to 80 percent relative to data warehousing tools from Teradata and Oracle.
  • SaaS apps such as Salesforce and Workday can save you money in the early years relative to an on-premise deployment from Oracle or SAP, but you could wind up paying more out over the duration of a deal. The outcomes range from 50 percent savings to spending more on SaaS vs. on premise.
  • Box is more expensive than on premise options in many cases, but collaboration customers are willing to pay up to access files remotely from mobile devices…
October 11, 2013 Off

Taking Your Cloud Deployment to the Next Level

By David

Grazed from DataCenterKnowledge. Author: Aaron Patrick.

In today’s IT landscape the benefits of cloud computing – flexibility, lower costs, higher productivity – are well understood. However, now that the term “cloud computing” is everywhere, companies need to work proactively to ensure they have put their business in the best possible position to succeed now and in the future.

A huge component of this success will be dependent on where your organization’s cloud infrastructure is housed. The data center that your cloud calls home will have certain capabilities and features that may be the difference in whether your cloud keeps pace or falls behind. Uptimes, network bandwidth and security are some of the most important aspects of the data center infrastructure that companies must take into account…