August 8, 2013 Off

Cloud Foundry brings CenturyLink aboard to open up PaaS process

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

Last week it was IBM. Now CenturyLink has joined the community advisory board that will, in theory, help Cloud Foundry establish itself as a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) that enterprises will use. cloudfoundrylogoThat’s no mean feat. Developers often love PaaSes, which give them an easy environment to build their applications, but big companies often balk at deploying those applications on a third-party platform and bring them in house.

Pivotal, the spin-off partially owned by EMC and VMware, is backing this Cloud Foundry play big time but apparently realizes it needs strong third-party support — including from cloud competitors — to avoid the perception that any one company is big-footing the process…

August 8, 2013 Off

Who is the New Infrastructure Administrator?

By David
CloudCow Contributed Article.  Author: John McNelly, Product Senior Advisor for Performance Monitoring, Dell Software

Traditional IT roles are beginning to converge as organizations leverage more and more innovative technologies to modernize the data center. Technicians are expanding their responsibilities into new domains, which means that yesterday’s “silo” administrator is quickly becoming today’s “infrastructure administrator.” As part server administrator, virtual environment manager, network engineer, and storage architect, this next generation role requires a broad spectrum of knowledge across all of these multiple domains. Today’s infrastructure administrators need the skills to build, maintain and manage high performing data center infrastructure solutions, with the end goal of producing a flexible infrastructure where capacity can be scaled up or down as business requirements change, while simultaneously focusing on data center cost optimization.
August 7, 2013 Off

Green Cloud Computing Benefits Midsized Firms

By David

Grazed from Midsize Insider. Author: Marissa Tejada.

Midsize firms often turn to cloud computing for increased efficiency, and this move is now proving to help the environment at the same time. A new study shows that the cloud is reducing energy use annually by 80 percent at both public and private companies thereby reducing greenhouse gas emissions. These green traits are proving to be a big plus for midsize firms.

Reducing Dependence

A global green IT association called The Global e-Sustainability Initiative (GeSI), recently released a study in cooperation with Harvard University, Imperial College, Reading University, and Microsoft Europe entitled "The Enabling Technologies of a Low-Carbon Economy – a Focus on Cloud Computing." The study, featured in the Cloud Times, found that as more companies utilize the cloud, the U.S. will reduce its energy dependence and save $2.2 billion in energy costs…

August 7, 2013 Off

Google, Microsoft play catch up to Amazon, add load balancing, auto-scaling to their clouds

By David

Grazed from Network World. Author: Brandon Butler.

Google Wednesday rolled out load balancing features to its public cloud service, allowing customers to automatically scale up and down virtual machines to accommodate unexpected spikes in demand. The rollout comes just a few months after Microsoft improved its Azure cloud service with new auto-scaling features. Both companies are effectively playing catch-up with leading IaaS provider Amazon Web Services, which already offers such features.

Load balancing is a “critical” feature for any highly scalable cloud deployment, Google engineers wrote in announcing the company’s service today. It allows Google Compute Engine (GCE) to automatically and intelligently route traffic across a collection of servers. This replaces a manual process where new virtual machines (VM) would be provisioned by the user…

August 7, 2013 Off

CloudBeat 2013, San Francisco. September 9 – 10, 2013

By David

Grazed from VentureBeat.  Author: Event Announcement.

Returning for its third year, CloudBeat will track the growing maturity of the cloud and identify the hot issues for the next twelve months.  CloudBeat 2013 is held in San Francisco, USA, on September 9-10, 2013.

We’ll cut through the hype surrounding the cloud by gathering real customers who have gone through the pain of adoption and change, and who have compelling stories to tell about the ways in which the cloud continues to transform their business…

August 7, 2013 Off

DigitalOcean Raises $3.2 Million in Funding to Expand IaaS Solutions

By David

Grazed from The Web Site Host. Author: Editorial Staff.

Infrastructure-as-a-service provider DigitalOcean announced on Wednesday it has raised a $3.2 million seed round led by IA Ventures, with participation from CrunchFund and TechStars. The move comes a few months after DigitalOcean suffered a data breach that impacted a “small percentage of customers”, and promptly rolled out a fix for those affected customers.

DigitalOcean nearly has 350,000 cloud servers to date, adding an average of 500 new subscribers a day. The company says it plans to use the proceeds from this funding round to hire more marketing and engineering employees, as well as build out its infrastructure…

August 7, 2013 Off

Datadog Addresses Top AWS Performance Problems

By David

Grazed from PRWeb. Author: PR Announcement.

Datadog, the SaaS-based monitoring and data analytics platform that provides a unified view of IT infrastructure, released today a troubleshooting guide for developers and system administrators using Amazon Web Services (AWS) Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). In the new eBook, The Top 5 AWS EC2 Performance Problems, Datadogs technical team details the top five EC2 performance issues and provides instructions on how to detect and remediate these problems.

For many developers and system administrators, AWS’ EC2 promises ease of deployment and instant scalability. However, EC2 also introduces significant changes to coding, deployment and application maintenance which makes this infrastructure behave differently from traditional on-premise servers. These differences lead to performance issues such as unpredictable EBS disk I/O, EC2 instance ECU mismatches, and ELB load balancing traffic latency. Applications running on AWS infrastructure that are affected by these issues experience a decrease in performance or downtime…

August 7, 2013 Off

Why Amazon and others don’t specifically report cloud revenues

By David

Grazed from NetworkWorld. Author: Brandon Butler.

Recent news that the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating how IBM reports its cloud computing revenues begs the question: Why are companies so coy about reporting their cloud revenues? Basically, the answer is because they can be. Although, the SEC’s most recent probe could change that, for at least some companies.

Perhaps the biggest player in the IaaS market of the cloud, Amazon Web Services, is a good example of the issue. In financial filings, the company reports revenues from its cloud computing division – Amazon Web Services – in a line item lumped in together with two other items, advertising services and credit card agreements. So, it’s difficult to decipher exactly how much revenue is derived from AWS alone…

August 7, 2013 Off

Cloud computing will kill the IT department. True or false?

By David

Grazed from ComputerWorld. Author: Stuart Kippelman.

I know this might not be a comfortable topic for everyone, but we have to talk about it. What if the cloud becomes the primary data center, and SaaS is the only way applications are sold? Will there be a need for an IT department?

This blog won’t come up with the answer, but an open dialog is always healthy. This topic comes up frequently, and depending on the day and with whom I speak, the viewpoints are very different. I encourage you to post your thoughts and let’s discuss them. There are two very different sides to this topic. Let me try and represent both for your consideration. IT departments are toast:…

August 7, 2013 Off

10 Things CIOs Should Know About The World’s First Cloud Database

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: John Foley.

When CEO Larry Ellison introduced Oracle Database 12c at Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco last September, he described it as a new foundation for modern cloud applications. That sums up Oracle Database 12c perfectly. First and foremost, it’s a platform for cloud computing, as signified by the “c” in its moniker. If there were just one single thing you should know about Oracle Database 12c, that would be it.

Wrapped up in that big idea are hundreds of database improvements. In fact, there are more than 500 new features in Oracle Database 12c, which together bring new levels of efficiency, scalability, and security to Oracle’s market-leading database management system…