May 2, 2013 Off

Software-as-a-Service Ship Is Cruising Full-Steam Ahead

By David

Grazed from eWeek.  Author: Eric Lundquist.

"The software-as-a-service ship has sailed," Google CIO Ben Fried told attendees at the Bloomberg Enterprise Technology Summit in New York City late last month.  Where once there were entire conferences dedicated to whether or not cloud computing would ever be right for the enterprise, that argument is now moot. OK. So it is a moot argument, but the reality is that it isn’t one boat but an entire flotilla of boats that have sailed.

Not to belabor the metaphor all that much, but there is the SS Amazon, the SS Rackspace, the SS OpenStack and a mixed crew of major vendors, independent developers and CIOs. The CIOs attending the Bloomberg forum weren’t disputing the value of cloud computing, but were still concerned about security, privacy and liabilities related to the cloud…

May 2, 2013 Off

Citrix Cloud Advisor Program Takes Citrix’s SaaS to the Channel

By David

Grazed from MSPMentor.  Author: Tom Flink.

Citrix (NASDAQ: CTXS) is launching a new program designed for cloud service providers to take Citrix cloud-based services offerings to market. Anticipated partners for the program include large service providers and telecom providers, especially those outside of the United States. Here are the details.

The new program is called the Citrix Cloud Advisor Program and Tom Flink, the company’s VP of Worldwide Channels and Marketing, told MSPmentor that the program will roll out in the months ahead and expand the go-to-market strategy for Citrix’s cloud-based services.  There are two models for this…

May 1, 2013 Off

Why the cloud will never (entirely) replace in-house applications

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Steve Ranger.

Cloud computing, with its promise of cheap, easy access to enterprise-class applications via the internet, is a seductive concept for many cash-strapped organisations as it seems to offer state-of-the-art infrastructure without the need for epic IT integration projects — or expensive staff.

At the moment cloud still accounts for a relatively small slice of enterprise IT spending — perhaps no more than five or six percent of the total software market, although one prediction sees this climb to 20 percent by the end of the decade. That’s partly because companies remain cautious about the new technology, but also because they have significant investments in their existing on-premise IT infrastructure, both hardware and software…

May 1, 2013 Off

Past, Present And Future: Cloud Computing In Three Minutes

By David

Grazed from CloudTweaks. Author: Jula Holkkola.

Perhaps the most interesting thing about the cloud is just how fluffy it really is. Recent news indicates that it has finally gone mainsteam. Yet at the same time, most people are still not quite clear on what the cloud really is. To get a better understanding, here’s a three-minute summary of where the clouds came from and where they are heading.

Looking at the roots of the cloud computing movement, it all really started in the late ‘90s when companies with a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) business model started surfacing. Perhaps the most well known pioneer is Salesforce.com, the first billion-dollar company in the cloud space. Today there is a plethora of companies offering all kinds of online applications shared by the public. As a rule of thumb, if you could run something on your own computer but choose to tap into shared online resources instead, you are dealing with the cloud…

May 1, 2013 Off

Cloud Crosswinds Ahead as Behemoths Battle on Price

By David

Grazed from DataCenterKnowledge. Author: Ted Chamberlin.

With the recent announcement from the Microsoft Azure camp stating “ its commitment to price match Amazon Web Services prices for commodity services like compute, storage and bandwidth, aligned with the general availability of Windows Azure infrastructure services,” the official race to zero begins in the Infrastructure as a Service market. This shot across the bow of AWS will most definitely bother AWS, but it should scare the stuffing out of the rest of the IaaS market. Particularly the providers who the traditional businesses trust a bit more for more enterprise-ish workloads should be concerned.

Providers like GoGrid, Tata, Savvis, Terremark, Rackspace Cloud and others just entering the market will face the heavier crosswinds as these behemoths engage battles. The stark reality is that hyper scale providers like Amazon use their operational acumen and scale to drive pricing down on IaaS services on a regular basis. This will create an exceedingly tougher environment for the rest of the cloud providers to compete. How is an IaaS provider to thrive, yet alone, survive?…

May 1, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: New Relic, ScienceLogic Partner on Application Performance Management

By David

Grazed from MSPMentor. Author: CJ Arlotta.

Software as a service (SaaS)-based cloud application performance management provider New Relic has forged a partnership with IT management software provider ScienceLogic Inc. to offer combined application performance management (APM) and infrastructure performance management data for cloud services providers and businesses, hoping to assist them with performance and business goals. Here’s the story.

According to the companies, the partnership, formed through New Relic’s Connect Partner program leverages both companies’ platforms to provide instant, comprehensive information to development and deployment teams. These teams are responsible for the management of applications running in the cloud and the data center. New Relic’s Connect Partner program was created to help the company streamline product integrations with complementary technologies…

May 1, 2013 Off

CloudSigma’s Public Cloud Fuels 2013 NASA Space Apps Challenge

By David

Grazed from IT News Online. Author: PR Announcement.

CloudSigma, an international, customer-centric, pure-cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) provider, today announced that it has provided free, compute resources for 2013’s NASA Space Apps Challenge participants. By contributing servers, featuring 30 Gb of storage, 2 Gb of RAM and 2 GHz of CPU, and a specially-configured central server, CloudSigma hopes to further participants’ innovation to address today’s top challenges on Earth and in space.

Now in its second year, NASA’s International Space Apps Challenge is the world’s largest, collaborative technology development event for software, hardware, data visualization and mobile apps. With 9,000+ participants (up from 2,000 the year before), this year’s challenges included detecting near Earth objects (NEOs), revisiting how NASA offers data to the public, and more effectively curating how to tell the story of space to the world…

May 1, 2013 Off

General Dynamics – Taking Cloud Brokerage to the Next Level

By David

Grazed from Business2Community. Author: Matthew Ramsey.

If your IT team has kept up with the latest cloud computing trends, chances are it has come across at least one of the cloud brokerages participating in an expanding market. Many companies have faced challenges in working with the public cloud. General Dynamics Information Technology is changing this, however. By using Gravitant’s flexible cloudMatrix platform, it is already offering cloud management systems to local, state, and Federal government agencies which previously struggled with such deployments.

These challenges include:

  • Cost savings: The idea of adopting cloud computing solutions is for companies to save money. The government’s Cloud First policy was enacted to ensure the goal of public cloud computing is to lower costs for organizations. In the past, government agencies could only use private and community clouds which do not typically result in the savings most organizations expect.
  • Complexity: Managing the appropriate solutions from different public cloud providers is often complex along with finding the most efficient ways to use them.
  • Standardization: If private and public clouds make up the IT infrastructure, centralized management is only efficient if there are standardized tools aiding the majority of users…
May 1, 2013 Off

How to ensure trusted geolocation of data in the cloud

By David

Grazed from GNC.com. Author: William Jackson.

The National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence still is ramping up to full operational capability, but it has collaborated with industry to produce a scheme for ensuring trusted geolocation of work being done in the cloud. This first product was published as an interagency report by the National Institute of Standards and Technology to address the challenges presented when sensitive applications or computing jobs are moved into a cloud where the user does not have direct control of the infrastructure.

“We have released a demonstration of how the end user can validate that the workload is in a secure location, and trace it through a hardware root of trust,” said Nate Lesser, deputy director of the NCCOE. The draft report, “Trusted Geolocation in the Cloud: Proof of Concept Implementation,” is an example of the solutions to security challenges faced by government and industry that the center of excellence will produce. The center focuses on implementing existing technology rather than developing new ones…

May 1, 2013 Off

Actuate Integrates ActuateOne BI Platform and BIRT onDemand SaaS with Amazon Redshift for Big Data Analytics in the Cloud

By David

Grazed from BusinessWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Actuate Corporation (NASDAQ: BIRT), The BIRT Company(TM) — delivering more insights to more people than all BI companies combined, today announced that they have integrated ActuateOne(R) — Actuate’s BIRT-based suite of commercial products for development and deployment of custom business analytics applications — and BIRT onDemand(TM) — Actuate’s SaaS version of ActuateOne — with Amazon Redshift, AWS’s new petabyte-scale cloud warehouse service. This announcement heralds yet another addition to Actuate’s rapidly growing stable of ActuateOne connectors for Big-Data-ready data sources that enable developers, IT departments and OEMs to deliver world-class BI applications.

When the already blazingly fast visualization and analysis features of ActuateOne are combined with Amazon Redshift’s performance, scalability and low cost (under $1,000/terabyte/year) — organizations of all sizes reap the benefits of ultra-fast access and near-speed-of-thought visualization for Cloud-based business analytics on real-time Big Data workloads of any size or complexity…