July 10, 2012 Off

Kognitio Expands “Big Data” Analytics To The Amazon Web Services Cloud

By David

Grazed from PR NewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Kognitio, driving the convergence of Big Data, in-memory analytics and cloud computing, today announced the immediate availability of its in-memory analytical platform via Amazon Web Services (AWS).

In doing so, Kognitio is extending the reach of Kognitio Cloud implementations, giving its clients the industry’s widest range of cloud-based Platform as a Service (PaaS) offerings for companies that need to gain business insights from Big Data. This allows companies to choose how they want to do advanced data analytics on their corporate-critical information, where they want to store the data while doing so, and to control their costs to a greater degree than ever before…

July 10, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing Explained and Explored in New Three-part Quest Executive Brief Series

By David

Grazed from MarketWatch. Author: PR Announcement.

Cloud computing is quickly bringing revolutionary benefits to just about everyone’s working and personal life, and it offers small businesses an unparalleled opportunity to use information technology to compete effectively with much larger, more powerful rivals.

In an effort to help business decision-makers understand the realities of Cloud computing, Quest(R) is offering, free of charge, a new three- part Executive Brief series, GETTING THE MOST FROM CLOUD COMPUTING. The series explains how Cloud computing’s new architectures have made IT less costly, more accessible, and easier to use than ever before — and includes what businesses need to know to deploy and use Cloud computing effectively…

July 10, 2012 Off

Cloud Should Be Defined By What It Will Become, Not What It Is Today

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: JP Morgenthal

There’s been a lot of discussion about what makes cloud computing different than other forms of computing that have come before. Some refer to the set of attributes set forth by NIST, while others rely on less succinct qualifications simply satisfied to identify network accessible services as cloud, and others define cloud by applicable business models. In the past, I have written about scale as a common abstraction based on upon some of these other definitions. However, more recently, I’ve come to the realization that we need to define cloud by where it’s going and not what it is in its infancy.

Cloud computing is following in the vein of the automobile and fast food industries. These industries introduced their first products with little to no customization and then changed and competed on value based upon significant customization. The automobile industry started out offering only a black Ford Model T and today allows buyers to order a completely custom designed car online delivered to their home. Likewise, cloud computing started out as vanilla infrastructure services and is rapidly moving towards greater levels of customization. Ultimately, cloud computing will not be defined by service model monikers, but will be a complete provision, package and deliver (PPD) capability facilitating control over the type of hardware, operating systems, management systems, application platforms and applications…

July 10, 2012 Off

Cloud Security & Cloud Encryption Explained

By David
Grazed from Porticor.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Cloud encryption and cloud security are hot topics for enterprises migrating to the cloud.

IT departments are constantly looking for ways to increase flexibility and deliver value in shorter times, while utilizing computer resources more efficiently. Cloud computing is the natural answer to this evolution, yet at the same time enterprises cannot compromise on cloud security, and cloud encryption should be considered high on the list as it segregates and “hides” your data from other virtual entities hosted on the same physical cloud infrastructure.

We have created this short presentation to further explain cloud security issues and business needs, as well as to present the Porticor approach to cloud encryption. to read more about Porticor and our unique technology, be sure to download this white paper by clicking here.

July 10, 2012 Off

Cloud Is ‘Bright Spot’ in Global IT Spending

By David

Grazed from Wall Street Journal. Author: Clint Boulton.

Gartner said IT spending is expected to rise 3% to $3.6 trillion in 2012, largely on the strength of increased spending on cloud computing. The outlook for this year was raised from an earlier forecast of 2.5% growth. Nonetheless, the growth for this year will be much slower than the 7.9% gain in 2011, as economic turmoil in Europe, and slowdowns in China and the U.S. put pressure on IT budgets.

Cloud computing, which lets CIOs offload their hardware hosting and maintenance to a vendor, is one of the “bright spots” in IT spending, said Gartner analyst Richard Moore. Spending on the cloud is expected to rise to $109 billion this year from $91 billion last year. Moore said cloud-based business process software accounts for the bulk of cloud spending by enterprises, followed by platform as a service, software as a service and infrastructure as a service. Moore said cloud spending could nearly double to $207 billion by 2016…

July 10, 2012 Off

CIOs cite Cloud, Mobile as Focus of IT Spending

By David

Grazed from Wall Street Journal. Author: Clint Boulton.

CIOs are focusing the bulk of the growth in their IT spending on cloud computing and mobile technologies, which squares with the findings of Gartner’s new report on global IT spending.

Dominion Enterprise CIO Joe Fuller said mobile application development currently accounts for 26% of his total budget for the marketing services firm, but will rise to 40% by the end of the year as the company seeks to better compete with Zillow and other online brands.

He and his team developed roughly 29 mobile applications to enable customers to access brand websites such as ForRent.com and Homes.com from the iPhone, iPad, Android and Windows Phone handsets. “We want to have the best mobile offerings out there,” Fuller said. “So we’ve got to step it up a notch.” Fuller is also on the process of testing hybrid cloud computing using virtualization software from VMware with the notion to gradually move away from locally-stored software to a complete cloud for its brands…

July 9, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Will The PlayStation 4 Actually Be PlayStation 3 + Gaikai?

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: Editorial Staff.

Rumors keep swirling about for the next-generation of video game consoles.

What sort of specs will the Xbox 720 and PlayStation 4 have? How will these systems compare to the current-gen consoles? To gaming PCs? And how will cloud-computing figure in to the next generation of games, both in terms of processing power and distribution?

There’s no clear or certain answer to any of this, and likely won’t be for some time…

July 9, 2012 Off

No Rainy Days Ahead for Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from HealthTech Zone. Author: Deborah Hirsch.

For a long time, healthcare organizations shied away from cloud computing, rightfully worried about privacy issues and security when confidential data was stored and managed on the Web.

But all that seems to have dissolved. A recent report by Dallas-based research firm MarketsandMarkets predicts the market will grow to $5.4 billion worldwide by 2017, according to a story by James Ritchie. In 2011, market penetration for cloud computing in healthcare was apparently 4 percent, representing only a $1.7-billion market.

Cloud computing allows organizations to rely on remote machines owned by another firm for software and data storage via a Web-based service for such functions as electronic medical records and for back-office functions, including billing and payroll, according to the study…

July 9, 2012 Off

The Economic Impact of Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from IT Business Edge. Author: Michael Vizard.

As the presidential campaign gets into full swing in advance of the November election, there’s obviously a lot of focus on the employment outlook. While the accuracy of the numbers that the Department of Labor posts are dubious at best, there’s no doubt that the employment picture could be better. A lot of factors go into determining what the employment picture actually winds up being. But one factor that a lot of folks don’t seem to be appreciating is the role IT and cloud computing are about to play in reshaping in the economy.

While most of the employment chatter these days about cloud computing centers around the impact this shift will have on people working inside IT, the reality is that the impact on people working outside of IT is going to be exponentially greater. Once a company starts moving IT into a third-party data center, it’s only a matter of time before entire business processes start heading in that same direction. Once business process outsourcing starts to occur in volume, it becomes apparent pretty quickly that one smaller group of people in the cloud can automate a process or task that used to be performed by 10 times as many people working in 10 different companies. As that trend continues, it’s not like those jobs moved somewhere and will come back one day; they just simply disappeared into the cloud…

July 9, 2012 Off

Utility Computing, Cloud-Style

By David

Grazed from IT Business Edge. Author: Arthur Cole.

Now that enterprises are becoming more comfortable with the cloud computing model for basic applications like backup and recovery, attention is starting to shift toward some of the more advanced possibilities.

Key among them is Infrastructure-as-a-Service, which promises not only software and operating instances on-demand, but entire data environments. While a number of high-profile services are up and running (most of the time, anyway) the question remains how close we are from making the transition from ad hoc service-based infrastructure to full utility computing.

At the moment, implementing a working IaaS architecture is a bit more complicated than switching the lights on. Hardware and software integration, network pathways, usage and governance policies and a range of other items generally mark the "to-do" list when it comes to establishing cloud infrastructure. However, it seems the process is becoming more streamlined, particularly as enterprises transition to more cloud-like architecture within their own data centers…