July 2, 2012 Off

VMware’s First Cloud Certification

By David

Grazed from DABCC. Author: Editorial Staff.

Recently VMware’s first certification around cloud computing quietly went into beta. Let’s learn more about this new certification option, the VCP-Infrastructure as a Service (or VCP-IaaS) certification…

Top 10 Must-Knows for the New VCP-IaaS

As this certification is still in beta, as of today, we don’t have a lot of official information yet but here’s what we do know:…

July 2, 2012 Off

Apple Shuts Cloud-Syncing Service MobileMe

By David

Grazed from Dow Jones. Author: Editorial Staff.

Apple Inc. (AAPL) this weekend pulled the plug on one of its rare missteps, MobileMe. On Saturday, the company shut down its much-maligned cloud-syncing service, preserving account holders’ data for a limited time so they might migrate to its new cloud service iCloud.

The closure brings to an end Apple’s first foray into cloud computing, one that, at the time it debuted, threatened to tarnish the company’s brand…

July 2, 2012 Off

Locking Down the Cloud-Based Workspace

By David

Grazed from ChannelPartners Online. Author: Editorial Staff.

The chief objection to the adoption of cloud computing is security. End users are concerned that cloud service providers do not have the security infrastructure, policies and procedures necessary to adequately safeguard data and respond to security incidents. As trusted advisers, channel partners need to understand their concerns and be able to reassure customers that their business-critical applications are safe in hosted environments. To help partners do that, this issue will identify risks and ways to mitigate them:

Top 7 Threats to Cloud Computing
To help organizations in making educated risk-management decisions regarding their cloud adoption strategies, the Cloud Security Alliance, has compiled a guide to the top cloud computing threats…

July 2, 2012 Off

Gartner: Consumers Will Drive Huge Growth for Cloud Storage

By David

Grazed from Data Center Knowledge. Author: Colleen Miller.

Consumer use of cloud computing will ramp up over the next few years, according to research firm Gartner, Inc., which recently predicted consumers will store 36 percent of their digital content in the cloud by 2016. This compares with a mere 7 percent of consumer data housed in cloud storage in 2011. Consumers’ increasing desire to share content and use multiple devices is driving this trend, Gartner said.
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“Historically, consumers have generally stored content on their PCs, but as we enter the post-PC era, consumers are using multiple connected devices, the majority of which are equipped with cameras,” said Shalini Verma, principal research analyst at Gartner. “This is leading to a massive increase in new user-generated content that requires storage. With the emergence of the personal cloud, this fast-growing consumer digital content will quickly get disaggregated from connected devices.”…

July 2, 2012 Off

Survey Finds that Cloud’s Future Burns Bright as Corporate Confidence Grows

By David

Grazed from Integration Developer News. Author: Vance McCarthy.

A survey finds the future of cloud is bright, as firms become more trusting in cloud solutions to run business-critical operations. The Future of Cloud Computing Survey, released by North Bridge Venture Partners asked 785 industry experts, vendors and end users about drivers inhibitors and best practices for cloud computing.

More than half of those surveyed expressed confidence in the viability of cloud solutions for critical business apps. Some 57% said scalability would be critical to cloud success.

Among those who feel confident about clouds, SaaS (software-as-a-service) looks to be a big reason, according to the survey. In fact, SaaS remains the Number One cloud investment, with 82% of respondents noting that this cloud expense was their top budget item. SaaS also has proven its merit to IT and business users, as a whopping 88% said they still planned to use SaaS five years from now, according to the survey…

July 2, 2012 Off

Ingram Micro Invests in Computing Infrastructure

By David

Grazed from Channelnomics. Author: Dave Courbanou.

It’s all about infrastructure. Whether it’s metal inside a skyscraper or ‘metal’ inside a data center, you can’t touch the clouds without it. But sometimes the channel is so caught up in the cloud that it can forget there’s a foundation of hardware behind those nebulous services.

Ingram Micro hasn’t forgotten, which is why it’s rolling out a brand new high-performance computing program, set to be exclusively delivered by the enterprise-focused community of channel partners.

In particular, Ingram Micro is looking to entice system builders and VARs to jump aboard. The program has been meticulously designed in partnership with PSSC Labs, a member of Ingram Micro’s System ArchiTECHs program. The new portfolio of computing solutions goes beyond servers, covering computing workstations, “supercomputing clusters” and high-end software installation services to go along with that high-end hardware…

July 2, 2012 Off

Will you get locked into your cloud? Ask the data gravity theory

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Jack Clark.

Cloud computing was meant to do away with vendor lock-in, but the work of an independent researcher suggests it could be having the opposite effect.

Researcher and cloud architect Dave McCrory has spent the past two years working on a theory of "data gravity", intended to allow IT buyers to assess cloud products’ potential for vendor lock-in and so make decisions to keep their data as accessible as possible.

According to the theory, clouds are not the adaptable systems that their marketing portrays them as, but planets that are always hungry for more data – and loathe to let it leave. "The motivation for looking at things like this is to determine what you want to do with your data and where you want to put your data, so this allows you to look at it as instead of just storing bits and bytes, it could be the longer term effects of your decision to put your bits and bytes over there," McCrory says…

July 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Apple Pays $60 Million for Chinese iPad Trademark

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Maureen O’Gara.

Apple has agreed to pay $60 million to make the Proview Technology (Shenzhen) Company’s claims that it owns the iPad trademark in China go away.

Apple bought Proview’s iPad trademarks in 10 countries through a UK lawyer and a specially organized company for about $55,000 (£35,000) in 2009 before the iPad came out and sued when Proview claimed the Taiwan affiliate it dealt with wasn’t authorized to sell the Chinese rights. Apple lost the suit and appealed.

The appeals court, which announced the settlement on its web site, reportedly mediated the deal, which, it said, was struck on June 25. The dickering took since the end of February…

July 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Dell Gets Quest for $2.36 Billion

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Maureen O’Gara.

Dell has won the bidding war for Quest Software agreeing to pay $28 a share, a 50 cent improvement on its last bid.

That brings the price to $2.36 billion, which is what JPMorgan claimed the company was worth weeks ago.

Insight Venture Partners, which offered $23 a share back in March, had to bring in Vector Capital, another private equity firm, to offer a financed cash bid of $25.75 a share. Dell retorted with $27.50 or about $2.32 billion. That’s where things were last Monday with the ball in Insight’s court…

July 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing Forecast: Cloudy With A Chance of Fail

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: Reuven Cohen.

Amazon’s Cloud service is having a bad a couple weeks. For the second time in as many weeks Amazon’s East Coast cloud crashed during a severe storm that left 1.3 million in the Washington D.C. area without power. The outage brought down numerous high profile web sites hosted on Amazon including Netflix, Instagram, Pinterest, and Heroku. Making things worse was the fact that other cloud services hosted in the area experienced no downtime.

I spoke briefly to the George Branch, Director of Service Delivery for Washington D.C. based cloud provider Virtustream, who told me “The Virtustream Data Center was generally unaffected by the storms in the region. We did not have to switch over to generator at any time and we remain on utility power at the facility. Due to problems with one of our telephone vendors, we did lose access to our 877 telephone support line.”…