What is Cloud Bursting?

Cloud News, Resources and Information

The Open Data Center Alliance (ODCA) today welcomed T-Systems, corporate customer arm of Deutsche Telekom, to the organization’s steering committee, as well as Cloudera, Hortonworks, Lenovo, Link4Dev , MapR, SAS and Symantec as solutions provider members. The membership of the Alliance continues to grow as companies recognize the need for a common voice in the expansion and development of cloud computing requirements.
The ODCA also announced a call for papers for ODCA Forecast 2012 Poster Chat and Birds of a Feather discussions. Held on June 12, in conjunction with the 10th International Cloud Expo in New York City, ODCA Forecast 2012 will bring together hundreds of members of the Alliance, industry experts and leading technology companies to showcase how ODCA usage model adoption can accelerate ROI for businesses deploying cloud solutions and services…
Grazed from The Times of India. Author: Mayur Shetty.
Infosys has started offering its core banking solution on the cloud and is targeting smaller banks by offering fee-based usage of the product.
"We are working with some cooperative banks on this and area also looking at the African market for this product" said Haragopal Mangipudi, Senior VP and Global Head of Finacle at Infosys. Finacle on the cloud would enable smaller banks without the resources to offer their customers the same kind of anytime anywhere banking services offered by new generation banks. It would also enable them to use multiple channels like ATMs, internet and mobile for extending banking services without making large investments. The company has also implemented Finacle in 10,000 region rural banks. But in the case of RRB’s although the core banking solution is not on the cloud but hosted by the sponsor bank…
Public clouds make enterprise IT uneasy. For one thing, it’s a disruptive technology — a significant shift toward compute resources becoming a shared utility. It also creates a lack of visibility and less control over IT assets. Add concerns about data loss and security that BYOD creates and it’s no wonder some cloud rookies are breaking out in hives.
SearchCloudComputing.com spoke with Jim Reavis, executive director of the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA), about the true security concerns of public and private cloud as well as common misconceptions that are keeping enterprises from diving headlong into cloud…
In a guest editorial for Forbes Mike Pearl, the cloud computing leader for international professional services giant PricewaterhouseCooper, succinctly and clearly explained just why the cloud is so awesome. Okay, maybe he didn’t use the word “awesome.”
That editorial, more properly called “Looking At Cloud Strategy Through The Lens Of Value,” starts with a high-level view of cloud strategy, and how vendors that don’t market cloud solutions as such are falling behind. Pearl likens the cloud to the role of credit in financial services, insofar as it enables an organization to grow and move beyond their physical assets. But putting aside the technology itself, there are really four distinct ways in which the cloud can add value to a business, he writes…
Private cloud computing seems to be surrounded by much fog and misinformation as to exactly what it means for the enterprise. What types of companies are a good fit? Who might need a private cloud? Are security issues the only reason? Developing your private cloud takes considerable skill but is a viable option for companies looking to achieve economy of scale behind the corporate firewall. So say respondents of the 2011-2012 TSS Java Trends survey.
What exactly is a private cloud? It is simply a marketing term for a proprietary computing architecture that provides hosted services to a limited number of people behind a firewall. A private cloud is typically implemented by first virtualizing internal commodity hardware, then adding an application services layer, and finally managing the new infrastructure as a single resource. This single resource is often allocated to applications that process and store sensitive and private company information in accordance with internal or government policies, such as Sarbanes-Oxley and HIPPA…
With a spotlight on its cloud computing platforms in booth #508 at the 2012 Interop Expo May 8-10 in Las Vegas, Premio ( http://premioinc.com/ ) is demonstrating how data centers or enterprises who wish to offer reliable, flexible, elastically-scalable and price competitive cloud computing services can do so seamlessly within their existing infrastructure.
Premio is a U.S.-based premier provider of complete design, engineering and manufacturing services to OEMs and ODMs around the globe and excels at "build-to-order" technology solutions in a wide range of markets that are unmatched in both quality and affordability. Demonstrations at Interop will showcase Premio’s expertise in computing, storage and cloud technologies as well as the company’s association with strong ecosystem providers such as Intel, MPSTOR and EchoStreams…
Piston Cloud Computing, Inc., the enterprise OpenStack(TM) company, today announced its Co-founder and CEO, Joshua McKenty, will be participating in a panel session at Interop Las Vegas titled, "Is OpenStack the Answer to the Walled Garden?" taking place at the Mandalay Bay Casino in Las Vegas from May 6-10, 2012. Interop features the latest innovations in virtualization, mobility, cloud computing and the data center.
What: Learn which companies are involved (and how involved) with OpenStack and how OpenStack’s open source community approach is destroying the value proposition of closed and proprietary models from other vendors…
Nirvanix announced on Thursday it has raised over $25M in a Series C funding round led by Khosla Ventures. Current Nirvanix investors Valhalla Partners, Intel Capital, Mission Ventures and Windward Ventures also participated in the round. The company plans to utilize the capital infusion to significantly expand its engineering organization and accelerate the delivery of innovative new cloud storage services while increasing its global footprint across sales and marketing. The new investment brings Nirvanix’s total capital raised to $70M.
"Our enterprise cloud storage focus has clearly resonated with customers, as demonstrated by the fact that we booked more revenue in Q1 of 2012 than nearly all of 2011," said Scott Genereux, President and CEO of Nirvanix…
Knowledge has always been power, but how that information is stored has emerged as one of the most challenging issues facing the evolution of technology.
We’re connected digitally as never before and the ubiquitous nature of smartphones and tablets only means that the ability to access and share information must become cheaper and faster. This shift in how we seamlessly integrate technology is the byproduct of a cloud computing revolution that’s been led by some of the biggest names in technology, companies like Google, Apple and Facebook.
Consumers may associate these companies with their headquarters in places like Silicon Valley. But the world’s computing power is churned out in monolithic data centers spread across the globe. Some of these sprawling complexes consume enough energy to power a small city. And their meteoric rise in importance has mostly been fueled with sources like coal and nuclear power…