Author: David

November 20, 2012 Off

Europe taps Amazon and Telefonica for cloud push

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: David Meyer.

Top EU officials will meet with companies such as Amazon and Telefonica on Monday to discuss ways to set up a single European market for cloud services. The steering board meeting will be the first for the new European Cloud Partnership, which looks to take advantage of the public sector’s buying power to influence cloud computing provision in the region. To do this, the group will try to come up with common cloud procurement standards.

Digital agenda commissioner Neelie Kroes said in January that the European Commission will put €10m (£8m) into the partnership, in the hope of eventually pooling resources between member states…

November 20, 2012 Off

Platform-as-a-Service market to see sharp growth according to Gartner Research

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: Chris Kanaracus.

The PaaS (platform as a service) market will grow to $1.2 billion this year, up from last year’s $900 million take, as vendors and customers seek easier ways to create new applications and customize existing ones, according analyst firm Gartner. PaaS spending will rise to $1.5 billion in 2013, while reaching $2.9 billion by 2016, Gartner said Monday.

The firm includes both broader PaaS products such as Salesforce.com’s Force.com, as well as discrete application infrastructure components, such as databases, messaging and "other functional types of middleware offered as a cloud service," Gartner said…

November 20, 2012 Off

Tackling cloud concerns from the front lines

By David

Grazed from TechTarget. Author: Steve Gunderson.

It seems like every year some new technology explodes onto the IT scene with huge potential — and frequently even greater hype. But tackling every technology that comes along is usually both impractical and too expensive. So how do you choose the right ones and then integrate them successfully into your environment?

As we all know, one of today’s hottest IT topics is the cloud, and it’s more than likely on your priority list as well. But figuring out how to maximize the real potential of cloud computing while avoiding the trap of relying on it to solve problems it was never designed to solve is a script most IT executives are still trying to write…

November 20, 2012 Off

Austin-based Silverback acquires cloud-based computing company – EPM Live

By David

Grazed from The Austin American Statesman. Author: Brian Garr.

Austin-based business software company Silverback Enterprise Group has acquired another cloud-based computing company. Silverback, which is backed by $50 million from Austin Ventures, purchased San Diego-based EPM Live, which provides cloud-based project portfolio and work management software that’s built on Microsoft’s SharePoint platform.

The company will be folded into another Silverback-owned company, Boston-based PowerSteering Software, which sells software that helps corporate customers manage projects, IT governance, new product development and other business. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. Silverback chairman and CEO Jack McDonald said the acquisition is complementary to PowerSteering’s existing offerings and will help solidify the company’s position as the lead vendor of cloud project and portfolio management software…

November 20, 2012 Off

Where Businesses Need to Focus Their Efforts to Maximize Returns From Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from Business2Community. Author: Samantha Robinson.

Businesses stand to make huge efficiency gains through the use of cloud computing. But many businesses are rightfully concerned that they’re not extracting every last drop of potential from what is possibly a very significant restructuring investment. In this article, we’ll draw from cloud computing theory to suggest areas those concerned businesses can check off to guarantee they’re getting the most out of the cloud.

Cloud computing is becoming ubiquitous and synonymous with remote service provision. As far back as the 1950s, scientists – including Herb Grosch – were predicting the current state of play, with clients accessing centralized mainframes. In fact, Grosch’s predictions – that the entire global community would access data stored in 15 data centers – form a great deal of the foundation behind IBM’s Smarter Planet vision…

November 20, 2012 Off

Global push for cloud blueprint

By David

Grazed from ITPro. Author: Matthew Hall.

The challenge with all new technologies is to ensure users and providers alike sing from the same hymn sheet so that interoperability and performance can be easily benchmarked. And so it is with the relatively new cloud computing trend. Now the Open Data Centre Alliance, a global industry association of heavyweight cloud users, has released a blueprint it wants adopted to ensure consistent enterprise cloud service delivery.

It intends to establish four tiers – from bronze to platinum – for cloud services covering availability, performance, recoverability, security, management, functionality and interoperability. The latest in a series of benchmarks the ODCA intends to establish, the most recent papers specifically address computing ”infrastructure as a service”, or IaaS…

November 20, 2012 Off

Educational Institutions and Cloud Computing: A Roadmap of Responsibilities

By David

Grazed from The Huffington Post. Author: Daniel J. Solove.

Increasingly, educational institutions and state entities handling student data are hiring outside companies to perform cloud computing functions related to managing personal information. The benefits of cloud computing are that outside entities might be more sophisticated at managing personal data. These entities may be able to manage data more inexpensively and effectively than the educational institution could do itself. In many cases, cloud computing providers can provide better security than the educational institutions can.

The risks of cloud computing are that educational institutions no longer have as much control over the personal data. They must rely on the cloud computing provider to have the appropriate practices and policies to ensure that data is properly maintained, handled, used, or disclosed…

November 19, 2012 Off

Security remains major concern to cloud adoption

By David

Grazed from ITBusiness.ca. Author: Jeff Jedras.

“To the cloud!” was Microsoft’s rallying-cry, and it appears most organizations agree it’s inevitable that portions of their business will end up relying on cloud computing in the near future. Still, it also appears that significant security concerns remain that could slow cloud adoption.

Those are the findings of a new survey by GreenSQL, a database security company based in Tel Aviv, Israel. It asked its respondents “What is your main security concern when moving your database to the cloud?” and found a number of concerns identified:

* 31 percent: I do not trust the level of security in cloud services
* 28 percent: Compliance and regulations requirements do not allow moving data to the cloud
* 22 percent: I cannot control my data on the cloud
* 19 percent: Cloud services are not mature yet…

November 19, 2012 Off

What HP’s cloud chief wants you to know about HP’s cloud

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

Zorawar Biri Singh, who leads HP’s cloud effort, says the company’s vision aligns nicely with what enterprises want. HP will fill in check marks to its OpenStack-based game plan next month but the big question is whether HP’s brand still carries weight.

The controversies that have afflicted Hewlett-Packard in the past few years has given even the most loyal customers and partners pause. This is, after all, a company that has gone through a half dozen CEOs in 6 years. That uncertainty doesn’t help the company’s cloud computing strategy, which had so many moving parts that the company launched yet another reorg to rationalize the effort two months ago…

November 19, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: The Great Arms Race For Virtualization Security

By David

Grazed from CloudTweaks. Author: Gavin Hill.

Since its infancy in the early seventies when the first computer virus was created, the malware and anti-malware business has grown into multi-billion dollar industries. No longer are script kiddies creating malware for notoriety, instead the malware industry is run by organized criminals who invest time and money in new technologies and methods to compromise systems for profit.

The evolution of malware is the driver for the progress of security. Malware propagation has gone from floppy disks, to email attachments, and on to remote exploits of vulnerabilities. Malicious software itself has become more sophisticated by using kernel-level code to hide as rootkits, effectively moving down the stack. The result: an ‘arms race’ between organized criminals and security vendors. Each party reacts to changes in the industry to gain the upper hand. Take for example the growth in broadband adoption since the early 2000’s. As broadband adoption grew so too did the number of endpoints in botnets…