Author: David

November 11, 2012 Off

To Understand Just How Much The Cloud Will Change The World, Look At Toyota

By David
Grazed from Business Insider.  Author: Julie Bort.

Spend a few minutes talking to Zack Hicks, Toyota’s top technology executive in North America, and you’ll walk away with a startling revelation: Cloud computing is changing everything about our world from how we work to how we manage our health.

Hicks, the chief information officer for Toyota’s U.S. arm, says that the automaker’s adoption of cloud technology—Internet-based computing, served up through websites and apps—has freed up his staff to work on more meaningful projects.  And those are really life-changing things, like apps that can monitor your vital signs…

November 11, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing Standards Are Under Discussion by US Government

By David
Grazed from Midsize Insider.  Author: Alex Keane.

A Google search for "cloud computing" will produce millions of possible results and goes to prove just how popular the subject is for modern computer users. However, cloud computing is still very much in its infancy and can be compared in some ways to early adoption of the Internet, where incompatibility issues between browsers and applications were common. And there are no international cloud computing standards or regulations governing this particular marketplace.

However, the US government, looking to utilize the technology for federal, state, and local use, has stepped in, taking a logical approach to the problem. As reported on Fierce Telecom, the federal CIO (Chief Information Officer) contacted the NIST (National Institute Of Standards and Technology) to spearhead the campaign for a common standard, one that addresses the possible issues and concerns involved in cloud adaptation. In response, the NIST produced a publication that helps potential users of cloud computing resources to understand the risks and benefits of the technology. Cloud Computing Synopsis and Recommendations will form the basis for future standards in this area. It is aimed at a general audience but will also be of benefit to IT administrators, company owners, and other IT decision makers…

November 11, 2012 Off

5 reasons to delay migrating to the public cloud

By David

Grazed from HealthCare IT News.  Author: Benjamin Harris.

With all the talk about switching from data centers to cloud-based computing, it seems like the cloud is an etherial magic bullet for every problem that healthcare IT might face, from reduced costs to improved flexibility. Not so fast, says Steve Jacobs, president of Velocity Data Centers, a firm that provides private cloud solutions.

While "there are some definite business advantages to operating in a cloud IT environment, the risks are very real and concerning," says Jacobs. For all of the pros of cloud-based solutions floating around, he points out that some of the cons can be big nails in the coffin for any organization that relies as much on data as healthcare does.

Here are four reasons providers should consider delaying making the jump to the cloud…

November 10, 2012 Off

CloudBeat 2012 speakers really have their heads in the cloud

By David

Grazed from VentureBeat.  Author: Garrett McCullum.

CloudBeat 2012 is right around the corner, and we’re confident it’s going to be the cloud event of the year. Here’s why:  It’s unlikely that any single player will dominate the cloud computing market in the foreseeable future. So more and more enterprise IT leaders are taking a pragmatic, creative approach and adopting a wide range of solutions.

CloudBeat is unlike other cloud events because it puts those customers (the companies that are adopting cloud solutions) front and center to share their experiences and insights on what’s working and what’s not…

November 10, 2012 Off

How Effective are Cloud-Based Anti-Viruses?

By David
Grazed from CloudTimes.  Author: Xath Cruz.

Cloud computing technology is one of the most transformative technologies in recent history, as it allows computers to perform tasks that are normally beyond their computing and storage capabilities. We have also seen that the amount of web applications available has increased rapidly as the consumer market starts to accept cloud computing. Everything from document editing, to image manipulation, and even gaming have been adopted to the cloud. In fact, even security software such as anti-viruses have been migrated to the cloud.

The demand for cloud-based anti virus software has gone up steadily these past few years, as more and more computing devices that are cloud dependent have come out of the woodwork, with tablets, ultraportables, and even smartphones starting to become as susceptible to malicious code as their big desktop brethren…

November 10, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing Security Needed? Symantec Weighs In

By David

Grazed from Investor’s Business Daily.  Author: Donna Howell.

Clouds will be the new norm, security firm Symantec (SYMC) says. They can make handling data easier and sometimes cheaper.  But given that safe use of cloud computing can be sometimes lacking, Symantec — the largest company in IBD’s Computer-Security industry group — this week fleshed out a strategy to develop more protections.

Using resources distributed across the Internet and different networks will become so prevalent that the term "cloud" may go away, predicts Dave Elliott, a senior marketing manager in Symantec’s cloud unit…

November 9, 2012 Off

IDC projects healthy public cloud services growth through 2016

By David

Grazed from The IT KnowledgeExchange. Author: Editorial Staff.

The latest prognostication about public cloud computing from IDC calls for a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 18.5 percent between now and 2016 – with$43.2 billion in revenue anticipated by the end of the forecast period. (That compares with $18.5 billion in 2011.)

This forecast doesn’t include private cloud infrastructure or hybrid cloud integration work; it only covers services that are “shared among unrelated enterprises and consumers, open for a largely unrestricted universe of potential users, and designed for a market, not a single enterprise.”…

November 9, 2012 Off

Department of the Interior to give employees anywhere, anytime, any device access via cloud

By David

Grazed from GCN. Author: Rutrell Yasin.

The Interior Department is working to give employees access to IT resources anywhere, anytime with any device enabled by cloud computing through DOI’s data center consolidation initiative. “I view cloud computing as helping us meet the needs of our dispersed workforce,” said Interior CIO Bernard Mazer.

With 2,400 locations, DOI is all over the place, Mazer noted. “We are there where [telecommunications] carriers are; we are there where carriers aren’t,” he said. As a result, DOI has to use a variety of tools to ensure that employees are supported no matter where they are located – in a refuge, a Bureau of Land Management office, a Bureau of Indian Affairs’ project or a national park in a remote hinterland. This support also includes access to the business applications associated with contract, financial and human resource management systems…

November 9, 2012 Off

IT Confidence in Cloud Computing Going Up as Investor Surety Falls

By David

Grazed from Midsize Insider. Author: Doug Bonderud.

As cloud computing becomes a ubiquitous part of IT business life, administrator confidence grows–at least according to VMware. The virtualization giant’s third annual Cloud Index says that many Asia-Pacific IT pros now believe they "strongly understand the cloud." But despite increased use and comprehension, investor surety in the cloud isn’t keeping pace. Even companies with huge sales numbers are still unprofitable; is the market headed for a cloud tipping point? Does this get worse for midsize IT before it gets better?

Certain in Singapore

According to the VMware Cloud Index 2012, Singapore tops the list with 82 percent of respondents confident in their knowledge of the cloud. The study covered 10 economies in the Asia-Pacific region, with nine of those boasting numbers above 70 percent. Only Malaysia came in under that mark, but 66 percent is still a solid percentage given the immaturity displayed by many cloud services. Among the top drivers of cloud adoption in the region were optimizing IT and reducing costs; interestingly, cost also made it into the "top cloud concerns" along with data privacy and security. Singapore and Hong Kong especially expressed concerns about data privacy and residency, despite efforts by their governments to encourage local data centers over foreign owned interests…

November 9, 2012 Off

Gartner: Mobile Development, Social Media and Cloud Computing Disrupting IT

By David

Grazed from CloudTimes. Author: Florence de Borja.

In a conference in Orlando, Florida, Gartner Inc. revealed that the central focus of IT consisting of social media innovations, mobile devices, web information, and cloud computing can disrupt the whole IT environment. Addressing at least 10,000 participants, Gartner Vice President David Cearley said that at the rate things are going the mobile experience is overshadowing the desktop experience. Cloud computing, together with mobile devices, is set to alter the modern corporation’s primary architecture of computing. Instead of focusing on client-server, IT shops must now set their sights on cloud-client architecture.

With this new type of architecture, it is also possible for skill sets necessary for enterprise software development to be altered significantly. The front-end interface must have better designs and development teams must gear towards HTML5 Web browser opportunities aside from the usual mobile device operating systems. Cearley also claimed that consumers have fresh expectations. As such, application developers and architects must obtain new design skills to meet these new expectations…