Author: David

August 2, 2012 Off

Forecast for systems administrators: Cloudy

By David

Grazed from ComputerWorld. Author: Mary Brandel.

When Donald Roper found himself in the job market earlier this year, he quickly learned how high the bar had been raised in his profession.

A senior systems administrator with 28 years in IT, an MBA and seven certifications to his name — including one in virtualization — he discovered that wasn’t always enough.

"A number of times, I’d go for an interview, and they’d ask, ‘Do you have Citrix?’" recounts Roper. "I’d say, ‘No — I thought you were looking for a virtualization person.’ And they’d say, ‘Oh yes, you have to have that, too.’ Nowadays, they want you to have everything."…

August 2, 2012 Off

3 first steps in building your own cloud services

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: David Linthicum.

These days, I’m running into more than a few innovative enterprises looking to stand up their own cloud computing services or APIs for consumption outside of the business. In essence, enterprises are becoming cloud computing providers.

Enterprises are standing up cloud services in support of new business opportunities, such as better supply chain integration, better customer service, or even the ability to charge a subscription fee for access to bits and pieces of their existing information systems that may be of value to outside users. In doing so, they may also gain a client list that includes partners, customers, or even unknown users leveraging these services for a fee…

August 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: EMC and Lenovo deal won’t impact Cisco relationship. Really.

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

EMC’s newly minted deal to work with Lenovo on X86 servers reverberated throughout the hardware sector after it was announced Wednesday morning. Under a key part of this three-pronged arrangement, Lenovo and will make and sell servers that will be “embedded into selected EMC storage systems over time.”

That could have big impact on non-aligned hardware players. BusinessWeek looked at the deal through the Dell lens — EMC and Dell had a long-time if uneasy partnership that started to unravel with Dell’s acquisition of storage player Equallogic 5 years ago. Per EMC’s positioning, the Lenovo-EMC servers will compete most directly with Dell at the low end but HP stock also took a hit after the news…

August 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Oracle Loses HP Itanium Court Battle

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Art Wittman.

For the last six weeks, Oracle and HP have been publically airing their dirty laundry in a court case that resulted from Oracle’s 2011 unilateral decision to drop support for HP’s Itanium-based servers. On August 1, Judge James Kleinberg issued his decision and order in the case, which amounted to yet another in a string of losses in court for Oracle.

In his decision, the judge strongly backed HP’s claims that its September 20, 2010, contract with Oracle explicitly said that mutual product support must continue as it had in the past.

In deciding a remedy, the judge had two options. The first was to award HP a cash settlement with no requirement that Oracle support HP’s Itanium servers. The second option–the one that Judge Kleinberg chose–was to require Oracle to continue support, and for Oracle to pay for damages HP has already incurred…

August 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Amazon takes aim at IO bottlenecks

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

Amazon appears bound and determined to speed up IO for its cloud customers.

New Provisioned IOPS (Input Output per Second) block storage volumes will let users set performance levels of up to 1,000 IOPS per volume and then use RAID to stripe two or more volumes together to realize 10,000 IOPS, said Arun Sundaram, product manager for AWS Storage. (See the AWS blog post and video announcing the news here.)

Users can set up the new Provisioned IOPS volume from the Elastic Block Storage (EBS) console. “It’s as easy as spinning up an EC2 instance, you create an EBS volume, specify the amount of storage, and attach your volume to the instance,” Sundarum said…

August 2, 2012 Off

Microsoft ditches Small Business Server, dedicates efforts to cloud computing

By David

Grazed from Cleveland Business. Author: Brian Rosenfelt.

Microsoft recently announced that its soon-to-be-released Server 2012 platform will not include a Small Business Server edition. This will be the first time since 2000 that the popular “SBS” platform will no longer be available.

Microsoft Small Business Server is designed for smaller organizations (under 75 users), and bundles Microsoft’s Server, Sharepoint services, and Microsoft Exchange platform into a single package. This meant an inexpensive way for many smaller organizations to have their own in-house mail solution, without the need to have multiple servers and systems.

This decision will impact many of the clients we work with and the future, and in my view is sending a very clear message: Microsoft is committing itself 100% to the cloud…

August 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Accel Partners beefs up big data investment team

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Derrick Harris.

Venture capital firm Accel Partners is looking to ramp up its investments in the big data and cloud computing spaces with the addition of a new principal and a new entrpreneur in residence.

New principal Jake Flomenberg comes from Splunk, where he was director of product management, and was previously at Hadoop pioneer Cloudera. New EIR Nick Mehta was most recently CEO at LiveOffice and has also been a VP at storage provider Veritas (Symantec acquired both companies). Flomenberg will work primarily on Accel’s $100 million Big Data Fund, which it launched last November, while Mehta will likely focus a lot of attention on the intersection of SaaS applications and big data.

The firm’s Big Data Fund targets big data applications and higher-level analytics software rather Hadoop distributions, databases and other infrastructure-level technologies. According to Accel Partner Ping Li, the firm has several companies as part of that portfolio, including Code 42, RelateIQ and Vigilent. A few others are set to come out of stealth mode in the fall. Accel’s previous data-focused investments include Cloudera, Couchbase and Nimble Storage…

August 2, 2012 Off

Five reasons Microsoft’s new cloud-based Outlook.com beats Windows 8 Mail

By David

Grazed from ComputerWorld. Author: Preston Gralla.

Microsoft just released a preview version of its new cloud-based Outlook.com email service, and it’s a winner, much better than Windows 8’s underpowered Mail app. Here are five reasons it beats Windows 8 mail.

You can create mail rules

Anyone beset by email overload — which means everyone who uses email — needs tools to help manage their mail. Chief among them is the ability to create mail rules that will automate the handling of messages, for example, automatically sending mail from your boss to a Boss folder, from your family to a Family folder, and so on. Outlook.com does it. Windows 8 Mail doesn’t…

August 2, 2012 Off

Rackspace Open Cloud Offers Easily Scalable Computing and Freedom From Vendor Lock-in

By David

Grazed from BusinessWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Today, Rackspace® (NYSE: RAX), the service leader in cloud computing, announced the unlimited availability of Cloud Databases and Cloud Servers powered by OpenStack, along with a powerful and elegant new Control Panel. These solutions, backed by Rackspace’s renowned Fanatical Support®, further expand Rackspace’s broad Cloud hosting portfolio, which is used today by over 180,000 customers worldwide.

“The new Rackspace Cloud Servers began delivering business value to us and our customers almost instantly”

The introduction of these open cloud products marks the first time any company has deployed a large-scale open source public cloud powered by OpenStack. Customers can now select from private, public or hybrid offerings and have the flexibility to deploy their solutions in a Rackspace data center or another data center of their choice…

August 2, 2012 Off

Global IT trade barriers threaten cloud, software providers

By David

Grazed from ITWorld. Author: Kenneth Corbin.

An increasing number of countries, particularly those in emerging economic regions, have been erecting trade barriers that have restricted access to lucrative foreign markets for U.S. IT firms, software leaders warned on Wednesday.

The market-access restrictions have taken many forms, including government mandates supporting domestic companies, regulatory hurdles, tariffs and the manipulation of technology standards.

"Protectionism is not new, but the scale and the scope … is unprecedented," said Robert Holleyman, president and CEO of the Business Software Alliance (BSA), a leading trade group representing the software sector. "The challenge we face is steep. It is particularly challenging in what should otherwise be the fastest-growing markets."…