Cloud News, Resources and Information
AppFog, the leading platform-as-a-service (PaaS) for cloud-based application deployment and management, today announced it is collaborating with Rackspace, the service leader in cloud computing, to allow its customers to deploy applications to the open Rackspace Cloud powered by OpenStack. AppFog’s solution will be available through the recently announced Rackspace Cloud Tools Marketplace.
AppFog will offer customers the ability to develop and deploy apps to the open Rackspace Cloud in an efficient and cost effective manner. Highlighting a pay-for RAM approach, developers are able to receive 2GB free of RAM simply by creating an account. Users will reap the benefits of interoperability, as AppFog provides customers with the capacity to redeploy applications to Rackspace that are currently running on a different Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) provider with zero-code migrations, while helping users avoid vendor lock-in. AppFog’s IaaS deployment options continue to expand with the addition of Rackspace to a list that already includes AWS, HP, and Microsoft Azure. As a multi-language PaaS, AppFog supports Java, .NET, Node, Python, Ruby, PHP, MySQL, MongoDB, Postgres and more.
OnApp has announced that CloudTO, a subsidiary of Cirrus Tech Ltd., has selected the OnApp Cloud platform to power a new range of public cloud hosting services. With OnApp Cloud, CloudTO can deliver extremely resilient, scalable and easy-to-use cloud services to its enterprise customers, quickly and cost-effectively. The company has already launched two new services built on the OnApp Cloud platform: an elastic public cloud service with utility billing, and a configurable cloud VM service with monthly pricing.
CloudTO spent two years trialling cloud platforms from five other providers before choosing OnApp Cloud. CloudTO selected the OnApp platform for its scalability, resilience and ease of use, and because of OnApp’s proven experience delivering and supporting successful cloud platforms for hosting companies.
Grazed from IT Business Edge. Author: Carl Weinschenk.
At best, mobile technology provides a robust set of applications and network platforms that are the next best thing to being in the office. But, for some workers, the next best thing isn’t quite good enough. These workers need platforms that are equal to what they use in the office.
The industry is not quite there yet, but it is getting close. Yesterday, I blogged on Gartner’s perception that social media, cloud computing, the “ubiquity of information” and mobile technology is creating a new reality…
Grazed from BetaNews. Author: Ian Lewis.
It’s the Next Big Thing. Any vaguely IT-related person just has to say something like “computing is moving to the cloud” and everyone nods their heads wisely. And so it is with Office 2013. I’ve been using the Public preview of Office since it appeared two weeks ago, and I have to say I like it; and I also like the much more straightforward integration with Skydrive and Sharepoint. But there’s still no way I’m going to change my default habit of local saving and working to using the Cloud as my primary storage. And here’s why.
There are several aspects to this, and the first two are most revealing of the way in which people sitting in Redmond, Wash., Cupertino, Calif., or most other major corporations live in a different world from the rest of the population of this little blue planet of ours.
Top of the list are power — meaning electricity, availability, reliability and security. I live and work in a town about 40 miles from London — not exactly in the wildernesses of a developing country — but (for local reasons, and that’s exactly the point) we still experience a handful of power cuts every year. Some of them are only momentary, usually just long enough to restart any computers, but a few winters ago, we had one which lasted several days…
Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Maureen O’Gara.
Windows 8 was released to manufacturing Wednesday morning, a hallelujah moment for Microsoft that nowadays means OEMs and manufacturing partners are getting the final code on which Microsoft’s future depends.
The new "re-imagined" operating system, with what Microsoft calls "thousands of new features," won’t get to the broad market on PCs and online for another three months, October 26 to be precise.
Developers with MSDN and TechNet subscriptions will get access to the code and the new Visual Studio on August 15 and companies with Software Assurance licenses will follow on August 16. Volume customers without the license will get it September 1…
Grazed from PRWeb. Author: PR Announcement.
Virtual Internet, a leading managed web host since 1996, has launched a new product to assist with the management and utilisation of cloud computing.
The team at Virtual Internet have announced the new product called Virtual Datacentre [http://vdc.vi.net ], a simple control panel that allows users to launch multiple cloud servers automatically from 15 locations around the world within an instant and without having to deal with other suppliers.
Patrick McCarthy, Managing Director of Virtual Internet, has been very upbeat about launching the new datacentre: "We found that what our customers were really after was a control panel that not only let them manage their current servers, but also enabled them to launch a new VPS simply and quickly, without having to begin a new contract. So that’s what we’ve built!"…
Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Maureen O’Gara.
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AMD has poached the director of Apple’s mobile-focused Platform Architecture Group Jim Keller, credited with architecting several generations of the ARM-based chips found in the iPad, iPhone, iPod and Apple TV.
It will be Keller’s second go-round at AMD. He was there years ago working on the Athlon 64 and Opteron 64 processors that featured the world’s first native x86-64 bit architecture, a scheme Intel was forced to follow.
He also co-authored AMD’s HyperTransport specification and the x86-64 instruction set…
Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Maureen O’Gara.
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NetApp and flash storage start-up Fusion-io are going to create software-defined "solutions using server-side flash and caching software products when used in conjunction with the NetApp Virtual Storage Tier."
They are "collaborating on low-latency, high-performance solutions for compatibility between the Fusion ioMemory platform and NetApp’s Data ONTAP operating system, as well as key caching solutions, including NetApp Flash Cache, NetApp Flash Pool and Fusion-io caching software."…