Author: David

November 10, 2011 Off

Why the Cloud Will Bring the App Store Revolution to Enterprise IT

By David
Grazed from Wired.  Author: Jon Stokes.

Though I think the term is generally useless as either an analytical tool or category of computing that large entities can and should use in planning strategy, I’m not quite ready to give up on the idea that “the cloud” does have at least some worthwhile content. And after three days at the Cloud Expo, I’d like to suggest a simple signature of cloudiness that seems to fit everything I’ve seen with the sole exception of Oracle’s “cloud” offerings. Here’s my idea: it’s “cloud” at the platform and infrastructure layers if users can provision their own resources via some automated system…

November 10, 2011 Off

5 key trends in cloud computing’s future

By David
Grazed from InformationWeek.  Author: David Linthicum.

I was asked to talk about the future of cloud computing at Cloud Expo, taking place this week in Santa Clara, Calif. For those of you not at the show, I identified five key trends to anticipate…

November 10, 2011 Off

Is Geospatial Cloud Computing a Commodity?

By David
Grazed from Directions Magazine.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Directions Magazine conducted a survey to snapshot the current thinking among several solution providers (Esri, Ubisense,eSpatial, Accela, ERDAS) about geospatial cloud computing. We wanted to know if cloud computing is now considered a commodity and what additional differentiators potential users are looking for before buying solutions…

November 10, 2011 Off

The New Software Pricing Model: Can the Older Giants Compete?

By David
Grazed from Knowledge@Wharton.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Cloud computing is not only changing how users access software applications, it’s also upending the pricing model for software products. Fading fast are the days when software packages were sold in boxes with a one-time, perpetual software license fee. Instead, consumers and businesses are increasingly turning to subscription models and are buying only those applications they need for particular tasks rather than broad, general-purpose suites…

November 9, 2011 Off

Amazon finds startup investments in the ‘cloud’

By David
Grazed from Reuters.  Author: Alistair Barr.

Amazon.com’s investment opportunities are under a cloud — and that’s a good thing.

Five years after launching its so-called cloud computing service, the biggest Internet retailer is reaping the benefits of what has become a unique window into the technology startup world…

November 9, 2011 Off

NASA cloud storefront would offer scientists range of services

By David
Grazed from Government Computing News.  Author: Rutrell Yasin.

NASA is working on a cloud "storefront" that will give the agency’s scientists and engineers access to the computing resources and services they require regardless of their IT environment…

November 9, 2011 Off

The ‘Cloud’ is not a Place

By David
Grazed from InformationWeek.  Author: Laurianne McLaughlin.

A security expert whom I follow on Twitter recently took issue with journalists’ continued insistence on writing headlines about moving to the cloud, racing to the cloud, and traveling to the cloud. He’s absolutely right. You don’t move to the cloud. The cloud is not a place, when we speak of it in computing terms. It is an operational model (with many variations) that you adopt–and then continue to adapt…

November 9, 2011 Off

Cloud-computing based risk management platform introduced by Proactis

By David

Grazed from Business Insurance.  Author:  Mike Tsikoudakis.

Proactis Group Ltd. has launched a risk management platform to help organizations mitigate exposures from their suppliers.

The Cloud Supplier Risk Management Platform aims to help organizations address supplier risks by using cloud computing technology to manage suppliers’ performance, the Leeds, England-based software and services provider said in a Tuesday statement…

November 9, 2011 Off

‘Cloudburst’ Expected in United States Could Save Both Cash and Carbon

By David
Grazed from TMCNet.  Author: Cheryl Kaften.

The future of U.S. computing is under a cloud — and that’s a good thing. A new report predicts that American companies will increase their adoption of cloud computing over the next decade from 10 percent to 70 percent of their information technology spend. The anticipated sky-high leap in cloud usage will be good for the planet, as well as bottom-line profitability, making it a win-win for environmentalists and economists alike…