Category: News

July 12, 2013 Off

Cloud security is important, but what does it really mean?

By David

Grazed from VentureBeat.  Author: John Boitnott.

Cloud computing is one of the most valuable innovations for business, providing cheap, virtual services that once required expensive, local hardware.  We place almost everything in the cloud, but what do we really know about its security?  How do we protect ourselves and our privacy from being compromised?

Fears over cloud security were not assuaged last year when Dropbox, a popular online cloud storage platform, was hacked yet again.  This attack resulted in unauthorized access to employee accounts containing personal information of users, and spam being sent to users’ personal folders. There have been other slightly more embarrassing security controversies for the term dropbox, but we won’t go there…

July 12, 2013 Off

Inside Amazon’s Cloud Support

By David

Grazed from Datamation.  Author: Sean Michael Kerner.

Perhaps more so than any other company, Amazon has helped to define the new Cloud era of computing.  While Amazon’s Web Services (AWS) cloud offerings are tightly associated with specific tech capabilities and increasingly competitive pricing structures, there is another key element in Amazon’s cloud portfolio — support.

Brent Jaye, is VP of AWS Support, a position he came too after first spending years toiling in Amazon’s traditional retail sales division. Jaye told Datamation that AWS services a very wide range of customers, including some of the largest enterprises in the world, as well as many small businesses and individual customers. To that end, Amazon offers a number of different support options to meet the specific needs of the various use cases that customers have in place…

July 11, 2013 Off

Oracle Expands Support for Mobile and Cloud Technologies With the Latest Java Development Tools and Framework

By David
Grazed from Oracle.  Author: PR Announcement
 

Developers are under pressure to develop quality applications faster and across more channels than before. To address this need, Oracle has delivered new releases of its Java Development Tools and Framework. Oracle Application Development Framework, Oracle JDeveloper and Oracle Enterprise Pack for Eclipse enable developers to rapidly and efficiently build multi-channel — Web, cloud and on-premise — applications, while providing a richer end-user experience.

July 11, 2013 Off

Who’dda Thunk It? Oracle, Microsoft, Peanut Butter and Pickles

By David
Grazed from BMC.  Author: PR Announcement
 

Long-time competitors Microsoft Corp and Oracle recently announced they would collaborate with Oracle software on its cloud-based platforms, permitting bits of Oracle’s software to interface with Microsoft’s software and online services.

This effort is aimed at improving the rivals’ chances as new competitors emerge selling less expensive services based in remote data centers.

BMC Software responds in a blog by Lilac Schoenbeck in Cloud Computing.

July 11, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing Market May Become An Oligopoly of High-Volume Vendors

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: Joe McKendrick.

Is the cloud computing marketplace becoming the domain of a few big vendors? With large players including Amazon, Microsoft, Google and IBM coming online with similar types of services, we may be starting to see a consolidation of the primary cloud computing market into the hands of a few powerful vendors.

This may herald the emergence of an IT oligopoly, Owen Rogers, senior analyst at 451 Research, suggests in a recent research note. Actually, he goes further to say what is emerging is both an oligopoly and monopoly at the same time. With identical services comes commoditization, and only big vendors that can deliver huge economies of scale with margins will survive in this space…

July 11, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: One in three businesses have ‘multiple’ outages a week

By David

Grazed from CloudTech. Author: James Bourne.

Companies are failing to update their software, meaning that because of the strain being put on old data centres, they suffer debilitating network outages on a weekly basis. That’s the verdict from Brocade, whose latest research found that one in three businesses suffer “multiple” network downtime instances per week. Further, more than nine in 10 (91%) of IT decision makers admit that they have to ‘substantially’ upgrade their infrastructure in order to keep up with the demand of cloud computing. Shockingly, 16% of those surveyed said they experienced daily outages.

On average these outages last around 20 minutes – according to the research 2% of those polled say they’ve encountered downtime of more than an hour. And in terms of the consequences, more than one in three said that these outages meant their SLA wasn’t hit, which in some cases led to customers looking for reimbursement…

July 11, 2013 Off

Consortium tests open cloud infrastructure for disaster situations

By David

Grazed from ComputerWeekly. Author: Archana Venkatraman.

An industry and government IT team in the US is conducting a test on the use of open cloud computing infrastructure to respond to emergencies and national disasters such as the Haiti earthquake of 2010. The team is testing how cloud computing platforms can help in collecting, storing and sharing geospatial information to assist emergency responders in a disaster situation through simulation.

The US non-profit organisation, Network Centric Operations Industry Consortium (NCOIC), has collaborated with six enterprises including The Aerospace Corp., Boeing, NJVC, Raytheon, Telos and Winthrop for the open source cloud concept project. These companies represent the response teams necessary during natural disasters such as healthcare, traffic control, aerospace and telecommunications, NCOIC said…

July 11, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing Defined as Future Model for Mid-Market IT with Adoption Increasing

By David

Grazed from PRNewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Cloud computing is regarded as the future model for IT by nearly nine of ten respondents, according to a mid-market business survey conducted by Evolve IP. The survey also shows that while companies in the cloud are experiencing benefits like disaster avoidance, scalability and flexibility, IT managers are less enthusiastic about deploying than executives and IT directors. Executives and IT directors believe more deeply in the value of the cloud, feel more educated on cloud services and expect to spend more on them than IT managers.

The survey of more than 1,100 individuals involved with IT at mid-Market companies in North America revealed insight into cloud adoption trends as well as current cloud deployment. For a full synopsis and analysis of results, a complimentary white paper, "Cloud of Dreams – Adoption of the Cloud by North American Mid-Market Businesses," can be downloaded at www.evolveip.net/Cloud-Survey

July 11, 2013 Off

For Software Makers, Turning Cloud’s Disruption Into Transformation

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: Editorial Staff.

There’s little doubt that the cloud has reenergized the software sector with exciting new companies, high-profile IPOs and compelling services. Less certain is whether the cloud is good for the software industry’s giants. Software has been a high-growth, profitable sector for years, and disruptive changes are rarely kind to incumbents. How should software leaders interpret the changes in their business landscape, and what should they do to make sure they’re not left behind by the software as a service (SaaS) wave?

We believe the rules of the game that create leaders in the sector today will endure. Platform power will continue to be paramount. When other developers build applications that work on top of yours, longevity is an inevitable consequence. Just ask Salesforce.com and the thousands of developers that build apps on top of its Force.com platform…

July 11, 2013 Off

Rackspace calls on users to rethink cloud technology approach

By David

Grazed from Cloud Pro. Author: Jane McCallion.

Organisations need to move beyond thinking about public and private Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) offerings when considering cloud and think more about what it is they want their application to do. This was the message from Nigel Beighton, international vice president of technology at Rackspace, during his keynote speech at the IaaS company’s Unlocked: The Hybrid Cloud event in central London earlier today.

“Infrastructure-as-a-Service and Platform-as-a-Service [have been] a revolution,” Beighton said. The technology revolution of cloud, which Beighton described as “treating infrastructure as if it is software”, has changed how organisations deliver services, as well as how they exploit and use technology…