Category: News

June 26, 2013 Off

The military cloud: Balancing security and accessibility

By David

Grazed from Defense Systems.  Author: John Edwards.

The Defense Department’s long-term IT strategy calls for storing and distributing virtually all data, even its most sensitive information, in the cloud. In January, the agency reported that it is fully committed to shifting to a cloud computing environment, citing cost, efficiency and user accessibility benefits.

The CIA is already on the path to secure cloud services. After attempting to build a private cloud, the agency and other intelligence organizations opted to turn to commercial sources and awarded a contract to Amazon Web Services in late January. IBM protested the award to the Government Accountability Office, and GAO ruled in IBM’s favor. Negotiations to determine the final resolution are still under way, but observers expect the CIA to continue its migration to a cloud-based system…

June 26, 2013 Off

What’s in a Name? That Which We Call the Cloud…

By David

Grazed from Talkin Cloud.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Shakespeare declared, “That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” He might be right about the flower, but in the cloud-sphere, I’m not so sure the same principle applies.  Lately, I’ve talked to many of my colleagues who are offering public or private cloud services. The thing that struck me was the variety of ways they are presenting these services to their customers. Some use “cloud” while others refer to “hosted” or “off-site” or “centralized” or “as-a-service” or … the list goes on.

If cloud is such a hot trend, why aren’t we shouting “CLOUD” from the mountaintops?

Is it because people don’t like the cloud? That doesn’t seem to be the case. CompTIA’s Third Annual Trends in Cloud Computing report (July 2012) reported that 85 percent of respondents feel “more” or “significantly more” positive about cloud computing compared to the previous year…

June 26, 2013 Off

Does Cloud Computing Really Offer a Way to Reduce Energy Demands and Greenhouse Gas Emissions?

By David

Grazed from CSRWire.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Increased use of cloud computing services will reduce the dependence on energy and help reduce global environmental damage with savings of over US$2.2 billion (€1.65 billion) and is 95% more efficient where 1 tonne of greenhouse gas (GHG) created by cloud leads to 20 tonnes abatted from customers according to the findings of a study released today by a research team from Harvard University, Imperial College and Reading University, sponsored by Microsoft Europe and the Global e-Sustainability Initiative (GeSI).

The study claims that 11.2 TWh less energy will be consumed annually by the time 80% of public and private organisations in the countries studied opt to provide cloud-based email, customer relationship management and groupware solutions to their staff, beyond current levels of adoption. This translates to 75% of the energy consumed by the Capital Region of Brussels or 25% of the energy consumed by London. It is equivalent to abating 4.5 mega tonnes of CO2 emissions annually or taking 1.7+ million cars off the road. 60 per cent of these potential savings relate to small or micro-sized firms…

June 26, 2013 Off

Google gets AGILE to increase IaaS cloud efficiency

By David

Grazed from The Register.  Author: Jack Clark.

Google has instrumented its infrastructure to the point where it can predict future demand 68% per cent better than previously, giving other cloud providers a primer for how to get the most out of their IT gear.  The system was outlined in an academic paper AGILE: Elastic distributed resource scaling for Infrastructure-as-a-Service which was released by the giant on Wednesday at the USENIX conference in California.

Agile lets Google predict future resource demands for workloads through wavelet analysis, which uses telemetry from across the Google stack to look at resource utilization in an application and then make a prediction about likely future resource use. Google then uses this information to spin up VMs in advance of demand, letting it avoid downtime…

June 26, 2013 Off

Microsoft’s cloud licensing sets up a compliance nightmare

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld.  Author: Matt Prigge.

On the list of things that IT pros would rather never have to think about, software licensing takes a close second behind backups. Holding frequent license compliance checks and ensuring that licensing is purchased as it’s needed is frequently a challenging, time-consuming process. All too often, these tasks are neglected, leaving many enterprises open to substantial legal liability.

As I’ve noted before, the licensing landscape is no better when you move into the cloud. In fact, it gets substantially more confusing, both for users and for the cloud providers seeking their business…

June 26, 2013 Off

Treat a cloud deployment as you would a home remodel

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld.  Author: Matt Prigge.

When weighing whether to go to the cloud or which cloud service to use when you do, it’s a no-brainer to make sure the service’s reliability, cost effectiveness, and security track records match your requirements. However, many cloud buyers don’t carefully consider two other critically important characteristics of any cloud service: the degree to which you can control your services without intervention from your vendor and the degree to which you cede responsibility for day-to-day management tasks to your vendor.

When I think back to some of the more well-publicized failures of megascale cloud infrastructures (Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure), each has been followed by enraged forum posts from users who had incurred downtime, lost production data, or both. It’s entirely understandable for customers to be irate when a service they’re paying for fails. However, it’s also an excellent indication that these cloud users didn’t fully understand that they still bore a large responsibility for managing and protecting their systems…

June 26, 2013 Off

Citrix open-sources XenServer to win over cloud customers

By David

Grazed from TechTarget.  Author: Colin Steele.

IT departments reevaluating their server virtualization spending have another free option to choose from.  Citrix Systems Inc. today released its XenServer 6.2 hypervisor to the open source community. All of the features previously in the XenServer Platinum Edition will be available at no charge.

Citrix had made parts of XenServer code open source in the past, as part of various cloud computing initiatives, but this marks the first time the entire product has been made available to the community.  "That’s pretty substantial," said Francis Poeta, president and CEO of P and M Computers, Inc. a Citrix partner in Cliffside Park, N.J. "It’s a great move. They’ve got to do something."…

June 26, 2013 Off

Oracle continues peace campaign with Salesforce.com cloud computing deal

By David

Grazed from Salesforce.com.  Author: PR Announcement.

Oracle has once again agreed to a cloud computing project with a former rival by signing a collaboration deal with Salesforce.com.  The companies said in a joint statement that Salesforce would be migrating the core technology of its cloud computing platforms to Oracle products including Database and Java Middleware. Additionally, the company will adopt Oracle Exadata systems and integrate Fusion HCM and Financial Cloud into its services.

The deal could end what has become a frigid relationship between Oracle and Salesforce.com. Driven by growing competition in the cloud and CRM markets, the two firms have engaged in a very public war of words led by chief executives Marc Benioff and Larry Ellison.  Most recently, the two companies squared off at the 2011 Oracle OpenWorld conference when Benioff was unceremoniously removed from his scheduled keynote address shortly before the conference kicked off…

June 26, 2013 Off

Oracle Goes All In On Microsoft’s Cloud

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek.  Author: Doug Henschen.

Cloud computing made strange bedfellows out of Microsoft and Oracle on Monday as the longtime rivals announced a strategic partnership whereby customers will be able to run Oracle software and Java on Microsoft’s Azure platform.

The partnership, which was jointly announced by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Oracle president Mark Hurd, will see Oracle certify and support Oracle Database, Oracle WebLogic Server, Java, Oracle Linux and Oracle applications on Windows Server Hyper-V and Windows Azure. Oracle’s software already runs on Windows Server in hundreds of thousands of on-premises deployments, but the partnership extends that capability to Microsoft’s cloud. It’s a step Ballmer described as crucial to customers of both companies…

June 26, 2013 Off

Progress Launches PaaS For Mobile, On-Premises Apps

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek.  Author: Charles Babcock.

Microsoft has platform-as-a-service. VMware has PaaS. Savvis has PaaS. Why shouldn’t Progress Software have PaaS too?  The other parties offer PaaS as part of their cloud service offerings. Progress, until now, hasn’t been viewed as either a cloud service or cloud software provider. That’s why it needs PaaS. Earlier this month, Progress announced its Progress Pacific PaaS system for cloud application and mobile developers. The system won’t become available until July.

Progress already has a presence in on-premises development. The company name springs from what was originally the Progress 4GL language, which it changed in 2006 to OpenEdge Advanced Business Language (ABL) to escape the limitations of being classified as a fourth-generation language. However, ABL maintains an English-like syntax and access to a built-in relational database, like its 4GL predecessor…