Category: News

June 4, 2013 Off

ActiveState Buys Appsecute To Enhance PaaS With Facebook-Style Feed For Developers And IT Pros

By David

Grazed from TechCrunch. Author: Alex Williams.

ActiveState, a platform-as-a-service provider, has acquired New Zealand-based Appsecute, a company with social monitoring tools for developers and IT professionals to monitor cloud environments. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Appsecute’s three employees will join ActiveState, based in Vancouver, Canada. They will remain in New Zealand developing the service. The Appsecute technology will get integrated into Stackato, ActiveState’s private PaaS, used for internal developer environments.

Appsecute launched as a PaaS las year, offering a universal user interface for a variety of different vendor PaaS platforms. Earlier this year, the company decided to take a different tack by offering what it calls a “social timeline for DevOps.” It essentially allows developer and operations teams to get a real-time, “single-pane-of-glass” view across multiple application management services…

June 4, 2013 Off

IBM Buys Cloud Computing Firm SoftLayer in Deal Said to Be Worth $2 Billion

By David

Grazed from New York Times. Author: Steve Lohr.

I.B.M. announced on Tuesday that it had agreed to buy SoftLayer Technologies, a cloud computing company, in an effort to strengthen I.B.M.’s position in the fast-growing market for computing sold to businesses as a service delivered over the Internet. The purchase price was not disclosed. But it was about $2 billion, according to a person told of the negotiations, who has asked not to be named because he had not been authorized to speak publicly about the terms.

SoftLayer, a private company based in Dallas, has a network of 13 data centers in the United States, Singapore and Amsterdam, and revenue of about $400 million a year. GI Partners, a private equity fund based in Menlo Park, Calif., is the majority owner of SoftLayer. The acquisition is the largest made under the leadership of Virginia M. Rometty, who became chief executive in January 2012. The move, analysts say, also gives I.B.M. a broader presence in the business of cloud computing services…

June 4, 2013 Off

CloudMe Integrates With WinZip to Provide Secure EU Cloud Storage and File Sharing

By David
Grazed from CloudMe and WinZip
 
CloudMe, The European Sync/Storage Service, today announced integration with WinZip to offer secure cloud storage and file sharing. With control over its data center and servers within the borders of the European Union, CloudMe gives customers the added security of storing their files in compliance with strong EU data protection laws.
 
WinZip helps companies keep files safe with enterprise controls that make it easy for IT departments to manage which cloud storage services employees are allowed to access. Network administrators can ensure employees are only able to access approved cloud services, such as CloudMe, with WinZip 17.5 and set policies enforcing AES encryption and password protocols. With these controls, businesses can take advantage of the security provided under national data protection laws.
June 4, 2013 Off

Big Brain Targets SMB Customers with High Availability Cloud Hosting Built on OnApp

By David
Grazed from OnApp
 
OnApp today announced that Virginia-based hosting provider Big Brain Global has launched a new range of cloud services built on the OnApp Cloud platform. Big Brain chose OnApp to create cloud services for its small and midsize business (SMB) customers, who need affordable but very high availability hosting for database-driven applications. The new Big Brain cloud joins the company’s existing range of virtual private server (VPS), dedicated server and colocation hosting services.
 
Big Brain chose OnApp after narrowing its options to OnApp and VMware. OnApp’s built-in autoscaling, automatic failover and flexible support for different billing models played a major role in the company’s decision, enabling Big Brain to give its customers enterprise-class features and performance while only paying for the cloud resources they use. OnApp’s ability to manage VMware workloads was also significant in Big Brain’s decision, since it gives its customers greater choice of hypervisors and enables the company to target larger business customers with its cloud services.
 
June 3, 2013 Off

The IaaS Merry-Go-Round

By David

Grazed from Web Host Industry Review. Author: Stacy Griggs.

The Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) marketplace is rapidly evolving to be a clash of four titans plus a number of other companies trying to differentiate themselves based on price, service, compliance or sales models. Let’s take a quick look at the major competitors and some recent news they have announced.

  • Amazon AWS – Recently passed $2 billion in revenue and Morgan Stanley is predicting that AWS will hit $24 billion in revenue in the next 10 years. With their dual devotion to engineering and price reductions, they are the most formidable (by far) competitor in the cloud…
June 3, 2013 Off

Transparency, not security, is biggest cloud challenge, says Verizon

By David

Grazed from ComputerWeekly. Author: Warwick Ashford.

Transparency is the biggest challenge in moving to cloud computing, not security, according to Gavan Egan, vice-president of sales at Verizon Terremark Europe. “Most big organisations do not see security as a challenge because serious cloud providers understand security and security infrastructure,” he told Computer Weekly. Verizon, which has a long-established security tradition, encrypts all data in its cloud environment and ensures that none of its employees have access to the data. All staff are also screened.

Egan, who formerly headed Verizon’s security services business in Europe, sees transparency as a far bigger issue for organisations making the transition to cloud. “IT departments not only have to ensure that cloud deployments comply with external and internal regulations, but they need to be able to prove that compliance to auditors and regulators,” he said…

June 3, 2013 Off

Did Amazon Already Win Cloud Computing?

By David

Grazed from WallStreetCheatSheet. Author: Eric Schaal.

How far can Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) go in the cloud computing game? Though Amazon Web Services is already believed to be clocking around $2 billion a year, a report indicates that number could grow to an imposing $24 billion in the next decade, which would make Amazon a terror to all competitors and possibly give the tech giant a monopoly in the industry.

A report by Morgan Stanley analysts sees Amazon in the top five and gaining fast in cloud computing, which they believe will have a TAM of $152 billion ten years from now. As for the inevitability of a world turning entirely to cloud services by 2022, that’s considered a given, and bad news for companies like NetApp (NASDAQ:NTAP) and EMC (NYSE:EMC). Of course, someone will need to be the host, so the market for servers won’t entirely disappear, Morgan Stanley’s analysts noted…

June 3, 2013 Off

More Efficient Cloud Computing with Cloud Hardware Miniaturization

By David

Grazed from BenchMarkReviews. Author: Editorial Staff.

With rapid growth and strong competition in the Cloud Computing sector, cloud service providers are looking for ways to increase efficiency to remain competitive. Learn more at this year’s Cloud Computing Expo in New York, where Innodisk, a DRAM and Flash Storage manufacturer, will be sharing their thoughts on cloud storage solutions in a special session. With more efficient hardware, cloud service providers can increase profit margins, cut costs, and boost scalability and performance of their systems.

This year’s Cloud Computing Expo is at the Javits Center in New York City from June 10-13, 2013. Please join Innodisk Senior Engineer, Edwin Lam, for a special session, "Maximizing the Small Things: Efficiencies for Cloud Hardware", on June 11th, 8:15am-9:00am, in Room 1A10. This session will focus on SATADOM, a very small form factor boot device for the cloud, and how it contributes to performance and scalability of cloud servers, as well as the requirements for tomorrow’s cloud hardware…

June 3, 2013 Off

BYOD, cloud computing make network upgrades a CIO priority again

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Steve Ranger.

The network may be one of the less glamorous elements of the enterprise technology infrastructure, but it’s an essential one — and it’s getting an overhaul. New initiatives such as cloud computing and BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) are imposing new burdens on the corporate network, which means CIOs are looking at upgrades, new technologies and new techniques to ensure that it can deliver the required services.

Cloud computing, for example, means that networks have to be reliable for staff to be able to access core business applications, while BYOD support allows staff to use their own devices on the corporate network, which may create additional demand — for example by increasing the amount of video traffic…

June 3, 2013 Off

Centrify Enables Fast and Easy Migration to Microsoft 365 with AD Integration for Single Sign-on and Access Management

By David

Grazed from PR NewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Centrify Corporation, the leader in Unified Identity Services across data center, cloud and mobile, today announced Centrify for Office 365, the industry’s most comprehensive solution for Active Directory-based single sign-on, user provisioning and mobile management for Office 365. With Centrify, organizations can simplify and speed Office 365 migrations and initial deployments within a matter of an hour for employees, reduce helpdesk burden, improve access controls, and leverage their existing Active Directory infrastructure and skillsets. Centrify is also announcing that Microsoft has evaluated Centrify for Office 365 across key user scenarios and has qualified it as a "Works with Office 365" solution.

Centrify for Office 365, an Azure-based service, delivers full support for Office 365, simplifying the deployment of federated identity, providing a rich catalog of pre-integrated SaaS apps, and delivering "Zero Sign-On" (ZSO) for rich mobile clients that require access to Office 365. Centrify for Office 365 delivers seamless integration with Active Directory in minutes — without the hassle of managing server clusters in the DMZ, creating security issues by poking more holes in the firewall, replicating identity information to the cloud, or acquiring and maintaining public certificates. The solution will be unveiled and demoed publicly for the first time this week at TechEd 2013 in Centrify’s booth No. 2418…