Category: News

April 30, 2013 Off

Nimbix and Convey Partner for “The Accelerated Genomics Cloud” (TAGC) Promotion

By David

Grazed from Convey Computer. Author: PR Announcement.

Convey Computer today announced that Nimbix, a leader in accelerated high-performance cloud computing, has partnered with Convey to expand its Convey hybrid-core (HC) infrastructure, as part of “The Accelerated Genomics Cloud” (TAGC) promotion, which provides free runtime for qualified applicants. The Convey HC-2ex platform will be used in research projects for customers who take advantage of the promotion.

A total of $25,000 worth of cloud processing time will be awarded to genomics researchers to boost their bioinformatics analysis. Top award recipients will receive $1,000 of runtime each, which is enough to map up to 3 Tbases of reads, providing the ability to analyze, for example, a dozen human genomes at significant coverage. Remaining qualified applicants will receive $500 of runtime…

April 30, 2013 Off

Cloud computing to change education

By David

Grazed from ITWeb. Author: Editorial Staff.

Cloud computing has the power to change the way students learn and the way staff teach, especially in rapidly transforming regions such as Central and Eastern Europe. To prepare students for a world based on technology, education institutions across the region are adopting Microsoft Office 365 to serve a variety of their cloud computing needs.

Goals met through their focus on technology include:

  • Improved communication. Office 365 enables students and staff to communicate across timezones and countries with the click of a mouse. As more and more young people become accustomed to real-time communication and “always on” technologies, Central and Eastern European schools are using Microsoft Lync Online to enrich their learning environments and student outcomes…
April 30, 2013 Off

SaaS security can help address emerging threats

By David

Grazed from ProofPoint. Author: Editorial Staff.

Every day, new types of malware and other risks emerge with the rapidly evolving IT environment, threatening data protection and forcing enterprises to consider new technologies for detection and prevention. More experts are pointing to the benefits of software-as-a-service (SaaS) solutions, which can help resolve some of these newer threats.

In an interview with Computer Weekly, Shlomo Kramer, founder of Imperva, revealed that many organizations have maintained the same budgets for security even though the threat landscape has changed. "Most of the security spend is still allocated to network firewalls and antivirus (AV) systems, but attacks are no longer broad, notoriety-seeking and naïve; they are very targeted, sophisticated and well-funded," he stated…

April 30, 2013 Off

The 4th wave of cloud computing will be vertical

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: Pete Babb.

"We’ve all heard of public, private, and hybrid clouds, but what happens when you connect a giant data center on a closed network and sell your cloud services exclusively to a select group of businesses with shared needs?" asks Ken Jennings (yes, the former "Jeopardy" champ). The answer is the "community cloud," which is not quite a hybrid cloud, but more of a specialized cloud available strictly for member businesses.

The NYSE (New York Stock Exchange) Technologies has built one of the first such community clouds — targeted at the financial sector, obviously — called the Capital Markets Community Platform, which provides all member companies with the horsepower needed for the billions of transactions per day they make, but its appeal is more than just raw computing capability…

April 30, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Emerging trends

By David

Grazed from CIOL. Author: Rajesh Rege.

Expected to be an inflection point for cloud computing, 2013 holds a great potential for innovation driven by a surge in demand for reliable, secure, high speed and resilient mobile and broadband networks and infrastructure. According to the Cisco Global Cloud Index, global cloud computing traffic will increase 12-fold from 130 exabytes to reach a total of 1.6 zettabytes annually by 2015.

Cloud is the fastest growing component of data center traffic, growing to more than 33 per cent of the total by 2015. A research by GigaOM expects the cloud market to grow to $158.8 billion in 2014. The opportunities will lie in both existing cloud architectures and emerging new architectures as organizations take advantage of differing deployment models…

April 30, 2013 Off

Why companies using the cloud are so happy

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: David Linthicum.

As reported by my friend and Forbes writer Joe McKendrick, "A new survey finds that roughly one out of four organizations are heavily into cloud computing, and they are providing lessons from which everyone else can benefit." The lessons come from having two or three years of real experience, enough time to see the real benefits and issues.

Keep in mind the study is sponsored by RightScale, a cloud vendor, and it was done in a way to discover the positive, not the negative. It’s as if Dunkin’ Donuts sponsored a study on breakfast foods. You wouldn’t expect to find results related to obesity or diabetes…

April 30, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Big Service Providers Embrace CA Technologies, Nimsoft

By David

Grazed from MSPMentor. Author: Joe Panettieri.

Logicalis, Rackspace and Savvis were among the big MSPs and cloud services providers (CSPs) on hand at CA World last week in Las Vegas. Each of those companies said CA Technologies plays a critical role in their revenue-generating platforms. So what will it take for CA Technologies to thrive against potential rivals like VMware, SolarWinds and OpenStack? Here are some educated guesses.

First the good news: CA World attracted roughly 5,000 partners and customers. That’s a solid showing, especially since CA Technologies has been in transition mode over the past few years. Still best-known for its enterprise IT management tools, the company:…

April 30, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Salesforce blows past SAP in CRM

By David

Grazed from CRN. Author: Joshua Gliddon.

Salesforce.com, which introduced the idea of cloud computing to many organisations, has leapt past SAP as the leading CRM vendor, a report from Gartner has found. While SAP enjoyed 12.9 percent of the CRM market, Salesforce jumped past with 14.9 percent. Revenues for Salesforce.com in the CRM space were $US2.5 billion, marginally ahead of SAP’s $US2.3 billion.

Worldwide, total CRM revenue totalled $US18 billion, a rise of 12.5 percent on the previous year’s figure of $US16 billion. Third place in the CRM stakes was Oracle, with sales of just over $US2 billion, Microsoft with sales of $US1.1 billion, and IBM an also-ran, with sales in the region of $US650 million…

April 30, 2013 Off

Cloud benchmarks show smaller providers coming out ahead — but they’re still benchmarks

By David

Grazed from GigaOM.  Author: Jordan Novet.

While benchmarks on cloud-computing performance come with their share of caveats, new data from Compuware show smaller cloud service providers such as Layered Tech coming out ahead of the big dogs.  Big-name cloud service providers capture the tech-press headlines day after day, but lesser-known players might deserve more recognition, at least based on new benchmarks out from Compuware.

The company found that, although Rackspace and Windows Azure were consistently fast in taking an application request, processing it and delivering it back, a handful of competitors are actually faster and more consistently so, while other providers are available more often. The figures from Compuware represent the average response times over a year of monitoring performance on 38 cloud facilities, as part of Compuware’s normal Global Provider View cloud-benchmarking application…

April 30, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: CSO’s – Are You a Groundhog or a Giraffe?

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media.  Author: Steve Pate.

Through a great deal of research on enterprise cloud adoption and security, I’ve learned something telling. As you would expect, CISOs’ opinions about cloud strategy are quite varied. While many folks recognize their company’s use of SaaS for HR, sales, communication, and other applications, they are fairly divided about the use of Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and how secure these environments are in keeping company data safeguarded. After many talks with these technology leaders, I’ve determined that each fall into three distinct categories.

The "Server Huggers"
The first group is the server huggers and they make up a very small percentage of the respondents. They simply have no reason to leverage IaaS. Their applications are very resource intensive and expensive, and their businesses are highly predictable, so the need for scalable capacity just doesn’t exist. However, the time may come where they have company needs to bring the cloud into the mix. If so, they should be well informed on how to take advantage of cloud services and realize the ways to protect data during and after that migration…