Category: News

April 13, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Extreme Networks Brings Open Fabric to the Edge

By David

Grazed from eWeek.  Author: Jeffrey Burt.

Extreme Networks officials more than a year ago launched their Open Fabric network architecture in the data center to help businesses deal with such trends as cloud computing, virtualization and mobility. Now the company is extending its Open Fabric capabilities to enterprise campuses. With Open Fabric,

Extreme brought such features as high availability and low latency, low power, automation and open standards to the data center, according to Jake Howering, senior director of marketing for Extreme. The next natural step for Open Fabric is the enterprise, where the influx of mobile devices, virtualization, cloud computing, wireless LANs and software-defined networks (SDNs) is putting new pressures on the network, Howering told eWEEK. And right now, IT administrators are having to manage multiple networks for workloads like unified communications (UC), physical security and WiFi, he said. Such situations are expensive and inefficient. “That isn’t going to scale and let you grow,” he said…

April 13, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Google Gives Users ‘Digital Wills’ For Data

By David

Grazed from Sky.com.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Search giant Google has decided to give its users a ‘digital will’ option for their online data.  The new facility allows consumers to decide what happens with their online account data after they die.  The cyber-stored information may also be wiped with approval if they become inactive online for any other reason.

According to Goldsmiths PhD student Stacey Pitsillides, who has focused her research on the issue of data and death, the Google strategy breaks new ground.  Ms Pitsillides, 26, told Sky News: "Google is one of the first major players to develop a clear opening strategy to deal with this issue and it is hoped that this will encourage others in the industry to follow suit."…

April 13, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: The next phase of enterprise mobility – from productivity to customer engagement

By David

Grazed from Appirio.  Author: Balakrishna Narasimhan.

This week, Gartner released three stunning pieces of data that demonstrate that enterprise IT is going through another dramatic shift (via @alexwilliams). First, Gartner reported that PC shipments were down 11% since the same quarter in 2012. We knew we were moving into the post-PC era, but the speed with which the shift is happening is surprising. Second, Gartner reported that in 2012, 39% of all CRM was delivered through SaaS and that Salesforce was the leading CRM vendor overall. Third, they projected that mobile CRM apps are set to explode from about 200 apps today to 1200 apps by 2014.

Put all that together and there are three clear implications:

  • Customer information increasingly lives in the cloud, mostly within Salesforce
  • Most business’ internal and external customers will access customer information on mobile devices
  • People much prefer task-specific mobile apps rather than all-purpose desktop-style apps…
April 13, 2013 Off

HP’s enterprise customer experience gives edge over Amazon’s ‘consumer’ cloud

By David

Grazed from ComputerWorld.  Author: Matthew Finnegan.

HP can stake a bigger claim in the infrastructure as a service (IaaS) market by creating an enterprise-friendly rival to Amazon’s ‘consumer’ cloud, according to the head of the firm’s Converged Cloud unit, Saar Gillai.  HP is in the process of reimagining itself in what it terms the ‘new style of IT’, with its traditional businesses are coming under threat while attempts to move into new areas such as the Autonomy acquisition have proved problematic.

Targeting cloud revenues is top priority for CEO Meg Whitman, as the company attempts to find other avenues of growth says Gillai. According to HP figures, total cloud-related revenues, including sales of cloud services and hardware used to setup clouds, were almost $4 billion for 2012, and this is targeted to double by 2015…

April 13, 2013 Off

3 Stocks To Consider For The Cloud Computing Bubble

By David

Grazed from SeekingAlpha.  Author: Editorial Staff.

The cloud computing market is expected to grow to $177 billion over the next two years, and in turn, many companies will be looking to capitalize from this bubble. For those unfamiliar, cloud computing is the use of computing resources (hardware and software) that are delivered as a service over a network (typically the Internet). Mainframe computing from around the 1970s was replaced by client-server computing architecture in the 1980s and 90s, but by the time the Internet flourished, the world found a need to centralize the storage of data again. In recent years, this necessity of centralization has created a cloud computing bubble.

Consumers may be more familiar with cloud service offerings. This includes Google Drive, offered by Google (GOOG), SkyDrive by Microsoft (MSFT), Box.com, and Dropbox.  Here are some other ideas for investing in cloud computing that investors should consider:..

April 13, 2013 Off

States Taxing the Cloud: It Was Only a Matter of Time

By David

Grazed from Wired.  Author: Robbie Wright.

You know what they say about two things being certain in life. The tax part of that illustrious pair is now rearing its ugly head in the world of cloud computing. It seems that politicians are finally starting to realize that this cloud computing “thing” is actually generating a lot of revenue — and they want their slice of the pie. However, let’s stay far away from the politics and just consider the ramifications of cloud taxation on cloud adoption.

Legislators in Massachusetts, among others, have begun pursuing or have already been successful in applying taxation to web-based services. The big question in my mind is what this actually affects. What difference, if any, will taxation make in the cloud market?…

April 12, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Soasta and CloudBees Team For Jenkins Plugin

By David

Grazed from Dr.Dobbs. Author: Adrian Bridgwater.

Cloud and mobile app testing company Soasta and Java PaaS player CloudBees have formed a partnership that sees the release of a new Jenkins open source plugin for build, test, and deployment. With continuous integration features for mobile development utilizing real mobile devices, CloudBees architect (and creator of Jenkins) Kohsuke Kawaguchi says he optimized the plugin for Jenkins to eliminate manual tasks in testing.

"I appreciate Soasta open-sourcing its Jenkins plugin and collaborating with the Jenkins community," said Kawaguchi. "Soasta brings the product expertise and the Jenkins community brings their Jenkins expertise. When we collaborate, it’s a win for everyone. We look forward to seeing more companies follow the same path."…

April 12, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Cisco, Microsoft Partner on Data Center Solutions

By David

Grazed from eWeek. Author: Jeffrey Burt.

Cisco Systems is working with Microsoft to offer new products designed to make it easier for businesses to virtualize their data centers, reduce complexity and leverage cloud computing technologies. Cisco is combining its Unified Computing System (UCS) converged data center solution with Microsoft’s Fast Track 3.0 architecture offerings to give businesses integrated solutions that will make it easier for them to provision, deploy and manage their data center environments, according to the two companies.

In addition, Cisco is offering new Microsoft Fast Track 3.0 packages that can leverage options from either EMC and its year-old VSPEX integrated virtualization solution or NetApp and its FlexPod technology…

April 12, 2013 Off

Cloud Computing: Glue Networks aims SDN technology at Cisco WANs

By David

Grazed from NetworkWorld. Author: Jim Duffy.

SDNs aren’t just for data center networks, despite the best-use-case-scenario arguments for network virtualization and flow management pervading the industry. SDNs can automate and manage WAN operations as well. Google is using OpenFlow to interconnect data center over a WAN. And startup Glue Networks is targeting Cisco’s installed base of WAN routers as a sweet spot for its SDN WAN offerings.

Major IT trends such as SaaS, private clouds, BYOD, mobility and voice/data convergence are stressing the quality of links in an enterprise WAN, as analyst Lee Doyle notes here. WAN links now require improved security, lower latency, higher reliability and support for any device in any location to accommodate these trends…

April 12, 2013 Off

Proofpoint acquires SaaS email security provider MailDistiller

By David

Grazed from SCMagazine. Author: Editorial Staff.

Proofpoint has acquired Maildistiller, a provider of SaaS email security solutions to bolster its cloud architecture. As part of a plan to expand its Proofpoint Essentials suite of software-as-a-service (SaaS) security and compliance solutions, it acquired the Northern Ireland-based company, which is specifically designed for channel distribution through multi-level distribution and managed service providers (MSPs).

According to Proofpoint, the technology will enable Proofpoint Essentials to combine the security and threat detection capabilities with ease of use, multi-level channel management and modern SaaS architecture required to serve the mid-to-small enterprise market…