Cloud News, Resources and Information
As the ongoing battle for lowering storage costs continues, the leading provider of cloud backup software for service providers BackupAgent announces its integration with Microsoft’s Windows Azure. With this new major feature the company enables service providers of all shapes and sizes to stay competitive in the cloud backup market.
The integration is twofold; the BackupAgent Cloud Backup Platform – including the service management console – can be fully hosted in a high available (load balanced) setup on Windows Azure Virtual Machines. Apart from the savings on hardware investments, this configuration makes it incredibly easy to manage resources and ensures optimal service during backup peak hours. The other part of the integration is the storage of backup data that can be outsourced to the Windows Azure storage platform. One of the great benefits is that this fits perfectly in BackupAgent’s pay-as-you-grow philosophy; you always pay for what usage, no overhead. On the other hand it makes it very easy to store backups on multiple physical locations all over the world. This redundancy reduces latency and adds value to the backup proposition.
Grazed from TalkinCloud. Author: Chris Talbot.
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Piston Cloud Computing is aiming to accelerate the adoption of OpenStack and its own Piston Enterprise OpenStack product with the announcement of a new OpenStack training series. The training series will kick off with "Deploying OpenStack for Cloud Administrators" in San Francisco May 8-9.
The first of the training courses will provide administrators with an introduction to OpenStack before diving into hands-on training labs to teach attendees about the installation and configuration of an OpenStack private cloud, instance management and migration, block storage, object storage and specific features for the enterprise…
Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Charles Babcock.
Cloud infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) revenues grew 15% in 2012 to a total of $12.5 billion, according to Synergy Research, a Reno, Nev., market researcher in telecommunications, in the report, "Amazon Cloud IaaS and PaaS Investments Pay Off," published Monday. The figure reflects estimated revenues from cloud service providers, such as Amazon Web Services, not the total cloud market. The total market also includes software sold to enterprises for managing private clouds and services sold to consumers from the cloud.
Amazon Web Services leads the infrastructure market with revenues that are about seven times as large as its closest competitor’s, IBM. Synergy didn’t disclose specific revenue estimates for each but displayed their relative positions in a bar graph. Neither company lists its IaaS-specific revenue figures in its quarterly reporting. But Synergy said Amazon leads one of the fastest growing areas of cloud computing. IaaS revenues grew 55% in 2012 over 2011, and Amazon commands 36% of IaaS revenues…
Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Thomas Claburn.
Google has revealed more details about how Project Glass will work, providing developers with a sense of the kinds of applications they will be able to build for Google’s Internet-connected eyewear. Project Glass developer evangelist Timothy Jordan on Monday delved into the workings of Project Glass at the SXSW conference in Austin, Texas. The event was documented by Engadget in a live blog.
Google has been teasing developers and the public with glimpses at Project Glass over the past few months, in preparation for the launch of the first iteration of its spectacles, Glass Explorer Edition, in "early 2013." In late January and early February, the company held invitation-only Glass Foundry events for developers in San Francisco and New York to introduce its Mirror API, used to write code that connects third-party apps and services to Google’s servers, which communicate with Glass devices…
Grazed from TriplePundit. Author: Harry Stevens.
Salesforce has announced an ambitious goal to fully power its data centers with renewable energy. The software-as-a-service company that Bloomberg Businessweek recently called “a cloud computing king” announced last week that it is “committing to work to steadily increase the amount of renewable energy we use in our data center operations, to reach our goal to be fully powered by renewable energy.”
The company will take a number of steps this year to begin making its data centers more sustainably powered. The company will research energy efficient data center technology and encourage its energy providers to increase the supply of renewable energy. The company will also convene peers, sustainability specialists and energy experts around data center energy issues…
Grazed from BBC. Author: Mark Ward.
The word cloud evokes images of all things soft and gentle; the kiss of a kitten or the soft touch of a lambswool mitten. While that might be true of clouds in the real world, those in cyberspace are turning out to be very different entities indeed, especially when it comes to security. Some of them are downright dangerous.
The captivating idea behind using a "cloud" of computers is that it does away with having a dedicated data centre. Instead, companies get their number crunching done by a benevolent source of computational power that sits out there, somewhere, anywhere, on the net. It’s the word cloud itself that is responsible for making this sound much more ephemeral than it actually is, said Martin Borrett, IBM’s cloud security adviser…
Grazed from CloudTweaks. Author: Krishan Lal Khatri.
Experts have started to believe that 2013 is going to be the year when enterprises are likely to cease worrying about cloud related security issues, and the market will see increasing popularity of cloud services. These speculations are based on industry surveys conducted by many reputable market analysts and technology reviews. It is predicted that year 2013 will witness growing popularity of hosted services and solutions, and more companies to migrate their prime IT assets to the cloud as they see more returns from cloud technologies.
The leading cloud computing trends for the current year are summarized below:
Cloud will remain popular platform for collaboration
Surveys suggest that enterprises will continue to use cloud for collaborative tasks such as application development, online communication, and software testing. Google and Amazon to remain leading collaboration service providers among public clouds…
Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: Peter Wayner.
Ah, Amazon — did Jeff Bezos choose that name to symbolize the largest bookstore in the world or did he realize that he would one day create an enterprise cloud service that was as large and complex as the river basin? After spending some time with his enterprise infrastructure service, I think he saw this coming.
Selling servers by the hour was a bold idea when the Amazon cloud business launched a few years ago, but it seems quaint compared to all the options for sale today. There are currently 21 products available on Amazon Web Services, and only one of them is the classic EC2 machine, an abbreviation of the full name, the Elastic Compute Cloud. The original S3 (Simple Storage Service) now has cousins like the Simple Workflow Service and SimpleDB, a nonrelational data store. Then there are odder innovations like Amazon Glacier, a very cheap storage solution that takes hours to retrieve the data. Yes, hours. Not milliseconds, not seconds, not minutes — but hours…
Grazed from Abiquo. Author: PR Announcement.
Service provider Abiquo has launched a new interface that will do for cloud computing what the World Wide Web did for the Internet, it has claimed. Abiquo’s EverythinQ will integrate its software with third-party infrastructure components used for cloud operation and management. This, it claimed, will let businesses manage everything from a unified platform and make IT managers ‘get’ the cloud.
EverythinQ EveryWare
The launch is a response to massive customer demand for an easy interface, according to Abiquo, which surveyed a sample of IT managers in order to quantify its feedback. The main finding was that 84percent of IT managers are yet to make the most of cloud computing, because 78 percent of them find the cloud set up too ‘convoluted’ and in need of a single point of control. The upshot was that 66 percent of them find resources cannot be automatically allocated…