Category: News

March 11, 2013 Off

Solution Providers Leverage Cloud Computing & Mobile – Research Report on Cisco, Juniper, Finisar, Riverbed, & Aruba

By David

Grazed from PRNewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Today, Investors Alliance announced new research reports highlighting Cisco Systems, Inc. CSCO +0.07% , Juniper Networks, Inc. JNPR +0.27% , Finisar Corporation FNSR +0.21% , Riverbed Technology, Inc. RVBD -0.48% , and Aruba Networks, Inc. ARUN -0.47% . Today’s readers may access these reports free of charge – including full price targets, industry analysis and analyst ratings – via the links below.

Cisco Systems, Inc. Research Report

As the Internet of Things market is rapidly emerging, Cisco takes action to accelerate its development, by announcing the inaugural Internet of Things World Forum to unite leaders and innovators in order to create a framework for collaborative industry innovation and market adoption that will accelerate the impact of the Internet of Things on the global economy, society, and the environment. The forum, hosted by Cisco, will take place in October 2013 in Barcelona, Spain. The Full Research Report on Cisco Systems, Inc. – including full detailed breakdown, analyst ratings and price targets – is available to download free of charge at: [http://www.investors-alliance.com/r/full_research_report/fdb0_CSCO]…

March 11, 2013 Off

3 reasons to embrace the private cloud

By David

Grazed from CloudTech. Author: Aiden Grayson.

For everything cloud computing offers – speed, convenience, simplicity, offsite backups – its “public” nature remains a touchy subject for enterprise. This simple fact explains why many organisations have been slow to embrace the cloud. In business, data security is everything. And for decision makers at big firms, trusting all mission-critical data into the care of a third-party IT vendor sounds just a bit too risky. But with the arrival of the private cloud, organizations can enjoy the conveniences of cloud computing without a lot of the tradeoffs. Here’s why they might want to give it a shot:

1. Data security and compliance

“A virtual infrastructure that offers on-the-go, anytime data access may sound great, but how can we be sure our data is safe?” This was – and still is – the big question for enterprise when confronted with cloud computing. The public cloud, they reason, is simply more vulnerable to misuse than data hosted in-house. On the other hand, a private, managed virtual network that delivers data and services is a different thing altogether. And it’s a thing more organisations are warming up to…

March 11, 2013 Off

Cloud computing platform will help robots learn faster

By David

Grazed from TheEngineer. Author: Editorial Staff.

The platform allows robots connected to the internet to directly access the computational, storage, and communications infrastructure of modern data centres for robotics tasks and robot learning. The new RoboEarth Cloud Engine extends earlier work on allowing robots to share knowledge with other robots via a WWW-style database, thereby speeding up robot learning and adaptation in complex tasks.

The developed Platform as a Service (PaaS) for robots allows to perform complex functions like mapping, navigation, or processing of human voice commands in the cloud, at a fraction of the time required by robots’ on-board computers. By making enterprise-scale computing infrastructure available to any robot with a wireless connection, the researchers believe that the new computing platform will help pave the way towards lighter, cheaper, more intelligent robots…

March 11, 2013 Off

What IBM’s embrace of Rackspace really means

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: Eric Knorr.

When IBM announced last week that all of its cloud offerings would be built around OpenStack, the open source cloud operating system, it was a triumph for the OpenStack Foundation and its large community of supporters. "We dreamed that one day IBM might get involved and do for OpenStack what they’ve done for Linux and other open source communities in the past," Mark Collier, COO of the OpenStack Foundation, told me. "They’re actually committed fully to OpenStack for being the basis for every single cloud solution they have going forward," both private and public.

The announcement signaled that IBM would take the helm as the corporate steward of OpenStack, surpassing in importance even Rackspace — which along with NASA gave birth to OpenStack three years ago. IBM is devoting the necessary money and resources and boasts an impressive track record cultivating open source communities: It built Eclipse from the ground up and was highly instrumental in the success of Linux and Apache…

March 11, 2013 Off

Seven myths which prevent success of Cloud

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: DD Mishra.

Cloud is on the verge of becoming a mega trend and it is necessary we debate this topic to a great depth and discuss it openly to remove any confusion and look at cloud from a different window of opportunity. I have tried to capture here some of the myths which exist around cloud for a healthy debate in my endeavor to demystify. I am sure there are better opinions and views which are available than what is being presented here and it will be a pleasure to debate them on this forum.

1. Cloud brings significant cost savings
This is debatable and this may not always be true. There could be situations where a cloud could be more expensive. We often overlook several associated costs to compute the cloud expense. More often this myth is created as rhetoric by product vendors to make a business case for cloud computing. If you are going for an OPEX model with public cloud, your accounting becomes simple but this also comes with an overhead of additional charges. The logic is same as buying a car and renting a car where renting over a long period is more expensive…

March 11, 2013 Off

Big Data in the Cloud

By David
CloudCow Contributed Article.  Author: Alexey Korotich, Dell Software

It is hard to say which of the two buzzwords tops IT news today: Big Data or Cloud. It’s much easier to see how these two can play nicely together.

Big data symbolizes the explosion of computer generated data, which is said to double every year and outgrowing the capacity of IT data centers. In trying to cope with ever-increasing data volumes and make sense of the data, companies find themselves in desperate need of high scale data aggregation, processing and analysis tools.

I won’t dare give another definition to such a multi-faceted thing as Cloud. Instead, let me summarize a few of its inherent capabilities, representing different levels of the cloud stack:

March 11, 2013 Off

PHD Virtual Transforms Virtual Landscape with Launch of Cloud Backup and Recovery Module

By David
Grazed from PHD Virtual.  Author: PR Announcement
PHD Virtual Technologies, a pioneer in virtual machine backup and recovery, and innovator of virtualization monitoring solutions, announced today the introduction of PHD Virtual 6.2 CloudHook™, the first and only solution on the market to offer powerful local VM backup capabilities, as well as a seamless link to public or private cloud storage for offsite backups. The latest release of PHD’s Virtual Backup and Replication includes a module for virtual backup to the cloud making it easy, seamless and affordable for small to medium-sized businesses to backup and recover data to and from the cloud at the touch of a button.
 
With PHD CloudHook, customers can avoid buying and managing costly cloud gateway appliances and cumbersome tape or other storage media for offsite backups. The PHD Virtual Backup Appliance (VBA) now gives you an easy-to-configure option in the cloud that removes all of that complexity. The best part is that you can recover just as easily from the cloud as you can from your local backups. Getting set up is quick and easy — one click in the PHD console backs up data to the customer’s choice of popular third party cloud providers, such as Amazon, Google, Rackspace or another private/public cloud provider storage. All provide the flexibility to scale as data storage needs increase.
March 9, 2013 Off

5 reasons VPNs suck in the cloud

By David

Grazed from CloudTech.  Author: Dome9.

If you’ve been around the block a few times, you’re probably wondering why the title of this post isn’t, 50 Reasons VPNs Suck in the Cloud.   VPNs have long been the bane of both administrators and users (and lets not forget, support). They’re clunky, complex, and costly, and the same is true when they’re deployed to secure cloud access.   Today, VPNs are increasingly used to connect to cloud computing resources.

Either by routing traffic back through the corporate network or direct to the cloud provider, VPNs offer authentication and transport-layer encryption to keep the bad guys out and sensitive information secure. But at what cost?   Both VPN configurations (corporate and provider) are complex to set up, require client agents with loads of support, and can be expensive to maintain. Arguably, there’s room for – and exists – a better approach to securing access to cloud servers.   We’ll get to what that is in a coming post, but for now we thought we’d share a few reasons why VPNs suck in the cloud, in reverse order (for effect)…

March 9, 2013 Off

Six Facts That Surprised Me About Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from CloudTweaks.  Author: Chris Kenealy.

In the course of my illustrious writing career, I have come across new and entertaining topics that I would have otherwise never cared to learn. For example did you know computers were called electronic brains in the 1950s? Of course knowing what we know now about the electronic brains’ memory capacities of the 1950s, it makes me wonder if all the asbestos lined schools and DDT neighborhood spray play dates were a reason for such a slow start in advancements of this electronic brain? Yet, the slang of the 1950s for computers is not what this article is about.

No, instead, I decided since I am going to be writing more about the cloud network I should read up on as much as I can. Yet, after starting my research I realized that I know remarkably little about this computing concept. So I figured we should have a little one on one time because I now feel it is my job to enlighten as many as I can on this foreign concept with a few facts that surprised me, but may help us understand the true vision of the cloud…

March 9, 2013 Off

MSPexcellence aims to help cloud computing service providers, wannabes

By David

Grazed from TechTarget.  Author:  Lynn Haber.

Targeting VARs, systems integrators, managed service providers and cloud services providers, CSPcommunity, launched this week, is an online information and education site, and network of industry professionals devoted to helping partners with any level of cloud savvy learn how to build a robust cloud services practice and transition to a reoccurring revenue business model.

Started by high-tech sales and marketing veterans Todd Hussey and Dave Zwicker, co-founders and partners of Andover, Mass.-based MSPexcellence, a business building consultancy for managed services providers (MSPs) and cloud computing service providers, CSPcommunity offers three levels of membership, or business building models for becoming a cloud computing service provider (CSP): Silver, Gold and Platinum. The membership levels correspond to a variety of resources, from the fundamentals of learning what cloud means to a partner’s business, to transforming and operating a successful cloud service provider business…