Category: News

December 18, 2012 Off

Let’s not repeat the mistakes of Web history in the cloud

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: David Linthicum.

I’m often told by those in the cloud computing industry that the rise of cloud computing is a new, unique phenomenon. I’m not sure that’s completely true. I’ve often pointed out in this blog that the rise of cloud computing has some parallels with the rise of the Web and the technology created to support the Web in the 1990s. There were clear mistakes made back then, and it appears that some of us are doomed to repeat them.

The more obvious potential repeat is the pushback on cloud computing based on claims it is a fad and a security threat. This results in delayed acceptance and planning activities. Déjà vu: Many companies in the 1990s viewed the rise of the Web as a flash in the pan or something that would not last, as well as a "security threat." They did not embrace the Web or the emerging value of the technology…

December 18, 2012 Off

Looking Back – Cloud Computing Trends Of 2012

By David

Grazed from CloudTweaks. Author: Rick Blaisdell.

This year, the winds of change have blown the cloud to a higher level. Studies predict that cloud computing will be on the rise for some a long period of time and that it will be a major source of revenue and employment globally by 2015. Industry experts also say that ultimately everything will be in the cloud, including migrating all physical hardware, software, platforms, services and processing.

There is no question that cloud computing evolved enormously this year. In 2012, we’ve seen:…

December 18, 2012 Off

Will Oracle Cloud Block Customers’ Monitoring Tools?

By David

Grazed from TalkinCloud. Author: Joe Panettieri.

Oracle’s Cloud Hosting and Delivery Policies apparently deny customers the right to use their own monitoring and testing tools to measure the availability, performance and security of Oracle’s cloud. It begs the question: Will third-party MSPs and channel partners be able to monitor SLAs (service level agreements) for Oracle’s cloud?

Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, President Mark Hurd, Channel Chief Judson Althoff and other company executives described their cloud strategy during the Oracle OpenWorld conference in September 2012. Hurd even called on partners to trust Oracle with customer applications in the cloud. Ironically, Oracle’s cloud hosting and delivery policies in some cases may block those channel partners from monitoring customers applications in the Oracle cloud. The policy states:…

December 18, 2012 Off

Report: North America’s Healthcare Cloud Computing Market Set to Grow at the Highest CAGR from 2012 to 2017

By David

Grazed from PRWeb. Author: PR Announcement.

MarketsandMarkets conducted a study on the “Healthcare Cloud Computing (Clinical, EMR, SaaS, Private, Public, Hybrid) Market – Global Trends, Challenges, Opportunities & Forecasts (2012 – 2017)”, which analyzed and studied the major market drivers, restraints, and opportunities in North America, Europe, Asia, and Rest of the World. Browse more than 100 market data tables spread through 231 pages and in-depth TOC of “Healthcare Cloud Computing (Clinical, EMR, SaaS, Private, Public, Hybrid) Market – Global Trends, Challenges, Opportunities & Forecasts (2012 – 2017)”.

The cloud computing market in healthcare is estimated to grow at a CAGR of 20.5% from 2012 to 2017. Healthcare organizations are required to stretch their limited budgets to meet increasing product and service demands, while complying with new regulations and healthcare reform legislations. Many healthcare organizations are also struggling to manage and optimize their complex IT systems so that patients and physicians can be provided instant online access to information, products, and services through their desktops and mobile devices for faster healthcare delivery. All these requirements have driven healthcare organizations towards adoption of cloud technology and are expected to contribute to its growth in the near future. The market in 2011 was dominated by Non-Clinical Information Systems, contributing the largest share, although the market for Clinical Information Systems is expected to grow at a higher CAGR of 27.1% from 2012 to 2017…

December 18, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Four Predictions For The Year Ahead

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: Antonio Piraino.

The cloud has become a well-used buzzword, but for good reason. Cloud computing strategies have provided organizations with many benefits in 2012, especially as budgets, products and applications were set aside for both public and private cloud investments.

However, despite the fact that companies have begun to embrace the cloud and move toward serious implementations, we are in the midst of a rapidly changing market. Below are a few predictions on the cloud computing front for the year 2013:…

December 18, 2012 Off

ScienceLogic Updates Private Cloud Management Platform

By David

Grazed from TalkinCloud. Author: Chris Talbot.

ScienceLogic has made an update to its data center and cloud management platform to provide enterprise IT managers with real-time and multitenant insight, visibility and control over the various private cloud environments they currently are or will be running.

The platform was developed as a way to provide IT managers with unified monitoring features for integrated stacks including FlexPod, VCE Vblock and the various underlying technologies such as Cisco UCS, EMC, NetApp, Xen and Microsoft Hyper-V, which are meant specifically to deploy private clouds in enterprise IT environments. Focusing on data center and cloud management, ScienceLogic built the platform to handle dynamic and heterogeneous computing environments at scale…

December 18, 2012 Off

Scientists show what 100M computing hours on Google’s cloud can do

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Derrick Harris.

In the latest case of researchers using the cloud for good, Google is highlighting the six projects to which it awarded grants via its Exacycle for Visiting Faculty program. Ranging from genomic research to astronomy, the researchers received 100 million computing hours apiece.

Deep in the bowels of Google’s offices in Mountain View, Calif., and Seattle, a group of researchers has been consuming an incredible amount of computing resources trying to make scientific discoveries that they hope will help change the world…

December 18, 2012 Off

NIST Cloud Computing and Big Data Forum and Workshop

By David

Grazed from NIST. Author: PR Announcement.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) announces a Cloud Computing and Big Data Forum and Workshop to be held on Tuesday, January 15, Wednesday, January 16, and Thursday, January 17, 2013. The format is a two-day forum followed by a one-day hands-on workshop. The NIST Cloud Computing and Big Data Forum and Workshop will bring together leaders and innovators from industry, academia and government in an interactive format that combines keynote presentations, panel discussions, interactive breakout sessions, and open discussion. The forum and workshop are open to the general public. NIST invites organizations to display posters and participate as exhibitors as described in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below.

9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on Tuesday, January 15, 9:00 a.m-5:30 p.m. ET on Wednesday, January 16, and 9:00 a.m.-12:40 p.m. ET on Thursday, January 17, 2013.

ADDRESSES: To register, go to: http://www.nist.gov/itl/cloud/cloudbdworkshop.cfm. The event will be held at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, 100 Bureau Drive, Gaithersburg, MD 20899 in the Red Auditorium of the Administration Building (Building 101). Please note admittance instructions in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below…

December 18, 2012 Off

Business associate agreements remain ambiguous amidst cloud-computing advances

By David

Grazed from PhysBizTech. Author: Madelyn Kearns.

While clouds often symbolize a lazy sense of freedom or wistful disconnect, healthcare’s adoption of cumuli demands certain boundaries be established to keep the latest advances in information storage/sharing from raining down on the industry’s developing techno-ecosystem.

As Adam Greene — partner at the Law Offices of Davis Wright Tremaine and chairman for the HIMSS Cloud Security Workgroup — noted during his introduction at the Privacy & Security Forum in Boston last week, a purportedly successful outlet like cloud computing, rather liberated and undefined in these early stages, poses a lot of questions for providers and servicers alike regarding its receptiveness to hard HIPAA legalities…

December 17, 2012 Off

Intelligence Agencies Move Towards Single Super-Cloud

By David

Grazed from AOL. Author: Charles Allen.

The intelligence community is developing a single cloud computing network to allow all its analysts to access and rapidly sift through massive volumes of data. When fully complete, this effort will create a pan-agency cloud, with organizations sharing many of the same computing resources and information. More importantly, the hope is the system will break down existing boundaries between agencies and change their insular cultures.

As in the rest of the federal government, lower costs and higher efficiency are the primary reasons for the intelligence world’s shift to cloud computing, said Charles Allen, formerly Under Secretary of Homeland Security for intelligence and analysis, currently a principal with the Chertoff Group, in an interview with AOL Defense. Now in its eighth month, the goal of the effort is to connect the CIA’s existing cloud to a new cloud run by the National Security Agency. This NSA-run network consists of five other intelligence agencies and the FBI. Both of these clouds can interoperate, but the CIA has its own unique needs because it must work with human intelligence, which necessitates keeping its cloud slightly separate, he said…