Category: News

December 15, 2012 Off

Some Cloud Computing Tips for you

By David

Grazed from: The Edinburgh Reporter.  Author: Phyllis Stephen.

Cloud computing is a term that we have all been hearing lots about over the last few years. You may already be making good use of its facilities. Or, you may be wondering what it means and whether it could be of interest for you. So, you could be surprised to learn that if you access or are active on YouTube, Gmail, Google Apps, Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn, you are already a cloud user.

To sum it up, Wikipedia defines cloud computing as the use of computing resources (hardware and software) delivered as a service over a network, usually the internet.  Cloud computing has a number of benefits, including its facility for on-line data backup. Its solutions that ‘know’ which files you have created or changed and back them up continuously and automatically can be especially helpful…

December 15, 2012 Off

Mitigating Risks in the Application of Cloud Computing in Law Enforcement

By David
Grazed from PRWeb.  Author: PR Announcement.

The IJIS Institute, a nonprofit organization that focuses on mission-critical information sharing for justice, public safety, and homeland security, is pleased to announce a new cloud computing resource for law enforcement. In partnership with the IBM Center for the Business of Government, IJIS Institute executive director emeritus, Paul Wormeli, authored a report titled Mitigating Risks in the Application of Cloud Computing in Law Enforcement.

The concept of cloud computing, although rising in popularity in the business world, is still somewhat of a new idea for the law enforcement community. As the notion of information sharing continues to change shape, justice and public safety communities struggle to operate under dwindling budgets and higher expectations for productivity and efficiency. Cloud computing can offer a cost-effective way to improve mission-critical operational success. As such, it is essential that executives in the law enforcement community begin to understand and embrace the benefits of the cloud…

December 15, 2012 Off

UK’s Government G-Cloud is a ‘suicidal mission with no exit’ says LinuxIT CEO

By David

Grazed from Computing.co.uk.  Author: Peter Gothard.

The CEO of Linux-based software solutions company LinuxIT, Peter Dawes-Huish, slammed the public sector G-Cloud system this week, likening the current service level to a military mission "with an entry route and no exit route" that is "not just dangerous, but suicide".

"Data lock-in and data opaqueness is as prevalent in cloud offerings as in any other delivery model," Dawes-Huish told the Westminster cloud computing eForum.  "If you move your applications and data to a cloud service in the proprietary model then you’ll be held to ransom, and it doesn’t matter how flexible your opportunity for moving, you’re locked in."…

December 15, 2012 Off

Consider the Cloud for Dynamic Workloads

By David
Grazed from WindowsITPro.  Author: B. K. Winstead.

When you mention cloud computing, most IT pros probably think of outsourcing their company’s applications and infrastructure. Certainly, that model is appropriate in some businesses. However, there are other circumstances that might call for cloud computing in a dynamic or temporary deployment, and a recent survey suggests that more businesses are looking at this model for uses such as big data or media files.

The survey was prepared by cloud security vendors CloudPassage and received input from 201 IT professionals ranging from C-level executives down to the systems administrators in the trenches. One of its key findings indicated that 70 percent more companies are planning to use public cloud environments for temporary workload or big data in 2013 as compared to 2012…

December 15, 2012 Off

Official document reveals the rules of Oracle’s cloud

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld.  Author: Chris Kanaracus.

An official document containing policies and pledges for customers of Oracle’s cloud services reveals that many aspects fall in line with industry standards, while others may prompt cause for worry among customers, according to analysts.

The document was last updated Dec. 1 and is marked "confidential," despite being openly available on Oracle’s website (PDF). It lays out the rules by which Oracle and its cloud customers must play, apart from any special terms that may exist in individual contract agreements. Oracle launched a wide array of cloud services this year, including its Fusion Applications as well as a PaaS (platform as a service), IaaS (infrastructure as a service) and social network…

December 15, 2012 Off

What we’ll see in 2013 in cloud computing — Cloud Computing News

By David

Grazed from GigaOM.  Author: Barb Darrow and Stacey Higginbotham.

Next year, “the cloud” will finally be ready for enterprise workloads and big companies will finally start moving them there. Data centers will stop being enclosed by walls and those are just two of GigaOM’s 5 big cloud predictions.

The cloud has moved from concept to reality. Sure, startups have been buying computing and storage on demand for years, while enterprises talked up virtualization and hoped it was the same thing. But now big companies are finally getting this whole on-demand compute thing, and the next year we’ll see big IT companies buy up startups that will help transition enterprise workloads to the cloud, more companies that offer enterprise-class infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) get real applications and a more viable model of hybrid cloud that enables cloud bursting. Let’s see what’s ahead…

December 14, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Intel Fields Atom for Microservers

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Maureen O’Gara.

Intel is going to try going after the data center with a brand new Atom System-on-a-Chip (SoC) that can be built into relatively cheap, high-density microservers for cloud providers. It really rather not – it really wants to sell its high-end chips – but it has no choice. It has forecast that microservers could get to be 10% of the server market by 2015 and it will have to fight for a piece of it after losing a head start earlier this year when AMD plopped down $334 million in cash and stock for SeaMicro, a microserver start-up that already had Intel designed in.
But, given the tone in its voice this week, Intel is apparently serious about the sector, which it’s blown off before for defensive purposes.

Intel says the new 22nm dingus, code-named Centerton and seemingly in development since 2007, is the first low-power 64-bit dual-core SoC for these data center systems that’s in production and shipping to customers…

December 14, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Total Defense for Business Provides Multi-Layer Security Protection

By David

Grazed from TalkinCloud. Author: Chris Talbot.

Total Defense is launching a new cloud-based security service the company is promising will provide SMBs and SMEs with a "complete" cloud security solution, protecting customers from a variety of threats.

The key to the new Total Defense for Business service is three-pronged. Included in the new solution is advanced endpoint malware and application controls, web filtering and malware protection, and cloud-based anti-spam and email threat prevention. Additionally, Total Defense noted, the cloud-based solution provides protection irrespective of location and system by applying and and enforcing policies consistently at the cloud level…

December 14, 2012 Off

The role of software-defined networks in cloud computing

By David

Grazed from TechTarget. Author: Tom Noelle.

It may seem ironic, but the most difficult thing about software-defined networking is actually defining it. Given the elasticity of views about what a software-defined network is, it’s hardly surprising that SDN’s specific role in the cloud is elusive. There are two software-defined networking models and two different SDN missions in cloud computing. Since networks create the cloud, managing the interplay between these two factors could be the key to cloud efficiency and success.

As an information service, the Internet treats the network as a transparent partner. With the cloud, a user’s applications reside in, and become part of, the cloud. And most agree that means at least some of the network must be integrated with the cloud. The current consensus is that the data center has to be made cloud-specific, but should the WAN also be a "resource" to the cloud?…

December 14, 2012 Off

Service governance morphs into cloud API management

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: David Linthicum.

My good friend Loraine Lawson posts in her blog an observation that’s evolved for the last few years: SOA governance is morphing into API management. Coming from the world of service-oriented architecture (SOA), I may have been in denial. However, many of the items that were once considered SOA, such as service governance, are now focused on the cloud, including API management.

The technology is a great fit — runtime service governance products (from Layer 7, Oracle, Vordel, and a few others) have a huge value in controlling and managing cloud services or APIs. The technology providers saw the matchup. They rebranded to the cloud and followed many of the newer cloud API management providers, such as Apigee and Mashery…