Category: News

December 13, 2012 Off

Dell World: Dell Updates Cloud Strategy

By David

Grazed from TalkinCloud.  Author: Chris Talbot.

Dell‘s cloud computing business continues to grow, as the company unveiled at Dell World 2012 in Austin, Texas. With cloud revenue growing 30 percent year-over-year in the third quarter of 2013, Dell announced plans to continue supporting open source cloud platform OpenStack while also committing to building both public and private clouds.

Dell bought into the OpenStack concept fairly early on, and according to the company, the open nature of the platform enables customers to take advantage of hybrid cloud capabilities to move workloads between private and public clouds. Dell also committed to building its own public and private clouds on OpenStack….

December 13, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Oracle buys DataRaker for energy analytics smarts

By David

Grazed from GigaOM.  Author: Barb Darrow.

With DataRaker buy Oracle says it can expand its reach into the water and energy verticals and offer deeper analytical “Big Data” services. It also buys new customers and a better maintenance and support revenue stream.

Other than its well-publicized cloud computing push, Oracle  has  been buying more into vertical application niches for years. On Thursday it’s done more of the same with news of its planned acquisition of DataRaker, which specializes in “cloud-based” (naturally) analytics for the electric, gas and water utilities world. Terms were not disclosed…

December 13, 2012 Off

Outlook 2013: Cloud Computing & Communications

By David

Grazed from ChannelPartners.  Author:  Kelly Teal.

Cloud continues to capture the industry’s imagination and investment due to its transformative impact on the delivery and consumption of technology. Momentum is expected to continue in 2013 as more businesses — large and small — buy into the as-a-service model. This will ease channel sales next year.

However, the tremendous potential of this nascent market has attracted big brands and startups alike, creating a fragmented supplier base and complicating provider selection for channel partners and their customers. From assessing needs to picking providers to migrating workloads, the complexity of cloud presents a growing opportunity for channel partners…

December 13, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Sendgrid adds Parse, Stackmob, Azure integrations

By David

Grazed from GigaOM.  Author: Barb Darrow.

SendGrid is inching towards ubiquity with new integrations to Parse, Stackmob and Windows Azure mobile backend services. SendGrid is popular with developers who want easy email integration for their mobile apps and who don’t want to rely too much on Amazon services.

SendGrid keeps moving toward ubiquity. The company, which brings e-mail delivery to popular applications like foursquare, Pinterest, and Airbnb, now integrates with Parse, Stackmob and Windows Azure mobile-backend-as-a-service (MbaaS) options. That should make it easier for more mobile devleopers to build email delivery and alerts into their applications without having to sweat the details of their infrastructure. Last week SendGrid announced tie ins to the popular Twilio APIs that enable SMS text and voice integration into mobile apps…

December 13, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Glide Apps Coming To Windows, Android, iOS

By David
Grazed from InformationWeek.  Author: Thomas Claburn.

Being ahead of the curve can be as much of a problem as being behind it. New York-based TransMedia introduced its Glide Effortless service in late 2005. The cloud-based app, storage and collaboration service was one of the early efforts to recreate the desktop experience in a suite of Web applications.

Since then, Apple, Google and Microsoft have all introduced their own cloud storage, sharing and productivity services, leaving TransMedia to reposition its offerings in an effort to survive amid the giants. Glide Effortless became Glide OS and its focus has shifted from providing branded and white-label Web applications for cable operators, to social networking, to content sharing, and online storage…

December 13, 2012 Off

Unconventional Cloud Predictions for 2013 – Executive Viewpoint 2013 Prediction from Adaptive Computing

By David
Grazed from Virtual Strategy Magazine.  Author: Robert Clyde.

2013 will be an exciting year for cloud computing for all the obvious reasons: exponential growth, new technologies, greater understanding, etc. Rather than repeat the obvious, I would like to make three predictions that are perhaps a little more controversial, or at least less obvious:

Bare-metal Clouds Will Continue to Grow

We tend to think that virtualization is a requirement for cloud computing. This is not so. Many clouds, especially private clouds, utilize bare-metal hosts in addition to virtualized hosts. Some applications need the enhanced I/O or processing performance that comes from running on physical hardware. If these applications don’t require the benefits of virtualization (migration, multi-tenancy, etc.), a bare-metal deployment can be best. This trend will continue to grow, as organizations learn to choose the right platform for the right job. Cloud management systems with policy-based optimization can manage heterogeneous hosts inside a single cloud environment, deploying services on physical or virtual hosts as needed…

December 13, 2012 Off

Cloud and the Global Economy – Study by London School of Economics

By David
Grazed from CloudTimes.  Author: Xath Cruz.

According to a study by the London School of Economics and Political Science, the development of cloud computing will result in economic growth, increased productivity, and promote change in the types of jobs and skills required by businesses.  The study focuses on two industries – smartphone and aerospace service – and dives into the impact of cloud computing on said industries using the UK, Germany, Italy, and USA and the years 2010 and 2014 as subjects. Microsoft helped underwrite the study.

The study claims that investments in cloud computing are contributing to job creation and growth in both the old and slow-growing aerospace sector and the relatively new, yet fast growing smartphone industry. Added to this, the cloud computing industry is also responsible for job creation via construction, staffing, and supply of the data centers that will host the cloud. Cloud computing also has the benefit of optimizing businesses as it frees up managerial staff and skilled employees, allowing them to focus on the areas of work that are more profitable…

December 12, 2012 Off

Sidera, ContinuityX Partner to Deliver Cloud, Disaster Recovery, Managed Services

By David
Grazed from TalkinCloud.  Author: Chris Talbot.

Sidera Networks will be providing the high-performance network connectivity needed for customers’ growing needs in cloud, disaster recovery and managed services. Sidera is collaborating with ContintuityX Solutions, a provider of managed networking, data center, applications, cloud and disaster recovery services, to connect ContinuityX’s data centers in New York, New Jersey, Chicago, Philadelphia and Toronto to provide stronger disaster recovery and cloud services.

Business continuity has been top-of-mind for a lot of east coast companies the last few months as they’ve had to contend with hurricanes that have at times taken down data centers. Thankfully, during Hurricane Sandy, cloud data centers fared quite well, but some of the business continuity plans included shifting customer data to data centers farther inland…

December 12, 2012 Off

One in three mission critical apps currently in the cloud, says survey

By David
Grazed from CloudComputing News.  Author: James Bourne.

Research from identity management provider SailPoint has revealed that US and UK based IT leaders see one in three mission critical apps as currently in the cloud, with that figure rising sharply by 2015.  The Market Pulse Survey of 400 IT and business leaders, which defined ‘mission critical’ as apps mainly focused on storage, file-sharing and communications, forecast that the number is expected to grow to one in two in three years.

The figures differed slightly dependent on which side of the Atlantic respondents were based – 32% in the US compared to 30% in the UK for cloudy mission critical apps now – but the consensus was the same.  Another element of the research centred on pain points with moving to the cloud, with the usual suspects present…

December 12, 2012 Off

Protectionism, free trade and security up in the cloud

By David
Grazed from Crikey.au.  Author: Bernard Keane.

The US Ambassador’s rallying cry against “data protectionism” reflects US hopes for the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Plus, it says a lot about the future of cloud computing.

It was a peculiar piece, out of the blue, from Washington’s man in Australia: yesterday, Fairfax ran an op-ed from US Ambassador Jeff Bleich about “cloud protectionism” and why it was important that the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiation currently underway (this week, in Auckland) pave the way for the removal of restrictions on movement of data across borders:

Like people who once thought keeping their money hidden under the mattress was better than having it in a bank, some voices across the region, and even in Australia, have called for limiting the flow of data across borders, and requiring firms to install local data centres in each market to ensure local ‘control’. This ‘beggar thy neighbour’ protectionism would be just as self-defeating in the digital economy as in every other sector.”…