Category: News

December 5, 2012 Off

Evolve IP’s vServer Receives TMC’s 2012 Cloud Computing Excellence Award

By David

Grazed from BusinessWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Evolve IP, The Cloud Services Company(TM), announced today that TMC, a global, integrated media company, has named its vServer product as a winner of the 2012 Cloud Computing Excellence Award. The award, presented by Cloud Computing Magazine, recognized vServer for its ability to help businesses improve business continuity, reduce costs, and increase productivity using the cloud.

Evolve IP’s vServer, a key component of The Evolved Data Center, is a premier private cloud service that organizations can access over private connectivity, just as if the servers were sitting in their own data center. That means organizations that use The Evolved Data Center’s vServer eradicate on-site management, maintenance, and capital expense…

December 5, 2012 Off

Midokura to Present on Network Virtualization at UP Cloud Computing Conference

By David

Grazed from Midokura. Author: PR Announcement.

Midokura, a global startup focused on network virtualization, today announced its participation at the UP 2012 Cloud Computing Conference held on December 12 in San Francisco. Midokura will present on the trending topic of network virtualization.

The UP Cloud Computing Conference is one of the largest and oldest cloud events with world class lineup of speakers, providing solutions that can be applied today and tomorrow. The conference covers a wide range of topics and provides an annual review of cloud computing developments and trends and the impact on global economy and society…

December 5, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Plexxi will reinvent networking for a scaled out era

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Stacey Higginbotham.

Plexxi has made a new networking box that it calls a switch, but is radically different from the switches on the market today. The switch contains software plus an optical transceiver that link to other Plexxi boxes to form a fast connection between thousands of servers.

The enterprise infrastructure of the late 90s and early aughts is no match for the demands of webscale companies like Google or Facebook, or even cloud providers like Amazon. Thus, the giants in the web and cloud worlds are demanding new infrastructure and remaking the world of computing for their own needs…

December 5, 2012 Off

Out of beta, into the fire: Can HP Cloud compete?

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: Eric Knorr.

HP has announced the general availability of HP Cloud Compute, its flagship IaaS offering, first launched in public beta seven months ago. At the same time, HP unveiled beta versions of HP Block Storage and HP Cloud Application Platform as a Service, the latter based on VMware’s Cloud Foundry Open PaaS Project.

The key question is whether any new IaaS player can put a dent in AWS’ (Amazon Web Service’s) huge market share, which gives it vast economies of scale. It also takes years and all sorts of deals to collect the range of products and services offered by AWS, from maximum VM configurability to NoSQL databases to Hadoop/MapReduce services to virtual private cloud capability and a vast software marketplace…

December 5, 2012 Off

It’s Not Always Sunny in Cloud Computing: A Look At The Risks

By David

Grazed from DataCenterKnowledge. Author: Bill Kleyman.

With so many organizations moving to some type of cloud model, we’ve been able to gain greater visibility into the design, maintenance and security of cloud computing. A well-planned cloud deployment can serve a company very well. To accomplish this, there has to be thorough planning and a solid use-case for moving towards a cloud platform.

Steering Clear of Drawbacks

Unfortunately, there are some issues to manage in the cloud model. Truth be told, there are still some inherent drawbacks and weaknesses to a cloud model’s security or design. Not everyone utilizes cloud best practices. And, expecting too much from a cloud provider can lead to overuse and improper utilization of cloud resources. The bottom line: it’s not always sunny in the cloud computing world…

December 5, 2012 Off

Andreessen Horowitz bets big on cloud security company CipherCloud

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: Doug Dineley.

Because Web 1.0 is many years behind us, we can all look back and laugh at the sorry state of application and database security in those days. When we look back at Cloud 1.0 in a few more years, we’re sure to have another good chuckle. New technology takes time to mature — and even longer to secure, it seems. It may be years before cloud service providers natively deliver the stringent data protection and regulatory compliance capabilities that the most security-sensitive enterprises seek. In the meantime, we can expect those needs to be filled by third-party vendors.

Some of those third-party vendors, such as CipherCloud, will be new companies with new ideas. The maker of a data encryption gateway for cloud services and SaaS applications, CipherCloud announced today that it has received $30 million in funding from Andreessen Horowitz. In an interview with InfoWorld, company founder and CEO Pravin Kothari said the investment would be poured into expanding sales and marketing into a global presence, as well as further product development. The company currently claims more than 40 customers in banking, insurance, health care, and technology. It’s looking to bring a cloud-based version of the solution to midmarket customers next year…

December 5, 2012 Off

The Price of Free Cloud Resources

By David

Grazed from THE Journal. Author: Margo Pierce.

All students, educators, and administrators are subject to data-gathering when they use cloud resources. Everyone’s online movements are followed by a number of service providers or advertisers, especially when the services they are using are "free," according to Jim Siegl, chair of the Consortium of School Networking (CoSN) Technical Committee, which researches and reports on internet privacy, along with other education technology issues.

Data is the most common (yet invisible) fee extracted from users by companies that make search engines, e-mail, and other cloud computing resources accessible to schools. Siegl reads the user agreements and terms and conditions of various cloud offerings such as Google Apps for Education or Microsoft 365 in order to understand the true cost of "free."…

December 5, 2012 Off

Under Seattle’s Cloud, a Big Data Cluster Grows

By David

Grazed from Xconomy. Author: Benjamin Romano.

It’s a good time to be doing big data in Seattle. So says Ed Lazowska, the University of Washington computer science professor who played host and tour guide to the region’s big data lineup during the Washington Innovation Summit last week. He points to the region’s strengths in cloud computing, and a steady stream of big data achievers marching forth from the UW.

While Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) may be among the most recognizable of these players, the work being done here now is not just about finding a better way to get you to buy exactly what you didn’t know you always wanted. From startups and investors to giants like Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), the Seattle-area big data cluster is at work on novel solutions to major problems in healthcare, transportation, energy, communication, and yes, commerce, too. They’re also building tools to democratize big data and improve upon Hadoop, an underlying piece of big data computing infrastructure…

December 5, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing in 2013

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Jnan Dash.

Marc Andreesen said recently that 2012 will be remembered as the year of SaaS. What he meant is that SaaS has been around for a while, but it came of age this year, with examples of successes such as the Workday IPO. No one questions the significance of SaaS any more. But the year 2013 will see a shift to PaaS (Platform as a Service) with “most” new activities.

There is already a blurring of the lines between IaaS and PaaS, as seen from Amazon’s AWS stack. But programmatic interface in PaaS will dominate as we move forward, catering to the developer community. The incumbents such as IBM, Oracle, SAP, Microsoft, and Adobe (representing “on-premise” software) will have to combat with pure-play cloud players. I saw a list of cloud pioneers and new cloud tools that are be worth sharing…

December 5, 2012 Off

Younity Launches Beta Version of Personal Cloud Service

By David

Grazed from Technorati. Author: Geoff Simon.

Santa Monica based younity announced today the beta launch of it’s unique personal cloud storage service designed to eliminate device to computer syncing and storage limitations for iPhones and iPads. Today marks the public beta launch of the app, which allows iPhone and iPad users to access all their music, videos, photos and other files from all laptops, desktops without any plugin, plugging in or syncing.

The service also removes storage limitations by not actually storing any of your files online, but instead works by providing a single file system across all devices where younity is installed (either Macs or PCs). Once installed, Younity indexes all your photos, documents, videos and music and represents it as a single file system. So what it allows for, is your machines, whether it’s a Mac or PC to stream the files directly to your iOS device from where they’re at, not by syncing it to a online cloud…