Category: News

November 28, 2012 Off

Convirture Adds VMware Support to Cloud Management Tool

By David

Grazed from The Var Guy. Author: Christopher Tozzi.

In days past, virtualization platforms that relied on an amalgamation of different technologies could present complications for IT managers. But in a sign that hybridized virtualization environments are becoming the accepted norm, Convirture has announced a new version of its management tools that supports all major virtualization and cloud platforms.

If the world of virtualization and cloud computing were simpler, there might be one clear preferred solution for building computing infrastructure. But organizations now have an array of enterprise ready hypervisors to choose from, ranging from Xen to VMware to KVM. At the same time, several major cloud platforms, including Eucalyptus, OpenStack and Amazon EC2, are available. Because all of these technologies have different strengths and weaknesses, many IT infrastructures rely on a mix of these various solutions…

November 28, 2012 Off

Demand for Cloud Skills Doesn’t Stop at the Data Center Door

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: Joe McKendrick.

The market for cloud-related jobs for technology professionals keeps expanding, with tens of thousands of job openings. But cloud computing skills may be providing non-tech professionals and managers an edge in the job market as well.

Wanted Analytics recently reported that within a given month, more than 10,000 US-based jobs were advertised online for technology positions that need experience and knowledge of cloud computing. The number of job ads increased rapidly in 2012, reaching new highs in demand each month and is up 80% from a year ago. Essentially, demand for cloud jobs maps closely to IT overall, led by such positions as software engineer, Java developer, systems engineer and enterprise architect…

November 28, 2012 Off

Review: Rackspace Cloud keeps IaaS simple

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: Peter Wayner.

Rackspace was one of the first players in the cloud arena. The company recognized early that enterprises wanted faster, simpler ways to spin up and spin down servers. If the bosses are going to be fickle and impulsive, there will always be a market for companies that make it easy for the people curating the data to pivot. If the corporate vision is going to morph, the IT shops will want a way to morph with it.

At Rackspace, the meaning of "cloud" has always been a bit simpler and more straightforward, and the philosophy a bit more open and pragmatic, than at other cloud providers. While some of the others spun elaborate metaphors, abstracted away the old files, and portrayed the opaqueness of their mechanism as a feature, Rackspace sold real instances that felt more like real computers. From the beginning, Rackspace’s cloud was just a fast way to buy extra machines for an hour, then turn them off…

November 28, 2012 Off

Data Security Concerns Impact Cloud Deployments

By David

Grazed from eWeek. Author: Nathan Eddy.

While organizations continue to adopt cloud computing solutions, data security remains an issue, according to survey of enterprises commissioned by Asigra and performed by the customer metrics and research organization, TechValidate.

The survey found 21 percent of respondents cited data security as the biggest concern while the location of where the data was stored came in at 7 percent. Backup related costs, user-related data loss and service provider stability all ranked at 3 percent. Overall, 59 percent said that all of these were concerns with respect to storing data in the cloud…

November 28, 2012 Off

5 things to watch for at Amazon’s first user cloud conference

By David

Grazed from NetworkWorld. Author: Brandon Butler.

Pretty much anyone watching the cloud computing market will tell you that Amazon Web Services is its 800-pound gorilla. Which means that this is a big week for the company: On Wednesday in Las Vegas, Amazon kicks off its first user conference, called AWS re: Invent.

Given the breadth of services it offers, Amazon is expected to be a major force in the cloud for the foreseeable future. But with its market-leading position comes questions about how the company runs its cloud, who is using it and what the future holds. From outages that have brought down Amazon services, to questions around the extent to which the company is seen as a trusted enterprise partner, AWS users and cloud watchers are keeping a close eye on the company…

November 28, 2012 Off

Will Cloud Computing Become a Regulated Industry?

By David

Grazed from BackupTechnology. Author: Editorial Staff.

The use of cloud services is becoming more and more common in businesses of all types and sizes. However, there are still many businesses who are reluctant to commit to cloud computing because of concerns, primarily over reliability and security. For many businesses, trusting a cloud provider with something essential to everyday business processes, such as a hosted exchange server or backup of essential data, is often the most difficult step to take. From this point of view, having a set of industry standards that can help to guide buyers is potentially very positive for customers and providers alike.

As the cloud computing industry picks up more momentum, some, like the Open Data Center Alliance, are promoting the idea that it should become a regulated industry. This would standardise services offered by cloud providers and would ensure customers could trust they were buying from a reputable company in what is a new and extremely fast growing sector of the IT industry…

November 28, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Software defined what?

By David

Grazed from The Age. Author: Trevor Clarke.

It’s the latest buzzword in the crowded IT dictionary: "software defined network", or SDN for short. But is it something Australian technology and business leaders need to worry about for 2013? Or can they comfortably ignore the industry hype and get back to their plans for mobile, social, cloud computing and big data?

The answer is one that consultants and analysts love to give: "it depends". It depends on whether you are a large telco, cloud computing provider, IT service provider or research institute operating a large or complex network: these are the likely candidates for early adoption of SDN…

November 28, 2012 Off

Boundary helps CIOs sleep better with cloud analytics features

By David

Grazed from ITWorld. Author: Mikael Ricknäs.

Boundary has added analytics features to its cloud monitoring service to give enterprises a better idea of how applications running on public clouds are performing and warn them when something starts to go wrong. Boundary is delivered as software-as-a-service and the new analytics features are being added this week, according to CEO Gary Read.

"The features will allow enterprises to start understanding what is normal for their cloud-based applications, including performance characteristics such as latency, response times and traffic patterns," Read said. When that has been established, Boundary can start to warn users when things start to go wrong…

November 28, 2012 Off

Will the Cloud Drive Up The Cost Of Cyber Insurance?

By David

Grazed from CRN. Author: Ken Presti.

International Computer Security Association Labs is working on a new initiative aimed at helping cyber liability insurance companies more accurately assess risk associated with cloud computing. An independent division of Verizon (NYSE:VZ), ICSA Labs has built a reputation around testing and certification criteria to measure product compliance and performance.

"We are teaming with the insurance industry to provide insurability certifications around cloud," explained Vinny Sakore, the organization’s program manager for cloud security. "This is a focus for 2013, and we expect to go public with an announcement sometime during the first quarter."…

November 28, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: OpenStack – An Overview

By David

Grazed from NetworkComputing. Author: Frank J. Ohlhorst.

Back in July 2010, Rackspace Hosting and NASA jointly launched a new open-source cloud initiative known as OpenStack. The ultimate goal was to enable any organization to create and offer cloud computing services that run on standard hardware. Since that date, approximately six revisions of OpenStack have been released, and more than 150 companies have signed up to support the platform.

Simply put, OpenStack is a "cloud operating system" designed for the data center. What’s more, OpenStack is also viewed as the kernel for cloud operations, on which vendors can build all sorts of software to run on in the cloud…