Category: News

November 26, 2012 Off

Netflix open sources tool for making cloud services play nice

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Derrick Harris.

Netflix has forged a cottage industry building tools to fill gaps in Amazon’s cloud infrastructure or otherwise add value to it. Now the company is open sourcing its Hystrix libraries, which manage interactions between the myriad distributed services that power its applications.

Netflix, it seems, is to cloud computing what Google and Facebook are to distributed systems, generally. Today, Netflix has open sourced its latest technology for keeping its cloud-hosted applications running — a set of libraries, called Hystrix, that is designed to manage interactions between the myriad services that comprise the company’s distributed architecture. If you’re building service-oriented architectures in the Amazon Web Services cloud, it might be worth a look…

November 26, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Amazon enjoys big “etail” lead as Cyber Monday hits

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

New Deepfield analysis out just after Black Friday and in time for Cyber Monday shows (spoiler alert!) Amazon is by far the most popular online retail site. But there are some surprises as well. Just in time for Cyber Monday, Deepfield released new numbers ranking online retail sites based on their traffic. Some of the results are surprising (Shopify, which offers an ecommerce platform for e-commerce sites, shows pretty good numbers); some less so (Amazon remains by far the largest and busiest site).

Deepfield, which offers services to build, manage and optimize network infrastructure, studied online shopping infrastructure by sampling internet backbone traffic across a “large cross section of North America and multiple collaborating infrastructure and internet providers.” The goal: To estimate how many users hit these sites daily and determine market share of the sites based on those numbers…

November 26, 2012 Off

iCIMS Receives 2012 Cloud Computing Excellence Award

By David

Grazed from PRNewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

iCIMS, a leading provider of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) talent acquisition software solutions for growing businesses, announced today that TMCnet, a global, integrated media company, has named the iCIMS Talent Platform a 2012 Cloud Computing Excellence Award winner.

The Cloud Computing Excellence Awards recognizes companies that have most effectively leveraged cloud computing in their efforts to bring new, differentiated offerings to market. In addition to iCIMS, this year’s winners included Citrix Online Services Division, EarthLink, Inc., and iCIMS NOW customer Enghouse Interactive. "TMC is proud to announce iCIMS, Inc. as a recipient of the second annual Cloud Computing Excellence Award," said Rich Tehrani, CEO, TMC. "The iCIMS Talent Platform has demonstrated innovation as well as the ability to improve the cloud," Tehrani concluded…

November 26, 2012 Off

Trains, Planes, Automobiles, Boats and Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from TelecomReseller. Author: Jeff Owen.

I’m a member of several online discussion groups so get regular updates on a variety of topics. One conversation that has been going on for awhile was started with this question, “I hear a lot about the cloud and cloud computing. Can someone explain to me what that is?” This came from a telecommunications professional within a discussion group for same. It got me thinking that some of our readers may be asking the same question, and we should provide an answer.

This is a natural question coming from someone either new to the profession or unfamiliar with data communications and nuances of emerging technologies. As a telephony professional or vendor, you may be asking why this is important to you. My answer is simple. The day of separate telecommunications or network disciplines is rapidly disappearing…

November 26, 2012 Off

Eucalyptus update makes its techie cloud easier to use

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

With this update to its open-source cloud, Eucalyptus focuses on better usability, a web-based user console, better reporting tools and key bug fixes to harden the cloud foundation for production use, says CEO Marten Mickos.

With its third major update in 12 months, open source cloud-software company Eucalyptus has added a graphical user interface and better reporting tools to its open-source cloud, and has hardened the underlying engine to make it more robust for production use. A pioneer in the private-cloud arena, Eucalyptus now finds itself competing other open source projects such as CloudStack and OpenStack, as well as with VMware’s vCloud Director…

November 26, 2012 Off

Irish Govt injects €5m into IC4 cloud computing research centre at DCU

By David

Grazed from SiliconRepublic. Author: John Kennedy.

With the intention of turning ideas into new start-ups and jobs, Ireland’s Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation Richard Bruton, TD, has unveiled the new €5m Irish Centre for Cloud Computing and Commerce (IC4) at DCU. The purpose of the new centre is to accelerate the development and adoption of cloud computing in Ireland.

The IC4 operation is jointly supported by Enterprise Ireland and IDA Ireland and is the 11th Government-funded technology centre to be established in Ireland. The centre is also guided by an industry panel including Fujitsu, Intel, IBM and Microsoft. It will be based at DCU but will be supported with additional research capabilities from UCC and Athlone Institute of Technology…

November 26, 2012 Off

Google Adds Cloud Infrastructure Muscle Vs. Amazon

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Charles Babcock.

In a bid to capture more cloud customers, Google has reduced prices on its existing virtual servers by 5% and added 36 selections to the four previously available in its Compute Engine server catalog.

Google seeks to put more muscle behind its infrastructure-as-a-service offerings since Compute Engine was first announced as "a limited preview offering" during the Google I/O 2012 show in June. It’s still in limited preview, i.e., a beta test through customers, with no date in sight for when it will become a generally available product, said Shailesh Rao, director of new products and solutions in the Google Enterprise unit…

November 26, 2012 Off

10 Cloud Computing Pioneers

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Charles Babcock.

It’s hard to write history when you’re still in the thick of recording it. However, in cloud computing we’ve amassed just enough background to name some of the early pioneers who’ve helped establish the relatively new computing paradigm.

The list is neither exhaustive nor all inclusive. And, undoubtedly, there will be other lists, highlighting other quiet innovators whose names we’re just beginning to hear, and whose accomplishments will be well-known in the coming years. But for IT managers in the midst of considering or adopting cloud computing, this list offers a commentary on where we have so recently come from, and where we may be going in the near future…

November 26, 2012 Off

Cloud computing’s lack of transparency – an update

By David

Grazed from EnterpriseIrregulars. Author: Tom Raftery.

We have been talking on GreenMonk about the lack of transparency from Cloud vendors for some time now, but our persistence is starting to pay off, it appears! Some recent conversations we’ve had with people in this space are starting to prove very positive.

We’ve had talks with GreenQloud. GreenQloud are based in Iceland, so their electricity is 100% renewable (30% geothermal and 70% hydro). They already measure and report to their customers the carbon footprint of their cloud consumption – so what discussions did we have with them? Well, GreenQloud use the open source CloudStack platform to manage their cloud infrastructure. Given that CloudStack is open source, and we’ve previously suggested that Open Source Cloud Platforms should be hacked for Energy and Emissions reporting, we suggested to GreenQloud that they contribute their code back into the CloudStack project. They were very open to the idea. Watch this space…

November 26, 2012 Off

Cloud computing gains steam, but questions remain

By David

Grazed from Mibiz. Author: Mike Brennan.

Cloud computing offers a lot of promise for business, particularly small-to-medium ones, to not only save money on IT spending, but also to rapidly scale up for important Internet advertising campaigns and the like. But a recent survey also shows there remains a lot of confusion among business executives on what cloud computing brings to the table.

The survey, “The Future of Cloud Computing,” showed only 40 percent of respondents are experimenting with cloud computing today, while another 26 percent said they are waiting for the market to mature before taking the plunge…