Category: News

November 19, 2012 Off

Citrix – Open platforms will win cloud race

By David
Grazed from BusinessTimes.  Author: Amit Roy Choudhury.

OPEN platforms will win in the cloud since they were born out of the innovations and foundations of open source. Unlike previous generations of computing, this cloud computing build-out will be led by technologies that were first proven at scale in large production clouds such Facebook, Zynga, Netflix and Google, then made available to customers of all sizes under an open-source licence.

Sharing his thoughts on this subject, Citrix’ Peder Ulander notes that everyone stands to benefit if they apply cloud computing in the areas where it makes sense…

November 19, 2012 Off

Barriers In Cloud Computing Adoption

By David
Grazed from CloudTweaks.  Author: Abdul Salam.

Though cloud computing is largely considered as the future of enterprise and consumer computing, it is not without its drawbacks and flaws that would prevent those with really special needs to adopt cloud computing into their business or organization. The cloud delivery mechanism, the internet, is leading to new and somewhat questionable revenue streams which are fraught with uncertainty, complexity, and have different privacy and tax compliance depending on the location and this is boggling the minds of users and providers alike.

So let us look at some major problems that inhibit the adoption of cloud computing in some IT organizations…

November 19, 2012 Off

Firm with roots in Cebu delivers top-class cloud solution

By David
Grazed from Sun.star.  Author: Max Limpag.

FOR a country like the Philippines, which has high power cost, the cloud computing solution developed by a company that was incubated in Cebu is a cost-efficient solution.  “It’s the most power-efficient cloud platform. That’s important because in the Philippines we have among the highest costs of power,” Morphlabs co-founder Winston Damarillo said during an interview last Friday.  “It’s best in class, better than anybody else by 1/2,” he said.

The private cloud solution, mCloud Helix, is now available worldwide through a partnership with Dell, the world’s third largest PC seller according to Gartner. It’s being used by Media Temple, one of the world’s top web hosting companies…

November 19, 2012 Off

How to Build a Secure Cloud Environment

By David
Grazed from CloudTimes.  Author: Saroj Kar.

Symantec has presented its vision for a secure, agile and efficient cloud. Within five years, companies would operate in a world of cloud, virtualization and mobile computing, converged IT; a world in which the cloud will be much more secure.

Today, cloud computing technologies are changing rapidly. A survey conducted by Symantec reveals that 23% of the information of companies around the world is currently stored in public, private and hybrid cloud. Sophisticated cyber-attacks so far launched against governments or entities will be targeted at data center with high profitability and high profile cloud. In the face of these new challenges, companies of all sizes will need a rigorous approach to the cloud and leading technology partners that can help them navigate through the complexities of the cloud.  To remain secure in the face of such new challenges, Symantec defines a ‘safe cloud‘ vision to help companies to successfully migrate into safe cloud environment…

November 18, 2012 Off

How a 2012 Presidential Campaign Ran on Amazon’s Cloud

By David

Grazed from Forbes. Author: Joe McKendrick.

Cloud computing is pitched as a great solution for applications that are temporary or run on bursty workloads. What could be more temporary and bursty than a political campaign? Amazon’s Jeff Barr just revealed that President Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign’s technology was running on the cloud — Amazon Web Services’ cloud, to be exact.

“The campaign’s technology team built, deployed, ran, and scaled up their applications on AWS,” Barr reports at the AWS blogsite. “The campaign used AWS to avoid an IT investment that would have run into the tens of millions of dollars.”…

November 18, 2012 Off

Why monopolies and commoditization would pollute the cloud

By David

Graze from GigaOM. Author: Mark Thiele.

There’s a common assumption that the Cloud’s destiny is to be a public utility. Mark Thiele, of data center operator Switch, argues that would kill competition and innovation, and that IT can be a better option. One of the prevailing assumptions around the cloud computing market is that it will drive towards an über-simplified delivery model that is similar to a utility. Further, this utility model will largely remove the potential for differentiation by most vendors and will lead to a race to the bottom from a pricing perspective.

There is ample evidence commoditization is occurring, and we could point to almost any area of IT to see it, from servers, PCs, virtualization, storage, networking, and so on. However, what is often lost in the obvious is that it’s not that simple…

November 17, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Cisco & Dell acquisitions bring datacenter automation center stage

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: David Chernicoff.

Automation software for IT has always been an important, if low profile, part of the IT management tool box. Building automation sequences using software tools to make IT tasks that were formerly complex series of steps to accomplish regular tasks has always been a highlight of the capabilities of automation tools. But with the move towards cloud computing and on-demand provisioning of cloud services, automation moves from the category of nice to have to absolutely critical for success.

Fewer things could make the importance of automation tools in successful cloud management more clear than the acquisition this week by Dell and Cisco of companies known for their automation and cloud management tools. Cisco announced that it would be acquiring Cloupia, known for their datacenter management software and Dell announced the acquisition of Gale Technologies, a datacenter ISV known for their datacenter infrastructure automation software and cloud provisioning and monitoring software. Gale Technologies has been a Cisco partner, but with Cisco’s acquisition of Cloupia, being acquired by Dell might have been the best outcome for the company…

November 16, 2012 Off

Dell acquires key software provider

By David

Grazed from Statesman.com. Author: Editorial Staff.

Dell Inc. said Friday it had bought Gale Technologies, a leading provider of management software that eases the the setup of diverse computing operations. Gale, founded in 2008, is based in Santa Clara, Calif., and builds software that enables companies to easily manage data operations in multiple kinds of cloud computing installations. No terms of the deal were disclosed and Dell would not say how many people Gale employs.

Analyst Patrick Moorhead with Moor Insights & Strategies said Gale gives Dell an important piece that it lacked in selling and deploying big cloud computing systems. That’s because Gale’s software lets companies track their data across multiple locations, whether it is in a private customer-owned cloud or in a public cloud that is shared with multiple companies…

November 16, 2012 Off

Getting to the Cloud Quicker – Webinar hosted by HP

By David

Grazed from CIO. Author: Editorial Staff.

Webinar hosted by HP. We live in an age of digital fluidity, where technology has made it possible for people to stay connected to any network, anywhere, through any device. The explosion in rich media applications and innovations in virtualization, cloud computing and most recently Software-Defined Networking (SDN) — are changing the way business is conducted and impacting the way organizations view networking.

Join IDG Enterprise Editor, Joyce Chutchian, and networking experts from Hewlett-Packard in this roundtable discussion. In addition to exploring the IT trends driving this fundamental shift, the experts will discuss emerging technology, real-world use cases for SDN capabilities and best practices that will allow you apply business logic to network behavior in a dynamic fashion…

November 16, 2012 Off

Cloud adoption: Why you have to get the measure of scalability

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Lori MacVittie.

Surveys, polls, research — organisations conduct all three to try to take the pulse of the market and understand where a particular technology might be in terms of adoption. This is the second year that Northbridge Ventures conducted its Future of Cloud Computing survey and, like most cloud-related surveys, the results offer up interesting titbits in terms of trends and data points — especially when compared with previous years’ findings.

The inhibitors remain fairly constant — security still tops the list — but the drivers have changed over the past year. Where last year agility topped the chart, followed closely by scalability and cost factors, this year scalability moved past agility and cost actually decreased in significance as a driver for the cloud. What’s interesting and frustrating about these kinds of summary surveys is the lack of definition of categories. Scalability and agility are as nebulous and open to interpretation as security, which makes it difficult to understand exactly what aspect of cloud is driving or inhibiting adoption…