Category: News

October 15, 2012 Off

Salesforce.com Announces Cloudforce New York, the Largest Enterprise Cloud Computing Event on the East Coast

By David

Grazed from PRNewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

Salesforce.com [NYSE: CRM], the enterprise cloud computing company, today announced Cloudforce New York—the largest enterprise cloud computing event on the East Coast. The event will take place Oct. 19 at the Javits Center in New York City, where Chairman and CEO Marc Benioff will deliver a keynote on how companies are transforming their businesses for the social revolution.

More than 10,000 attendees are expected to register to be inspired at Cloudforce, as industry leaders including General Electric and Toyota reveal how social, mobile and cloud technologies are enabling them to connect with their customers, partners, employees—and even products—in entirely new ways. With more than 30 sessions and 80 cloud companies in the expo, attendees can attend visionary keynotes, participate in interactive sessions, see hundreds of live demos and join in unparalleled networking opportunities…

October 15, 2012 Off

How Big Data And Cloud Computing Are Pushing Networks to the Brink

By David

Grazed from AllThingsDigital. Author: Arik Hesseldahl.

A lot is expected of corporate networks these days. Companies are trying to add new services and support new devices. There’s always more data that has to keep flowing, more stuff being connected to it. And the network is expected to perform, no matter what. Now there are about five billion devices connected to the Internet and billions of individual users, all expecting their networks to perform.

The folks at Juniper Networks started to wonder if the world of networking has reached some kind of fundamental inflection point. They got together with the people at Forrester Research and surveyed 150 senior IT executives to try to get a better handle on how big trends facing the enterprise, like cloud computing and big data, are affecting enterprise networks…

October 15, 2012 Off

New OpenStack clouds mean something for everyone

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

If there isn’t an OpenStack cloud you fancy, wait a second, there’s more — a lot more — in the pipeline. Cloudscaling, Metacloud and Dreamhost will all preview their take on the open-source cloud this week at the OpenStack Summit in San Diego.

Don’t fret if the OpenStack clouds now available from Hewlett-Packard, Rackspace, Internap and a handful of private-cloud-centric startups don’t suit your need. There will be more options to choose from very shortly. This week at the OpenStack Summit in San Diego, new flavors of the open-source cloud will be unveiled by Cloudscaling, Dreamhost and Metacloud, among others. Here’s a roundup of some of the noteworthy news:…

October 15, 2012 Off

Data centres without walls – where Cloud and Big Data meets

By David

Grazed from Business Cloud9. Author: Mervyn Kelly.

Big Data is gradually becoming the next big trend in the ICT world. While it is still only nascent and many of its technical specifications are yet to emerge, one can already imagine the numerous ways in which the huge sets of largely unstructured data that exist today and will be created in the future can be used to our advantage.

In fact, the application of Big Data technologies is likely to become pertinent in every aspect of our daily lives; retail, healthcare, transport – all of these will benefit from the ability to better understand all the myriad transactions and interactions consumers have with technology throughout the day…

October 15, 2012 Off

Is cloud computing always the greenest option for SMEs?

By David

Grazed from CloudComputing News. Author: James Bourne.

A new report has suggested that cloud computing is generally a better option than on-premise when looking to save energy, but it isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution. The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), alongside WSP Environment and Energy looked at how on-premise computing compared to the cloud in terms of energy efficiency – in particular power usage effectiveness (PUE) of the server room or data centre; how much of the server’s hardware is utilised; and carbon emissions.

Overall it was revealed that while running an app in the cloud is generally more energy efficient than running it in your server room, variables such as PUE and hardware utilisation are vital to cloud’s carbon footprint…

October 15, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Japanese virtualization start-up Midokura invades the USA

By David

Grazed from ComputerWorld. Author: Jim Duffy.

Midokura, a Japanese startup focused on network virtualization, this week said it is entering the U.S. market with a distributed software defined network product designed for Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS).

The companys MidoNet software virtualizes the network for multi-tenant public and private cloud computing, and supports the industry-defined OpenStack platform for cloud computing virtualization, automation and orchestration. MidoNet is a de-centralized software overlay where network intelligence resides in the edge rather than in a centralized controller, which is the common architecture for SDNs…

October 15, 2012 Off

Cloud Fever Grips Oracle

By David

Grazed from Financial Express. Author: Sudhir Chowdhary.

It generates about $1 billion annual revenue from Web-based software solutions and boasts of 25 million users of its cloud products. It now wants to become a one-stop shop, offering operating systems, databases, computer programs as well as computing infrastructure over the Web. Emerging markets are integral to its growth strategy and the Silicon Valley tech major is moving aggressively in India in terms of investments and positioning its products and solutions for customers here

Not long ago, the founder and chief executive of Oracle, Larry Ellison, had famously mocked cloud computing, terming it as “complete gibberish and a fad.” His outburst came in 2008 to be precise, in response to repeated queries from trade analysts. Seasoned industry watchers attributed the tech billionaire’s annoyance to the hype and hullabaloo around cloud computing than the concept itself. That was then…

October 15, 2012 Off

Apple iPad app pushes the location-based cloud

By David
Grazed from ComputerWeekly.  Author: Adrian Bridgwater.

Location-based service (LBS) technology has been growing in line with the development of both the mobile devices we use to connect and the wider proliferation of cloud computing services which we seek to connect into.  Traditionally, location services fall into two types:

PUSH LBS: location services can be push-based e.g. alerts sent to users when they pass into pre-specified geographic areas such as restaurants or shops etc.

PULL (or QUERY) LBS: location services can be pulled e.g. alerts sent to users in response to queries they make related to where they are…

October 15, 2012 Off

The cloud era is not about software

By David
Grazed from TechGoondu.  Author:  Aaron Tan.

Packaged software vendors may be starting to offer cloud-computing services in recent years, but their transition to a services-based business will be difficult to achieve, says CloudBees CEO Sacha Labourey.

“They are software vendors, not services vendors. Everything about those companies in terms of sales compensation and business models supports the software model,” he told Techgoondu in a telephone interview from Switzerland last month.  “The cloud era is a services era, not a software era,” he said.

While vendors such as Red Hat and VMware have been touting cloud software that allows businesses to create their private platform as a service (PaaS), Labourey said such offerings only serve to satisfy the needs of IT managers who are in denial about the benefits of the public cloud…

October 13, 2012 Off

How Cloud Computing is Affecting Everyone

By David
Grazed from CloudTimes.org.  Author: Florence de Borja.

With the current popularity cloud computing is experiencing, it is not surprising to expect that it will have a great impact on the global economy. In fact, according to the International Data Corporation, it is expected for cloud computing to generate at least 14 million jobs worldwide. In a recent Forbes article by Joe McKendrick, he pointed out 5 ways in which cloud computing will change how businesses are implemented. According to him, cloud computing will also indirectly affect jobs.

In McKendrick’s article “5 Ways Cloud Computing Is Disrupting Everyone’s Job”, he noted that because procurement of cloud computing resources can be done through a credit card, everyone can have access to it. And with that access, it is highly probable that IT will no longer be limited to a particular IT department only. Instead, the IT professionals will be part of each department using cloud computing. According to McKendrick, executives within the lines of business have greater IT budgets than their counterparts in the IT department. But, it doesn’t mean that IT executives will be eased out of companies. These IT executives will be advising the businesses as well as offer tactical and strategic guidance so that line-of-business executives can identify and select the suitable resources for their departments…