Category: News

October 13, 2012 Off

An OpenStack Cloud in the Parking Lot

By David
Grazed from Barton’s Blog.  Author: Barton George.

You may see all manner of vehicles as you search for a parking spot when you arrive at work in the morning. But you may not expect to encounter a cloud. At Dell headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, the company has used space in one of its parking lots of house a Dell Modular Data Center (MDC), which will house Dell’s OpenStack-powered cloud computing platform and Apache Hadoop solutions for customers to test-drive. It’s an interesting example of how modular units can allow companies to use available space on corporate camouses to expand their IT operations.

Read more from the source @ http://bartongeorge.net/2012/09/11/mdc-in-our-parking-lot-serving-up-openstack-hadoop/
 

October 13, 2012 Off

How Will Salesforce Adapt To The Next Platform Shift: Mobile Computing?

By David

Grazed from TechCrunch.  Author: Bruce Cleveland.

Most of us are familiar with the adage by George Santayana, who, in his biography said, ”Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” You may recognize it as, “Those who ignore history are bound to repeat it.” Either way, I agree.

This truism is applicable to the high-tech industry, specifically when it is applied against transformational technologies. For example, the change from mainframe computing to client-server computing. Or, for those of you old enough to remember, the move from Codasyl databases to relational databases. Companies that remain steadfastly adhered to old architectures (e.g. ADR or Cullinet – who were unassailable technology giants in the early 80’s) are eventually upended and replaced by companies with new technology architectures (e.g. Oracle)…

October 13, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: The Future of Workload Management

By David
Grazed from HPCWire.  Author: Chad Harrington.

The essayist Paul Valery once quipped, "The trouble with our times is that the future is not what it used to be." Surely, there is truth in that. The future of workload management continues to evolve; it is definitely not what it used to be.

As we look toward the future of workload management, we see three major trends: application insight, big data awareness, and HPC clouds. The trends are inter-related and we’ll discuss each in turn.

Application Insight

First, workload managers need to have greater insight into the applications they run. The more deeply the workload manager can understand the workload, the more efficiently it can schedule, manage, and adapt the computing environment. Today’s workload managers understand basic workload requirements and can track an application’s progress. However, there is more that can be done. In the future, we’ll see more emphasis on understanding an application’s purpose and key metrics. If the workload manager understands the application’s current and future needs, it can make much more optimal decisions. Metrics such as I/O bandwidth, memory allocation, storage space, CPU and GPU cycles, etc., all help the workload manager understand an application in order to optimally manage it…

October 13, 2012 Off

Amazon claims 300 US government customers for AWS

By David
Grazed from Computing.co.uk.  Author: Graeme Burton.

Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon.com’s cloud services division, has claimed that more than 300 government agencies and 1,500 education institutions in the US are now using AWS for a wide variety of uses including "big data" analytics, high-performance computing applications, web and collaboration applications, archiving and storage, and disaster relief.

Teresa Carlson, vice-president of worldwide public sector, AWS, attributed the rate of adoption to such federal government initiatives as the US Federal Cloud First mandate. "With the new services and features added today in AWS GovCloud, public-sector customers now have greater capabilities to rapidly design, build and deploy high-performance applications with AWS’s scalable, secure, low-cost platform," she said…

October 13, 2012 Off

Brocade Powers Up Its Cloud Network Efforts with Piston OpenStack

By David

Grazed from Enterprise Networking Planet.  Author: Sean Michael Kerner.

There is a lot of interest an activity around the open source OpenStack cloud project from all types of IT vendors, including networking vendors. One of those vendors is Brocade, who is now partnering with Piston Cloud Computing to build a joint solution set.

The partnership will see the Brocade VCS Fabric melded to a Piston Cloud designed OpenStack platform. Piston Cloud is a commercial vendor building its own OpenStack distribution. With OpenStack and its included Quantum network virtualization components the line will be begin to blur between Software Defined Networking (SDN) and the cloud…

October 13, 2012 Off

Can Oracle Thrive In Cloud Computing?

By David
Grazed from Seeking Alpha.  Author:  Cris Frangold.

During the OpenWorld 2012 conference, Oracle (ORCL) announced its Oracle Public Cloud service that will provide on-premise web hosting and management or strictly cloud computing using remote servers to businesses. To enter this growing market quickly, Oracle acquired a number of small startups over the past year with plans to integrate some of its existing products into the new service.

Acquisitions included Taleo and SelectMinds; both of which provided contact management services to businesses. Instead of building a cloud computing service from scratch like it had originally intended, Oracle decided to acquire several small companies and combine products into one offering…

October 12, 2012 Off

VMworld Europe 2012: Key highlights and technology takeaways

By David

Grazed from ComputerWeekly. Author: Archana Venkatraman.

Software defined datacentres, cloud management and automation, virtualisation licensing, mobile virtualisation, heterogeneity and the need for IT executives to develop new skills in the cloud era were some of the themes of the VMworld Europe 2012 conference.

“Cloud is a disruptive technology,” said VMware’s new chief executive Pat Gelsinger, in his opening keynote, setting the tone of the Right Here, Right Now conference, heavily focused on cloud computing’s role in datacentres and its automation…

October 12, 2012 Off

Expect To Save Millions In The Cloud? Prove It

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: John Foley.

The General Service Administration, in justifying its decision two years ago to adopt Google’s cloud services for email and collaboration, projected it would save $15 million over five years. Now, an internal audit has found that evidence of those anticipated savings is lacking.

GSA’s inspector general recently released the results of its audit of the agency’s transition from Lotus Notes to Google Apps for 17,000 employees. Unisys is the lead contractor on that part of the project. In a related move, GSA awarded a five-year contract to Salesforce.com to use its Force.com service to support the Notes migration. GSA’s undertaking is significant because it’s one of Uncle Sam’s first big steps into the cloud. The agency became the first "to move its entire staff to a single cloud-based email system," according to the inspector general…

October 12, 2012 Off

How Cloud Computing Could Be the Future of Education

By David

Grazed from The Huffinton Post. Author: Naibo Yu.

In a Chinese classroom, a teacher needs to face more than 20 students and sometimes up to 60. These students, and their parents, will always want to get the most attention from the teacher.
This is an educational challenge faced by schools the world over, which in China, we’re turning to technology to tackle.

In 2008, with a start up loan from Youth Business China (a member of the global charity network), Youth Business International, I founded HowLang Group – part of a new wave of educational tools, social learning, where technology is used to help break down the barriers of the school walls and improve learning. At this time, our product was just in the design phase, struggling for investment, so the loan was crucial to helping us progress…

October 12, 2012 Off

The ABCs of Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from the Huffington Post. Author: Steve Hamby.

You can’t engage in a conversation about IT today without hearing having cloud computing dropped in the first two sentences. But behind that term is an overwhelming number of types, issues, solutions, and architectures to consider and digest. The world could benefit from a translation of sorts to explain to the cloud non-experts all this IT mumbo-jumbo. Here’s my attempt.

Multiple Cloud Types

It’s common to envision "the Cloud" as one huge computer network hoarding gobs of information. However, there are many clouds and even different types of clouds, each suitable for different types of problems. Specific features and benefits of cloud types should affect decisions in developing and deploying cloud solutions. And sometimes one cloud type isn’t enough, and multiple cloud types need to be combined to solve a problem. For example, a utility cloud often provides the core computing resources needed for data and storage clouds. Here is a closer look at four of the most common types of clouds that I encounter in enterprises…