Category: News

October 12, 2012 Off

Asus looks to expand global cloud presence

By David

Grazed from DataCenter Dynamics. Author: Penny Jones.

Building on its current cloud computing operations, Asustek Computer – or Asus – which produces computers and provides personal cloud services, plans to build three more data centers around the world.

It has earmarked the US, Europe and Northern China for its new cloud computing centers, according to a report by the Focus Taiwan News Channel, which covered a speech given by Andy Huang, the Asus Asia Subsidiary’s director at a cloud computing forum in Taiwan…

October 12, 2012 Off

Synchronizing The Cloud: The Rise Of HTML5 And WebDesktop Platforms

By David

Grazed from CloudTweaks. Author: John Omwamba.

The new kid on the block is a rather interesting one known as personal cloud computing. It is a contradictory statement because as it allows one to cultivate individual freedom with one’s device, it also taps into a plethora of public resources in remote servers. In other words, while it helps to personalize individual pleasures, it uses multi-device networking as the stepping stone.

The WebDesktop is a classic example of this platform: it allows users to manage software functions online and offline without having to set up any programs. It also helps to synchronize apps in computers and stats in cell phones devoid of any brand restrictions because they are all open source. Need one say that it helps to run simultaneous gadgets on the desktop because unlimited space is on the web? That marks it public face. The personal face lies in the simple fact that it synchronizes all functions that an individual with an affinity for infotainment would require without buying expensive equipment. One can play live games, trade in futures, network and do virtually everything that personality can allow…

October 12, 2012 Off

How to get your first cloud computing job

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: David Linthicum.

Cloud computing is expanding rapidly, with an accompanying need for for cloud computing "experts" to make this technology work. That translates into many new jobs chasing very few qualified candidates. At the same time, many IT professionals are attempting to figure out how they can cash in on the cloud.

Most of the cloud jobs to be found these days require deep knowledge around a particular technology, such as Amazon Web Services, OpenStack, Salesforce.com, or Azure. This is typically due to the fact that the company has standardized on a cloud technology. I call these jobs cloud technology specialists, in that they focus on a specific cloud technology: development, implementation, management, and so on…

October 12, 2012 Off

The Greening of the Cloud

By David

Grazed from IEEE TechTalk. Author: Tekla Perry.

An abundance of cheap, renewable energy, particularly hydropower and geothermal, has drawn aluminum smelters to Iceland. It’s become an industry that already consumes five times as much electricity as the country’s residents, and more aluminum plants are on the drawing board—raising concerns about how much the country’s economy is relying on one industry.

Meanwhile, there is another fast-growing, power-hungry industry in the world: cloud computing and storage. “The cloud” seems so light and fluffy, but building a cloud involves huge clunky buildings full of servers. Just one of these server farms, according to an April report by Greenpeace, can consume the energy equivalent of 180 000 homes. The companies that run them do their best to be efficient, because high energy costs hurt profits—and also, in some cases at least, because of a corporate commitment to the environment. The April Greenpeace report praised Yahoo and Google for “prioritizing access to renewable energy in their cloud expansion” but criticized Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft for rapidly expanding their clouds “without adequate regard to source of electricity,” relying “heavily on dirty energy.”…

October 12, 2012 Off

Exclusive: Comcast casts its lot with OpenStack

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

The nation’s biggest broadband and cable provider is joining the OpenStack Foundation, just in time for it’s big coming out party in San Diego next week. Comcast is also working with Cisco on applications that can build on that open-source infrastructure.

Updated: Comcast, the nation’s largest cable company, is now aboard the OpenStack cloud effort having joined the OpenStack Foundation as a member, a Comcast spokeswoman confirmed on Thursday. That’s a big win for for OpenStack before the Foundation’s big coming out party at the OpenStack Summit next week in San Diego…

October 11, 2012 Off

Inktank Partners With Citrix to Support Ceph Distributed Storage in CloudPlatform

By David
Grazed from Inktank.  Author: PR Announcement
 
Inktank, the only company to provide enterprise-level support for the Ceph Distributed Storage System, today announced that it has partnered with Citrix Systems, Inc. to provide support for Ceph as a key component of Citrix CloudPlatform. CloudPlatform is Citrix’s commercially supported cloud orchestration system based on Apache CloudStack (incubating), a leading open-source cloud computing project into which Ceph has been integrated. The integration enables Ceph, a massively scalable distributed storage system with no single point of failure, to provide primary block storage for Apache CloudStack and Citrix CloudPlatform.
 
Launching later this year, Apache CloudStack 4.0 will be the first Apache release of CloudStack to integrate Ceph’s distributed storage platform to provide highly scalable and flexible virtual block storage for enterprises and developers.
 
October 11, 2012 Off

BMC Software Expands Global Alliance With Amazon Web Services, Delivers Packaged Cloud Solutions for the Enterprise

By David
Grazed from BMC.  Author: PR Announcement
 
BMC Software has expanded its long-standing global alliance with Amazon Web Services (AWS) to deliver a complete cloud services and cloud management portfolio that will give enterprise customers fast, flexible and powerful access to the power of the AWS cloud.
 
As part of the expanded alliance, BMC will work closely with AWS to offer packaged "JumpStart" solutions that consist of BMC licenses, AWS cloud services, Professional Services and Support. In addition, the companies will work together on deeper product integration and go-to-market activities.
 
October 11, 2012 Off

Prediction: Could the Cloud Expand Human Brain Capacity?

By David

Grazed from HotHardware. Author: Seth Colaner.

You have to love the ideas that spill forth from a good futurist such as Ray Kurzweil, who recently remarked at an event that the cloud is potentially capable of expanding human brain capacity. The “cloud” is a computing revolution (or evolution, or devolution, depending on who you ask) wherein data, programs, and more are decentralized from the machine sitting in front of you to a data farm at some remote location where everything is served up to users and accessed over the Internet. Or put another way, the cloud stores data–all of the data, really–which people can easily access with a computing device and an Internet connection.

Metaphorically, our brainpower has already been immensely expanded by the paradigm of remotely stored data that is easily accessible. Just take the search engine as an example; before the ability to search the Internet and it’s deep wealth of knowledge, the simplest bits of information were frustratingly elusive…

October 11, 2012 Off

FileSpirit lets mobile workers remotely access their files

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Ryan Kim.

Not every business wants to store their files in the cloud. FileSpirit, a German company, is launching a new service by the same name that lets companies give their mobile workers remote access to company files and databases through a mobile file browser.

While companies are increasingly storing more of their files in the cloud, not every business is ready to go that route. For those customers who just want to provide private mobile file access to their mobile workers, FileSpirit is trying to be that tool…

October 11, 2012 Off

Doctor’s orders: Healthcare in the cloud

By David

Klickstein is certainly open to the idea of using the cloud, but so far CHA’s IT investments, though working with management firm Egenera, have been around optimizing the IT infrastructure behind the company’s firewall. The hospital has decreased the number of servers CHA uses through virtualization, and has automated as many processes as possible, including daily backups…

Read more from the source @ http://www.networkworld.com/news/2012/101112-healthcare-cloud-263293.html?hpg1=bn