Category: News

August 22, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: The Love and Hate of OpenStack

By David

Grazed from CloudTimes. Author: Xath Cruz.

OpenStack is currently riding high on a momentum built up by Rackspace’s recent decision to rebrand themselves around the open source cloud project, along with long-running auction site eBay coming out and admitting that they are using the technology, but it’s not completely smooth sailing for Openstack, as there are still a number of skepticism in the industry over their governance and development models.

Openstack itself is an odd technology. It is well-received by the majority as it provides IT vendors and end users with an open cloud ecosystem that is robust enough to compete with closed source and commercial offerings, yet it still generates a lot of criticisms from people who question their governance model, and from people who pan its lack of maturity when compared to industry leaders such as Amazon’s AWS and VMWare. So, what’s the reason for Openstack’s ability to be so divisive and polarizing?…

August 22, 2012 Off

Workday Adds Time-tracking Module to Cloud HCM Software

By David

Grazed from CIO. Author: Chris Kanaracus.

Workday is expanding its cloud-based human resources and financial applications’ footprint with a new employee time-tracking module, the company announced Tuesday.

The new capabilities come as part of the SaaS (software as a service) vendor’s 17th release. Dubbed Workday Time Tracking, the module gives enterprises the ability to use "a single application to collect, process, and manage time and labor for their global workforce," Workday said in a statement.

It incorporates a calendar-style interface through which employees can submit information about their hours, as well as a "real-time calculation engine" that targets "critical data," such as overtime hours, Workday said…

August 22, 2012 Off

Achieving Cloud ROI – A How-To Guide

By David

Grazed from ITWire. Author: Beverley Head.

Established in the 1960s, ISACA (formerly known as the Information Systems Audit and Control Association) has released a guide to help organisations work out what the true return on investment will be from investments in the cloud.

According to the organisation there are hidden costs associated with cloud computing which need to be considered when assessing the benefits of cloud.

The guide which is available as a free download details a 12-step process that attempts to tackle the complexity of cloud computing and provide better insights regarding long-term costs and payback. It also makes the point that return on investment is not the only financial measure of success (or failure) and recommends organisations also consider calculating total cost of ownership, net present value and internal rate of return data before committing to a cloud investment…

August 22, 2012 Off

Amazon serves up Glacier: Slow moving storage for backup and archives

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Stacey Higgenbotham.

Amazon has added a new cloud offering dubbed Glacier, where for less than a penny per gigabyte per month users can store files that aren’t accessed very often. The new product could put the hurt on backup and recovery offerings from other vendors.
glacier

In its never-ending quest to deliver new features to the Amazon Web Services product portfolio, the online retailer has added a new storage service designed for archival and backup storage. AWS Glacier is cheap, slow and Amazon hopes startups find it the prefect place to put files that aren’t accessed very often. And if it takes off it could become a problem for the existing backup and recovery business (which is often the first offering many smaller telco cloud providers launch to customers)…

August 22, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing Is Leading The Outsourcing Market

By David

Grazed from CloudTweaks. Author: Seth Bernstein.

Cloud computing is revolutionizing the companies’ infrastructures. More and more companies are spending their outsourcing budget on purchasing cloud services. This helps them avoid hiring more people and save a fair amount of funds from their budgets. Research firms (including Gartner Inc.) have published figures that demonstrate the trend of cloud computing services in the IT outsourcing market.

On August 7th, 2012, Gartner Inc. said that out of $251.7 billion of total market of IT outsourcing, cloud computing services are the fastest-growing segment, having increased from $3.4 (2011) to $5 (2012). Currently, this is still insignificant when compared with the $251.7 billion market, but we can hope to see them as the leading area of IT outsourcing because of their high growth rate. Let’s take a look at some of the factors that have made cloud computing services so popular in the IT outsourcing sector…

August 22, 2012 Off

The Dark Side of Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from Virtualization Review. Author: Doug Barney.

The cloud is getting more and more worthy of your applications every day. But that doesn’t mean it’s perfect and that doesn’t mean you should necessarily trust it. I guess the question is, which network is less perfect, the cloud provider’s or yours?

These are issues Margaret Dawson tackled in Cloud Computing: Panacea or Power Monger on Enterprise Systems Journal. Dawson is a vice president with cloud provider Symform.

You should already understand your network’s weaknesses. Now let’s look at your provider’s presumed shortcomings…

August 22, 2012 Off

Dell Makes Moves to Survive in Cloud-Centric World

By David

Grazed from The New York Times. Author: Quentin Hardy.

Despite headwinds in its core business, Dell is trying hard to move into the new world of corporate computing.

On Tuesday, the company said that Marius Haas, a well-regarded executive with a noted history at Hewlett-Packard, would take over Dell’s Enterprise Solutions business, which sells the servers, network, and storage equipment for big corporate data centers and cloud computing systems.

It is a future that can’t come fast enough: Mr. Haas’s position was announced along with Dell’s second-fiscal-quarter earnings. Dell had net income of $732 million, or 42 cents a share, on revenue of $14.5 billion…

August 22, 2012 Off

BIM9 Creates Cloud Based Classroom for RTC

By David
Grazed from BIM9.  Author: PR Announcement
 

The BIM9 lab consisted of four of their private BIM cloud servers driving 21 rented MacBook Pros. Each BIM9 private BIM cloud server hosted five virtual machines with each virtual machine running its own session of Revit. The MacBooks were connected to these virtual machines with a standard RDP client. The result was a student experience of running Revit on high-powered workstations even though they were actually sitting at old, underpowered MAC laptops.

BIM9 has been developing and deploying private BIM clouds for clients throughout North America and Hawaii for a little over a year. “Although we had previously created private BIM clouds for classrooms this was the first time we did it for a conference lab,” said Lonnie Cumpton Business Development Manager and Co-founder of BIM9.

August 22, 2012 Off

PC Connection Achieves Cisco Cloud Builder Designation

By David
Grazed from PC Connection.  Author: PR Announcement

PC Connection, Inc. (NASDAQ: PCCC), a provider of a full range of information technology (IT) solutions to business, government, and education markets, today announced it has achieved the Cisco Cloud Builder designation within the Cisco Cloud Partner Program.

This designation recognizes PC Connection’s competencies to sell and implement Cisco end-to-end cloud solutions throughout its markets. As a Cisco designated Cloud Builder Partner, PC Connection has met the required competencies across all cloud infrastructure components (security, networking, compute, storage and virtualization solutions), cloud management applications, and a formal cloud professional services practice.

August 21, 2012 Off

Time to Make the Cloud Less Scary

By David

Grazed from Channelnomics. Author: Chris Gonsalves.

If it’s Tuesday, it must be time for another cloud computing survey telling us how cloud adoption rates continue to skyrocket.

Yes, businesses of all sizes and types covet the cloud for its ability to slash IT costs, introduce speedy services and make systems scalable and flexible. If researchers thought to ask, there would likely be data showing that the cloud can reduce wrinkles, trim ugly fat and raise the IQ level of the average CIO.

How hard could this really be? Cloud computing practically sells itself, right? Turns out, it’s tougher than it looks. For a technology that’s been dubbed the most important and disruptive of its generation, the cloud comes with more disclaimers than a frequent flyer program, and more caveats than the Irish Sweepstakes. Even the most optimistic surveys end with a “but” or “however” that takes some of the starch out of the whole happy affair. If cloud computing were a car, it would be a Toyota Celica with a rocket engine, handlebars, bicycle brakes – but no seat belts. Sure, it’s fast, but … Yeah, it’s cheap, but … Try selling that to one of your loyal customers…