Category: News

August 14, 2012 Off

5 Companies to Play the Cloud-Computing Revolution

By David

Grazed from DailyFinance. Author: Sean Williams.

You know the old saying about how an idea is the greatest thing since sliced bread? Well, cloud computing really is the best thing to happen to the tech sector since Al Gore invented the Internet.

OK, so that’s a joke that’ll never die, but according to estimates from Cisco Systems, global data-center IP traffic is expected to increase by a compound annual growth rate of 33% between now and 2015, with cloud workloads increasing to 57% of all data-center workloads by 2015 from just 21% in 2010. These figures are as real as its gets, and they demonstrate that the movement toward data sharing and storage is huge and rapidly transforming both large and small businesses.

With so much money being invested in virtualization, storage, and data transmission in the cloud, today I want to look at five different ways you can put your money to work in this segment for the long term…

August 14, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Parallel Evolution, Not Revolution

By David
Grazed from DrDobbs.  Author: James Reinders.

When Herb Sutter told us in 2005 that our free lunch was gone, he helped spur a rash of predictions that parallelism would take over and serial programming heretics would soon be burned at the stake. Backed by the evidence of multicore processors becoming ubiquitous, the air of truth in urgent calls to action for parallelism led to me being quoted saying "Parallel or Perish." (It made for a very popular t-shirt.)

Seven years later, it is not unreaasonable to ask whether parallel code will ever be embraced as Dr. Dobb’s editor Andrew Binstock did last month. Since it seems like little has changed, we might even suggest that the earlier pronouncements were all a case of irrational exuberance. This suggestion then degenerates to the conclusion that parallelism on a universal scale is a failure and never meant to be…

August 14, 2012 Off

Cloud is HR’s Best New Friend

By David

Grazed from CloudTimes.org. Author: Xath Cruz.

SAP’s yearly event for their partners and customers, called Sapphire, served as the launching point for SuccessFactors as a SAP company. SAP has created a new division called Cloud Computing, with SuccessFactors CEO and founder Lars Dalgaard helming the division, overseeing its 5000 employee-strong team, all of which are assigned to help SAP’s cloud strategy.

According to Dalgaard’s update on Successfactors, they currently have 3500 customers, with as many as 15.6 million unique end users. This makes SuccessFactors the largest cloud company, with a userbase 15 times the size of its competitors. SuccessFactors is currently used in 60 different industries spread out across 168 different countries.

According to their stats, the 15 million SuccessFactors users have used the suite to accomplish as many as 29 million performance reviews, complete 45 million learning items, commit 61 million goals, and process 23 million job applicants. While that’s already an impressive performance, there are still plenty of developments announced during the event…

August 14, 2012 Off

Data Security in the Cloud: Who’s Responsible & How Does It Happen?

By David

Grazed from Windows IT Pro. Author: K.B. Winstead.

Does your company use a cloud service to store sensitive or confidential data? If so, where does the responsibility lie for keeping that data secure? These are a couple of the questions addressed in a new study released by Thales e-Security. The study, titled "Encryption in the Cloud," also focused on data encryption with cloud solutions and where such encryption is applied.

One of the big surprises in the survey data comes from how many companies are using the cloud for sensitive or confidential data: nearly half, 49 percent, of respondents do so currently, and another third said their companies likely would do so within the next two years. With that amount of sensitive corporate data going to the cloud, data security must be a primary concern — or so you might think.

Another section of the survey, which was conducted by the Ponemon Institute, looked at where companies felt the responsibility fell for keeping safe that data they were sending to the cloud. Here, 44 percent of respondents said they felt the primary responsibility for data security was with the cloud provider, while only 30 percent thought primary responsibility was with the data owner (i.e., the company that’s sending sensitive data to the cloud). Another 24 percent thought there should be a shared responsibility…

August 14, 2012 Off

Cloud and big data give scientists unprecedented access to essential climate insights

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Dana Gardner.

A fascinating global ocean studies initiative helps best define some of the IT superlatives around big data, cloud computing, and middleware integration capabilities.

The Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) and its accompanying Cyberinfrastructure Program aims to provide an unprecedented ability to study the Earth’s oceans and climate using myriad distributed data centers and literally oceans’ worth of data.

The scale and impact of the science’s importance is closely followed by the magnitude of the computer science needed to make that data accessible and actionable by scientists. In a sense, the OOI and its infrastructure program, a major undertaking by the National Science Foundation, are constructing a big data-scale programmable and integratable cloud fabric for oceanography…

August 13, 2012 Off

RAMP Announces Major Enhancements to Award-Winning MediaCloud Platform Integrating Support for Amazon Web Services

By David
Grazed from RAMP.  Author: PR Announcement

RAMP, the leader in next generation search and video experiences, announced today at SpeechTEK 2012 in New York announced integration between its award-winning MediaCloud platform and Amazon Web Services. RAMP announced the launch of MediaCloud VM, with initial support for Amazon’s AWS. With MediaCould VM, developers can use RAMP’s industry leading speech recognition technology inside their existing AWS accounts, and integrate into their existing applications.

August 13, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Amazon Registers AWS with CSA STAR

By David

Grazed from PRNewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

The Security, Trust & Assurance Registry (STAR) is an initiative by the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) to document security controls offered by cloud computing providers. The registry recently received its biggest vote of confidence, as Amazon AWS, one of the first and biggest cloud providers, joined.

The CSA STAR started slowly in August 2011. Six months after its launch only three cloud providers had joined: Microsoft Office 365, Mimecast and Solutionary. Now nearing its one year anniversary, the CSA STAR now includes a a dozen cloud providers, among them major players like Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure and Box.com…

August 13, 2012 Off

What Can You Do In Cloud Computing? eBay Gives an Example

By David

Grazed from MidSize Insider. Author: Bert Markgraf.

Many midsize businesses are comfortable putting their email online and using the cloud for storage, but there are barriers to going beyond that. Ready-made cloud computing solutions are expensive, and IT departments are concerned about vendor lock-in. If the purchased system doesn’t meet expectations or if your needs change, do you have to scrap your investment and start over? Open source solutions such as OpenStack, CloudStack and Eucalyptus are available, but there have been few high-profile implementations.

network spheresThe eBay Project

Now eBay has announced that it is using OpenStack open source software as the basis for virtual networks that it will use to develop and test applications for its website marketplaces. An article on InfoWorld describes the project. The company is running Nicira Network Virtualization on the OpenStack cloud computing platform to let it start up separate virtual networks for its projects. Its multi-vendor approach led it to implement the already integrated Nicira/OpenStack solution rather than relying on its existing VMware cloud. Cost was also a factor. Jean-Christophe Martin, who is a cloud architect for eBay, says, "Before, we were mostly looking at vendor-provided solutions. I think that right now we are switching to more of an open source strategy."…

August 13, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Marketing is dead, long live marketing

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

In the era of cloud computing and big data, chief marketing officers can either sink or swim depending on their ability to recognize the importance of the consumer information available to them and ability to capture and put it to use.
marketing

Depending on what research you believe, chief marketing officers are either more powerful than they’ve ever been — or they’re on their way out. Early this year, a Gartner predicted that CMOs will have bigger IT budget power than CIOs by 2017. Naturally, that analysis was quickly bandied about by CMOs…

August 13, 2012 Off

Amazon Bets On Storage Lockers, New Kindle To Drive Growth

By David
Grazed from Trefis.  Author: Editorial Staff.

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), the e-commerce giant based out of Seattle, WA, is best known as the world’s largest retailer with operations across several countries. Apart from electronics, general merchandise, books, music and DVDs, the company is also a major provider of cloud computing services. Braving intense competition, Amazon has shown outstanding growth since its inception. The growth story is backed by the innovative solutions it provides to its customers. Here, we discuss some of these services and offerings.

Public Lockers for Books, DVDs, Electronics and General Merchandize

In the face of increasing competition from online and bricks & mortar retailers, Amazon’s growth in the U.S. market has slowed. To combat this slowdown, the company is experimenting with new delivery models, the most recent being public lockers at select locations. The concept is for the delivery to happen at this locker instead of a street address. When the package arrives, an email notification lets the user know where to pick it up along with a code to unlock the locker. With the lockers strategically placed at convenience stores, the customers can pick up their packages 24 hours a day instead of worrying about being at home to sign for the delivery of the package…