Category: News

July 17, 2012 Off

CopperEgg Offers First Free Advanced Website Monitoring and Next Generation Cloud Monitoring Service

By David
Grazed from CopperEgg.  Author: PR Announcement

CopperEgg, a cloud monitoring and analytics company, today introduced CopperEgg RevealUptime, a breakthrough free service providing next-generation website and web application monitoring. CopperEgg is the first to offer a free service that allows organizations to maximize website performance visibility with the fastest monitoring checks in the market.  With CopperEgg’s new cross-correlation analytics, business-critical websites can quickly isolate root cause issues in the cloud, correlating RevealUptime end user experience measurements with internal server health from CopperEgg RevealCloud server monitoring.

"I was dumbfounded by how easy the CopperEgg solutions are to implement and use. The visibility and detail the combined solutions provide are worth their weight in… copper," said Andrew Horton, Director of Operations at Aim2Game, which offers Minecraft server hosting for gamers. "Our customers are tech-savvy gamers. You can imagine how our phones would light up if service was disrupted for any amount of time. CopperEgg has allowed us to monitor not only from the inside out, but also from the outside in, so we always know exactly what our customers are experiencing."

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud report-2017: How will we view hosted IT services five years in the future?

By David

Grazed from CIO. Author: Mark Settle.

Just returned from an anniversary party to commemorate ten years of public cloud computing.

I joined several other CIOs who were pioneers in using Amazon’s Elastic Computing Cloud (EC2) when large enterprise instances initially became available in 2007. Who would have ever thought that things could have changed so much in ten years?

Even as little as five years ago, large enterprise CIOs thought that public clouds such as EC2 would only be used on a limited basis, primarily for the development of non-business critical applications…

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: NextCloud Launches High-Performance Backup and Disaster Recovery Platform

By David

Grazed from PR NewsWire. Author: PR Announcement.

NextCloud, a state of the art cloud computing service provider, today announced the availability of its NextStore(SM) service which provides high speed, high performance cloud backup for small, medium and large organizations facing the operational and financial challenges of offsite back-up, disaster recovery (DR) and business continuity.

"This high performance platform provides a compelling alternative to tape backup and existing low speed, internet-based cloud backup systems which fail to meet the requirements of the enterprise," said Jonathan Reeves, Chairman of NextCloud. "NextStore services allow our customers on east and west coasts to protect their operations and reduce risk by storing critical data offsite and replicate data across multiple locations."…

July 17, 2012 Off

Racemi nets $7M to attack booming cloud broker biz

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

Racemi, which specializes in moving business computing workloads onto and between clouds, snagged $7 million in B Round funding led by Paladin Capital Group and Harbert Venture Partners. The money will fund the expansion of sales, service and engineering efforts for Racemi’s cloud broker service. That brings total funding for the company to $19.3 million.

As more companies evaluate cloud deployments — especially multi-cloud deployments — the need for easy and safe ways to put workloads to the cloud to begin with, and then move them between clouds as needed, will grow. That’s the problem services like Racemi’s DynaCenter and competitors like CloudSwitch, now owned by Verizon and run out of its Terremark unit, are taking on. Other offerings in this space include Scalent, acquired by Dell in 2010, Altirus, now part of Symantec and Platespin, bought by Novell in 2008…

July 17, 2012 Off

The Government’s Mass Migration to the Cloud

By David

Grazed from Wired. Author: Rob Vanderburg.

Just a few years ago, cloud computing was a nearly unheard-of development in IT. Today, many enterprises are interacting with the cloud on a daily basis. A recent North Bridge Venture Partners survey of 785 IT decisionmakers reported that 50 percent of users say they are completely confident in the cloud. IDC predicted that by the end of 2012, 80 percent of new commercial enterprise applications will have been deployed on cloud platforms.

Cloud adoption has nowhere to go but up. However, companies still do have hesitations about adoption. The top ones uncovered by North Bridge were security (55 percent) and regulatory compliance (38 percent).

If the CIOs of private enterprises listed security and compliance as their main hesitations about the cloud, imagine how government agencies feel. In fact, until 2011, federal government agencies, which operate under sophisticated IT governance structures, regulations and security requirements, had no official impetus to migrate to the cloud at all. The cost-savings and scalability advantages of the cloud may have been clear, but adoption was hampered by concern that cloud providers couldn’t navigate the government’s unique requirements…

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Virtustream Aligns with SafeNet

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Liz McMillan.

Virtustream and SafeNet on Tuesday announced that they have entered into an agreement that will incorporate SafeNet’s market-leading authentication solutions into Virtustream’s enterprise cloud platform, xStream.

"Enterprises looking to deploy the cloud want both enterprise-grade performance and security, while still benefiting from the scalability and economics of multi-tenant virtualization technology," said Dr. Shaw Chuang, Executive Vice President of Engineering, Virtustream. "Incorporating SafeNet’s authentication platform brings another best-of-breed offering to our platform and lays the foundation for further extensive security capabilities."…

July 17, 2012 Off

Logicalis Announces Checklist to Help CIOs Examine Cloud Storage Market

By David

Grazed from PRWeb. Author: PR Announcement.

Storage requirements are growing exponentially and, as a result, companies are looking for alternatives to traditional tape-based solutions. The cloud can provide a cost-effective storage alternative, but it may not be the right solution for every case. Today, Logicalis, an international IT solutions and managed services provider, released a list of the top pros and cons to a cloud-based storage solution to help CIOs and other IT professionals determine if this cost-effective alternative to tape will work for their specific requirements.

“Most organizations can take advantage of cloud storage,” says Victor Dermott, solution architect, cloud computing, for Logicalis. Large organizations, Dermott notes, frequently have very large volumes of online storage and may have legal requirements to retain data for years, including unstructured data like pictures, films and radiology studies, resulting in petabytes of storage which can run into prohibitive costs for media and physical storage. Small and medium-sized organizations may benefit from the cloud’s affordable monthly terms and the ability to easily increase their storage service levels. “Any organization that has large volumes of archive data, or unstructured data, and a requirement to control and access that data on a policy basis can benefit from cloud-based storage systems,” Dermott says, noting that, frequently, the best data to store in the cloud are those types that have traditionally been stored on tape. To help IT pros determine if their companies can benefit from cloud storage, Dermott suggests a careful examination of the pros and cons…

July 17, 2012 Off

Three hurdles of data portability with multiple cloud providers

By David

Grazed from TechTarget. Author: Dan Sullivan.

Migrating applications is not a trivial process. Whether you want to move apps from on-premises infrastructure to the cloud or distribute them across multiple cloud providers, you’ll face obstacles. Moving virtual machines, migrating data and configuring networks can all create friction in the app migration process.

Migrating data from one cloud platform to another can be a substantial challenge.

Moving virtual machines. You have several options when migrating virtual machines (VMs) between an on-premises infrastructure and the cloud: using a shared machine image format, importing or rebuilding…

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud storage startup Egnyte nets $16M to boost brand

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

Egnyte netted $16 million in Series C funding to help raise its profile globally and to position itself as a leading hybrid cloud storage provider. The new cash brings its total funding to $32 million. Google Ventures, a new backer, led the round which also included funding from existing investors Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Polaris Ventures. Google Ventures partner Karim Faris will join Egnyte’s board.

The Mountain View, Calif.-based company is one of many cloud storage players, including Box, LogMeIn, OwnCloud, trying to crack the enterprise market for cloud storage.

CEO Vineet Jain said he will use the money to make Egnyte more of a household — er boardroom — name. “There’s been a huge amount of marketing dollars spent by our friends at Box. The number one problem I need to address is that our awareness is still low compared to Box,” Jain told me in an interview…

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Aryaka scores $25M to speed up corporate connections

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Stacey Higginbotham.

Aryaka, a startup offering cloud-based wide area network optimization has raised $25 million in Series C funding. The round was led by InterWest Partners, with participation from Presidio Ventures, a Sumitomo Corporation Company and included existing investors Nexus Venture Partners, Trinity Ventures and Mohr Davidow Ventures. It brings Aryaka’s total funding to $54 million.

Making wide area networks — the connections between multiple corporate offices or data centers — faster isn’t sexy, but it’s an important element of corporate computing, especially as we move to the cloud and more remote work forces. By taking the traditional WAN optimization game and moving it from boxes located inside corporate offices and data centers into a service comprised of a mesh network of connections, Aryaka has fundamentally changed the business…