Category: News

July 17, 2012 Off

Cisco and Violin Memory Set Cloud Computing Performance World Record

By David

Grazed from MarketWatch. Author: PR Announcement.

Violin Memory, Inc., provider of one of the world’s fastest and most scalable flash Memory Arrays, served as the storage platform required by Cisco to set the 2-socket server world record in cloud computing performance as measured by the VMware VMmark 2.1 benchmark. A record of this magnitude validates the sustained performance achieved by Violin Memory Arrays and their ability to provide the infrastructure necessary to support virtualized and cloud environments.

VMmark 2.1: The Industry’s Virtualization Platform Benchmark VMmark 2.1 is the industry’s first multi-server datacenter virtualization benchmark, which assesses the performance of a group of virtualized real world applications. It includes a variety of common platform-level workloads such as live migration of virtual machines, cloning and deploying of virtual machines, and automatic virtual machine load balancing across the datacenter. To achieve the best results, end-to-end performance from server to storage is needed…

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Coraid Unveils ZX-Series NAS

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Elizabeth White.

Coraid on Tuesday unveiled the new Coraid ZX-Series family of NAS servers. Designed for cloud, video and Big Data customers, this high-performance unified storage solution is powered by the Oracle Solaris ZFS file system combined with Coraid’s EtherDrive technology to enable unmatched scalability, performance and operational simplicity.

Carl Wright, executive vice president at Coraid noted that "organizations are increasingly challenged to provide predictable, cost-effective file performance in the face of uncontrolled data growth. By extending our product family to include a best-in-class NAS offering, Coraid can meet that challenge with a unified storage solution that takes full advantage of the scalability and performance of Ethernet SAN."…

July 17, 2012 Off

Morphlabs Launches Compact OpenStack-Based Cloud Platform

By David

Grazed from eWeek. Author: Darryl K. Taft.

Morphlabs , a provider of dynamic infrastructure services for the enterprise, has launched the mCloud Helix, a new converged private cloud infrastructures for enterprise IT consumers.

The mCloud Helix, a compact, scalable and efficient form of private cloud infrastructure, is powered by the open-source OpenStack cloud computing platform, and combines high performance solid-state-drive-powered (SSD-powered) nodes and preintegrated ZFS to eliminate the need for expensive enterprise SANs, the company said.

Morphlabs introduced mCloud Helix at the O’Reilly Open Source Convention (OSCON) July 17, also known as OpenStack Day at the event. The Morphlabs’ solution combines one of the smallest footprints of any cloud infrastructure on the market with unmatched density to set a new energy standard for watt/virtual CPU (vCPU). The Morphlabs’ mCloud Helix is built and tested on Dell PowerEdge C servers, which use the latest hyperscale technology for performance and efficiency. In addition, CoreSite, a national provider of network-rich data centers, has worked with Morphlabs to optimize its infrastructure for enterprises seeking to deploy their own mCloud Helix…

July 17, 2012 Off

Think through your cloud plans — or else

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: David Linthicum.

Most enterprise IT organizations focus more on technology than on thinking — a sad tendency I’ve often pointed out. Thus, I was happy to see InfoQ’s Mark Little review an article by Steve Jones of CapGemini. Both see the same lack of thought in how enterprises use technology. In fact, it’s worse than not thinking — there’s an active dislike of deeper consideration that gets expressed as ignoring or even disparaging planning, architecture, and design in IT.

This sorry state is quite evident as cloud computing begins to take hold in the standard IT technology arsenal. The fact of the matter is that there are two worlds. One involves the hype and good feelings about next-gen IT, such as cloud computing, that tells us the technology itself will save us from the mistakes of the past. Then there’s the world of planning, architecture, and design that makes the technology actually useful — despite IT’s aversion to this crucial stage…

July 17, 2012 Off

OpenStack, CloudStack contend for open source cloud customers

By David

Grazed from TechTarget. Author: Paul Korzeniowski.

When evaluating cloud services, enterprises first must determine whether to use an open source cloud platform or a proprietary one — an increasingly difficult decision.

As cloud services began to emerge, vendors such as Amazon, Google and Verizon/Terremark developed services based on proprietary APIs. These vendors provide only select interfaces to their software, making it difficult for enterprises to tailor cloud environments specific to their needs.

On the contrary, open source cloud software allows IT teams to modify the cloud architecture more than a proprietary or commercial cloud platform might. And working with the open source community often has benefits. “By adopting an open source model, vendors that may have small teams of developers gain more [programmers],” said Lydia Leong, research vice president at Gartner Inc…

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud storage tools and the impact of security breaches, data sovereignty and the Patriot Act

By David

Grazed from VoiceAndData. Author: Andrew Collins.

Vendors claim cloud storage offers a range of benefits to organisations, including cost savings and increased flexibility. But with things like security breaches, data sovereignty and the US Patriot Act breeding doubt in customers’ minds, the future of cloud storage is not certain.

“The cloud” has become one of the most used (perhaps overused) terms in IT discussions today. Vendors and service providers love to explain how the various forms of cloud computing can free your workers from the chains of their desktops, free up the time of your IT staff, and allow you to move your IT spending from CAPEX to OPEX.

Public cloud storage tools – remote storage, usually accessed via the internet, paid for in an on-demand fashion – have been available for some years now. Broadly speaking, they all offer remote data storage, are (usually) accessed via the internet and are paid for in an on-demand fashion…

July 17, 2012 Off

How a startup is seeking to disrupt the recruitment industry by using the cloud

By David

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Srikanth RP.

WinHire Technologies is seeking to disrupt the recruitment market by building the world’s first video social recruitment portal By Srikanth RP, InformationWeek, July 17, 2012

As a late entrant, how do you compete in a market that is already dominated by giants? As a small player with limited ability to capital, how do you scale up without any limits? Startup WinHire Technologies was grappling with these questions, as it rapidly scouted for solutions that could help the firm take advantage of technology and level the playing field with the giants.

WinHire Technologies had a radically different idea. Instead of text-based resumes, the firm wanted to use videos and the reach of the Internet to simplify and improve the process of recruitment. “We wanted to leverage the power of the Internet and the popularity of videos to create the world’s first video social recruitment and networking website,” says Giri Devanur, CEO, WinHire Technologies. On the portal, a job-aspirant can upload his or her video profile, and increase his or her chance of getting hired, as a video can even highlight personality attributes…

July 17, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: VMware shakeup – Maritz is reportedly out

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Stacey Higginbotham.

A tech trade publication is reporting that VMware CEO Paul Maritz is being pushed out and will be replaced by Pat Gelsinger, the current COO of EMC. EMC owns roughly 80 percent of VMware, the market leader in server virtualization. It’s a rumor we’ve been hearing since June, and on Monday night, CRN published a report that says it has confirmed those rumors, citing “multiple sources familiar with the situation.”

Other rumors circulating say that Maritz has been offered the role of chairman, but not the CEO, of the spin out of the CloudFoundry, Rubicon and Greenplum assets that we reported on this afternoon…

July 17, 2012 Off

The Cloud & the Supply Chain: A Match Made in Heaven

By David

Grazed from EBN. Author: Nicole Lewis.

The demands of extended global supply chains, along with the addition of new suppliers, have placed a greater burden on high-tech electronics manufacturers to collaborate with their partners as they use cloud computing technology to manage inventory, improve forecasts, and sharpen their competitive edge.

Many electronics companies have successfully designed a network that connects their partners and digitizes data that captures every aspect of a product lifecycle — from design, to the procurement of parts, to the manufacturing and distribution of the product. But a more pressing issue arises when high-tech companies seek to leverage their supply chain’s financial and operational data and create new business processes among partners to drive efficiencies and reduce costs…

July 17, 2012 Off

To Operate Smoothly, Businesses Need Clouds

By David

Grazed from The Moscow Times. Author: Editorial Staff.

It is a myth that there is no room for innovation during a period of economic instability. History proves the opposite. Even in the midst of the Great Depression, approximately 70 new research laboratories were established annually in the United States. Furthermore, such high-tech companies as Hewlett Packard were founded during that period. Currently, we are witnessing increasing interest in innovation as well. Intensive discussion about cloud computing started in 2008, when the U.S. recession ceased to be just a pessimistic forecast and became reality.

Why are innovations so important for overcoming the consequences of the crisis? I shall try to explain using clouds as an example.

Cloud computing is an evolution of corporate IT systems that helps to achieve two objectives: first, get rid of the "burden" by transferring capital expenditures into operational ones and, second, improve flexibility and business responsiveness to market challenges. Public and private clouds are the best models to fulfill these two tasks…