Category: News

July 17, 2012 Off

Is VMware’s brain drain a sign of its influence, or of its demise?

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Derrick Harris.

The big news out of VMware is that it’s likely spinning out a cloud computing business, but the company also has had a fair share of significant personnel departures over the past year. A talent exodus as VMware ware tries to compete with Microsoft, Google and Amazon to be the big name in cloud computing may indicate that all is not well in Palo Alto.

But this news isn’t all bad. The number of principal engineers and other technical leaders leaving the company and trying to have big impacts elsewhere suggests VMware might achieve mafia status a la Sun Microsystems, Facebook Google or PayPal. Its employees appear to have the vision, skills and reputations that transcend their work at VMware…

July 17, 2012 Off

Venture Capital Good With Cloud, Software, Social

By David

Grazed from InvestorsDaily. Author: Brian Deagon.

Venture capital firms feel positive about investing in cloud computing, software, and social networking, but have the least confidence in the chips and telecom sector, according to a new survey.

The 2012 Global Venture Capital Confidence Survey from Deloitte and the National Venture Capital Association also showed venture capital firms are more confident about investing in the U.S. than offshore. The exceptions to that are Brazil, Germany and Israel. The lowest confidence levels were for investing in the U.K., Taiwan and Japan.

On a 1-to-5 scale, with 5 being most confident, investor confidence in the U.S. was 3.26, compared with 2.72 internationally, the survey said. The poll had more than 440 respondents among venture capital and private equity groups in the Americas, Europe, Asia Pacific and Israel…

July 17, 2012 Off

The IaaS Rush

By David
Contributed Article.  Author: Giridhar L V, Head – VMUnify, MindTree Ltd
CloudCow Contributed Article
 

The IaaS Rush

 

Why is everybody getting into the IaaS business? For a long time, it was only Amazon, then Rackspace, Savvis etc followed but there were no new significant players for a long time. However, most recently, IaaS has been really hot; the new entrants into this space are Google, Microsoft and HP. While Amazon, Rackspace, Savvis have predominantly been operating in the IaaS space, Google was more of a PaaS and SaaS player. It did a little bit on the IaaS side with Google drive but nothing to the extent of Amazon S3. Microsoft was also a platform player with Azure, but recently introduced an IaaS offering into Azure. For HP, it was a brand new entry into the Cloud Space. While I am not sure about what technology Google is using to power its IaaS (should most probably be something based on Xen or KVM), HP’s IaaS management layer is run on OpenStack with probably Xen as the Virtualization layer.

July 17, 2012 Off

New Microsoft Office ropes in Skype, Yammer, SkyDrive

By David

Grazed from GigaOM. Author: Barb Darrow.

As Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and company showed off the latest version of Office Monday, they hit all the right marks — a touch interface, cloud storage, VoIP integration and social networking tie-ins.

The new Office (now in customer preview) will be both “ink-” and “touch-” enabled. It will store user documents to Microsoft’s SkyDrive by default. (Microsoft already said it was tying SkyDrive cloud storage closely into its upcoming Windows 8 operating system.) And the new Office Home and Student 2013 RT versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote will ship with Microsoft’s promised ARM-based Windows 8 machines including Surface…

July 16, 2012 Off

Making a Fuss About the Mobile Cloud

By David

Grazed from InternetEvolution. Author: Kim Davies.

What are we to make of the "mobile cloud," and is it something midmarket enterprises should be focused on?

It’s self-evident, I suppose, that mobile cloud computing implies a cloud architecture geared to serving mobile connections. Let’s take a look at an academic definition:

MCC is an amalgam of three foundations, namely cloud computing, mobile computing, and networking. The most promising and intriguing characteristics of MCC paradigm are mobility and rich functionality. We define mobile cloud computing as "a rich mobile computing technology that leverages unified elastic resources of varied clouds and network technologies toward unrestricted functionality, storage, and mobility…"

That’s a definition offered by researchers at the University of Malaya’s Mobile Cloud Computing Research Lab, and it has the merits of being both current and clear. Their 2012 paper on the subject, from which the definition is taken, is well worth reading in full…

July 16, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing Growth Still Going Strong

By David

Grazed from MidSize Insider. Author: Shawn Drew.

There are tremors of economic uncertainty reverberating throughout almost every segment of IT. Through it all, cloud computing continues to grow as strong as ever. With performance and management benefits that non-cloud solutions have difficulty matching, it’s little wonder that the cloud is one of the few areas of IT still showing growth. But recent surveys have shown that midsize businesses may be a little slow to adopt the cloud and, in this market, that could be killing them.

Gartner IT Predictions

This certainly isn’t the perfect time for many businesses. Enormous economic uncertainty in the United States, Europe, and China has put a damper on many business performance predictions, with analysts choosing caution in the face of such an uneasy customer base. However, this global downtrend doesn’t seem to be affecting IT as badly, and it has the cloud to thank…

July 16, 2012 Off

Cisco Buys Virtuata for Cloud, Virtual Machine Security

By David

Grazed from eWeek. Author: Jeffrey Burt.

Cisco Systems is adding to its data center and cloud portfolio by buying Virtuata, a company that specialized in virtual machine security.

Cisco officials announced July 16 that Virtuata will be incorporated into the company’s Data Center Group, which is headed up by Senior Vice President David Yen. No financial terms for the deal were announced.

Officials with the networking giant see a huge growth opportunity in the cloud and virtualization, as enterprises and network operators alike look to bulk up their infrastructure to leverage the rapid adoption of the cloud computing model. Cisco has been building up its data center capabilities over the past few years, not only with its networking portfolio of switches and routers, but also through its Unified Computing System (UCS) converged solution…

July 16, 2012 Off

Common Threats To Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from CloudTweaks. Author: Florence de Borja.

The core agencies of the US government have a central plan, Cloud First, which aims to shift the majority of their operations to the cloud. Before the plan can be implemented, it must go through a process of evaluation by the agencies concerned. In December 2010, a Cloud First policy was released by the Office Of Management and Budget so that federal agencies could implement the shift to cloud computing services if such agencies could find a cost-effective, reliable, and secure cloud computing service. The target was to move three of the core agencies’ technology services by June of the following year.

The Government Accountability Office recently released an overall progress report on the implementation plan. It reported that the Office found common challenges which the organization feels represent a hindrance to the Cloud First initiative. According to the report, one of the common threats is that cloud computing providers must first meet federal security requirements. Each of the government’s core agencies has their own security requirements, which cloud computing suppliers must satisfy first before such suppliers can be provided with a service contract. The problem is that most of these agencies have very strict requirements which suppliers find hard to meet…

July 16, 2012 Off

Cloud Adoption Picking Up, Says Rackspace CEO

By David

Grazed from The Wall Street Journal. Author: Editorial Staff.

Despite the advantages cloud computing can offer larger enterprises, adoption continues to be slow.

Lanham Napier, CEO of Rackspace, predicts the take-up of cloud systems will accelerate. But he warns the industry has to innovate or risk being commoditized itself. Mr. Napier said infrastructure-as-a-service, or IaaS, was the most widely used service as it was the easiest for the market to understand, but that it was a “race to the bottom.”

“If all you are selling is a [gigabyte] of computing power, you are in trouble,” he said. “The big boys are in a race to zero. They are trying to drive that price down to halfpennies.”…

July 16, 2012 Off

The Cloud Services Checklist: Automation, Service and Education

By David

Grazed from NetworkComputing. Author: Mary Shacklett.

The CIO called a 4 p.m. meeting to gather his chief data architect, senior systems manager, applications group director and QA and help desk managers over a fresh pot of coffee to talk about the finer points of cloud adoption.

This wasn’t a meeting about "cloud in a box," or cloud services implementation. The real challenge now was ensuring that the company’s cloud services strategy would pay off the way everyone believed it would. This meant understanding and being willing to do what it took to get there.

The first step was service…