Category: News

July 13, 2012 Off

The Sun Shines on ‘The Cloud’

By David

Grazed from The Wall Street Journal. Author: John Bussey.

What’s the real lesson to be learned from Amazon’s AMZN -1.40% cloud computing failure two weeks ago, the one that knocked Netflix NFLX +3.92% and other websites offline?

Far from being a dangerous sign that the cloud is unreliable, it was actually a blip—a painful one—on a trend line that is vectoring upward, much to the benefit of global business. There have been sporadic problems at a range of cloud providers, and each produced worrying headlines: "Can You Trust the Cloud?" "Are We Overdependent on Cloud Services?"

But what we’re seeing isn’t a breakdown. Instead, it’s the rapid expansion of a big new industry that is still in its shakedown phase—finding and fixing problems. This is Henry Ford getting the kinks out of his assembly line or cellphone companies trying to fix the dropped-call problem…

July 12, 2012 Off

Meet the company building AOL’s micro data centers

By David
Grazed from GigaOM.  Author: Derrick Harris.

Elliptical Mobile Solutions is hardly a household name in the data center world, but don’t bet against it becoming one. The Chandler, Ariz.-based company that started inside a founder’s garage builds one of the world’s smallest data centers and has already secured some big-name customers including, most famously, AOL. While bigger data centers seem to be better for webscale companies such as Google and Facebook, many are happy to grow on a lot smaller scale — about 105 cubic feet at a time.

Granted, EMS’s boxes are nowhere near as powerful as a massive data center chock full of computing gear, but that’s kind of the point. Modular data centers are all the rage right now because they let companies grow capacity as its needed, whether that’s a rack at a time inside an IO Data Centers unit or 1,920 servers at a time inside one of eBay’s specially designed modular units…

July 12, 2012 Off

Amazon’s New Projects Outweigh Cloud Woes

By David

Grazed from Seeking Alpha. Author: Editorial Staff.

In a very short time, phrases like ‘on the cloud,’ and ‘cloud computing’ have become part of everyday corporate vernacular. With more and more companies using this technology to share information with employees, customers, and vendors in real-time, Internet giants like Amazon (AMZN), Google (GOOG), and Microsoft (MSFT) have realized the potential profits for providing cloud-based services — and the potential downfalls when servers fail.

However, with intense competition comes intense scrutiny. During a violent series of thunderstorms in the Mid-Atlantic region a few weeks ago, Amazon faced a temporary shutdown of its EC2 cloud computing services. This shutdown hurt several companies, including the popular dating site, Whatsyourprice.com, because customers could not use the service during peak hours. As a result, the company dropped EC2 and moved to another cloud provider…

July 12, 2012 Off

The Rising Tide of Cloud Computing Lifts All Boats

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Paul Lidsky.

Today’s IT data center is at an interesting crossroads. Faced with typically flat annual budgets and increasing demands from the business, IT organizations have started looking for creative ways to not just meet the needs of the business, but to exceed them – while simultaneously reducing costs and simplifying IT’s overall management required.

A tall order? You bet. Impossible to achieve? It’s certainly a challenge if you plan to use the same legacy infrastructure many data centers have in place today. However, such goals become infinitely achievable as IT organizations begin their migration to private cloud computing. One of the most transformational movements to hit IT in a long time, most organizations will seek guidance for how to best unify servers, storage, and networking infrastructures. Most will also need help with addressing the cultural shifts that are inherent when virtualizing and unifying data center infrastructures and teams that were once disparate. The end result of this migration to private clouds benefits both the enterprises that embark on the transformation as well as the vendors and solution providers best positioned to assist them…

July 12, 2012 Off

The New Enterprise Reference Architecture

By David
Grazed from Sys Con Media.  Author: Srinivasan Sundara Rajan.

Over the last couple of years much has changed in the way enterprises map their enterprise IT architecture and realize their business capabilities. Till 2010 or so, enterprise architecture have been purely built on:

  • On-Premise Packaged Applications (SAP, Oracle, Siebel)
  • On-Premise Custom Applications Frameworks (.NET, Java EE)
  • Structured Data (Oracle, SQL Server, DB2)
  • Traditional Access methodologies (Web, Client/Server, CITRIX, other reporting tools)

However, now the enterprises have to rethink their reference architecture to fit all the new avenues opened due to the advances in these areas…

July 12, 2012 Off

Placing Multiple Cloud Computing Bets

By David

Grazed from IT Business Edge. Author: Michael Vizard.

Most enterprise IT organizations are not particularly fond of uncertainty, which is why anything to do with cloud computing is at the very least a little unsettling. No one is quite sure which cloud service providers will ultimately prove to be victorious in the enterprise. For example, while there’s almost no doubt that the Amazon and Microsoft Azure clouds will be significant players when it comes to application development, it’s not nearly as clear what role cloud service providers may play in production environments.

In recognition of that simple fact, the folks at GreenButton, a provider of cloud management software that makes it simpler to dynamically invoke compute resources across multiple clouds, have been steadily increasing the number of cloud platforms the company’s software supports. In addition to Microsoft Azure, GreenButton now also supports Amazon and an instance of VMware vCloud running on a cloud computing platform managed by Dell…

July 12, 2012 Off

Toshiba Phone Systems Move to the Cloud

By David

Grazed from Talkin’ Cloud. Author: Chris Talbot.

Toshiba is taking its business phone systems to the cloud with the launch of VIPedge, a cloud-based business phone system that enables customers to pay for telephony services in a monthly fee subscription package. Starting at $29.99 on average per user, VIPedge is the latest in Toshiba’s forays into cloud computing, putting the vendor up against a variety of services currently being offered — from consumer cloud services to business services from the likes of 8×8 and Mitel.

The announcement of VIPedge rounds out Toshiba’s business telephony portfolio, which already features IPedge and Strata CIX. Available now through authorized Toshiba dealers, VIPedge is being positioned as a cost-effective alternative to on-premise solutions. As with other cloud services, VIPedge is a subscription-based business telephone system service that makes it easy for customers to get going with a negligible up-front cost and fixed monthly fees…

July 12, 2012 Off

The Big Data and Cloud Computing Trends Depend on Open Source

By David

Grazed from OStatic. Author: Sam Dean.

Reuven Cohen has an interesting post up on Forbes’ site, which asks, "Free Versus Open: Does Open Source Software Matter in the Cloud Era?" He writes: "I like open source as much as the next guy but, from a value proposition standpoint, just being ‘open source’ doesn’t sound all that compelling to me. This has become especially true in the emerging cloud computing landscape where APIs and Big Data have become some of the most valuable currencies." In fact, though, as the transition to the cloud and Big Data continue, open source software is playing an absolutely critical role.

Cohen notes that Big Data has become one of the "most valuable currencies," but isn’t the open source Hadoop platform–used to sift insights from extremely large data sets–one of the flagship pieces of software driving the Big Data trend? Hadoop has given rise to promising startup companies such as Hortonworks, focused on training and services surrounding it…

July 12, 2012 Off

We Need More Peer-to-Peer Shared Cloud Infrastructure

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Larry Carvalho.

I recently participated in a panel discussion, titled: "Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) endgame – commoditizing the data center" at the GigaOM Structure 2012 Conference. While software is definitely defining the use of IaaS through Platform as a Service (PaaS), the underlying need for IaaS does not go away. In my opinion, the current pace of infrastructure and data center build out cannot be maintained, leading to a future need of resource sharing in this space.

Resource sharing includes everything that contributes to a data center, especially the physical infrastructure. Several Software as a Service (SaaS) providers, especially in the collaboration space, innovatively optimize their infrastructure to serve their specialized purpose. Facebook, for example, has open sourced their hardware design through Open Compute. Skype, as you know, routes calls and video through their users’ bandwidth, reducing the need for back-end infrastructure…

July 12, 2012 Off

Cloudability raises $8.7 million in venture backing, plans to grow Portland office

By David

Grazed from Oregan Live. Author: Mike Rogoway.

The forecast continues to brighten at Cloudability.

The Portland startup plans to announce today that it has landed $8.7 million in investment backing to help market its technology, which helps businesses manage their computing in the "cloud."

Many companies, large and small, have shifted much of their data storage and processing into data centers — large, centralized facilities packed with thousands or tens of thousands of computers. Companies such as Amazon.com and Rackspace lease space in their server farms…