Category: News

July 12, 2012 Off

ServiceMesh Teams with Apprenda, Cloud Cruiser & Derdack

By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Elizabeth White.

ServiceMesh has teamed with Apprenda, Cloud Cruiser and Derdack, with sponsorship from Microsoft, to create a comprehensive set of cloud enablement solutions named the Private Cloud Solutions Suite (PCSS). By collective effort, the team that created PCSS offers Systems Integrators (SIs) an enhanced market solution for building private clouds using the Microsoft stack that eliminates stop gaps and enables full-spectrum delivery of enterprise private cloud capabilities to customers. Strategically aligned with Microsoft System Center, Hyper-V and Windows Server, PCSS ensures that SIs can attract new revenue from enterprise customers and deliver on outstanding private cloud project commitments.

"Private Cloud Solutions Suite is strategically important to Microsoft private cloud and System Center as our ISV Partner Solutions enhance Microsoft’s industry leadership. PCSS also equips key SI partners with additional technology to help deliver on enterprise private cloud needs," said Sergio Klarreich, Director of Business Development, System Center Partner Ecosystem, Management and Security Division at Microsoft…

July 12, 2012 Off

Microsoft’s Roskill: How Our Clouds Beat Amazon, Google Apps

By David

Grazed from Talkin’ Cloud. Author: Joe Panettieri.

How is Office 365 performing with channel partners moving into cloud services? And how should Microsoft channel partners most effectively compete with Google Apps and Amazon Web Services (AWS) in the cloud market? Microsoft Channel Chief Jon Roskill offers some clues and updates from Worldwide Partner Conference 2012 (WPC12).

First, a confession: I missed a face-to-face sit-down with Roskill (sorry about that, Jon) because of my own logistics nightmare. But Roskill was kind enough to answer my questions over email.

Here’s the discussion…

July 12, 2012 Off

Microsoft Office 365 Now Fully Integrates Local or Cloud-Based External Data via Layer2 Cloud Connector

By David

Grazed from PR.com. Author: PR Announcement.

Microsoft Office 365 allows companies of all sizes to leverage the combined power of productivity tools such as Exchange, SharePoint, Lync and Office with the benefits of cloud computing. Instead of installing and deploying SharePoint Server on premises, any business can now simply subscribe to this service online to provide their employees with an enterprise grade solution for creating sites to safely share documents and information with colleagues, partners and customers.

But integration of existing corporate data is still difficult to implement. Layer2, as one of the leading providers of SharePoint add-ons in Europe and Microsoft Gold Certified ISV, today announced a new version of its Cloud Connector to seamlessly integrate almost any local or cloud-based corporate data sources with native SharePoint Online lists and libraries in the Microsoft Office 365 cloud. The connector extends the outstanding SharePoint features to existing data sets that will continue to reside within the corporate network or in other clouds, e.g. SQL databases, file shares or line-of-business systems…

July 12, 2012 Off

Currency Cloud Secures Investment from Notion

By David

Grazed from PEHub. Author: Angela Sormani.

Notion Capital, an entrepreneur-backed venture capital firm with a focus on cloud computing and Software-as-a-Service, has made its first investment from the recently closed $100 million, Fund 2. The fund has made a 2 million pounds ($3.1 million) investment in The Currency Cloud, a provider of a cloud-based currency conversion and international payments service. The investment comes on top of £2.5 million previous funding from Atlas Venture and the Anthemis Group.

Notion Capital, the entrepreneur-backed venture capital firm with a focus on Cloud Computing and Software-as-a-Service, today announced its first investment from the recently closed $100 million, Fund 2…

July 12, 2012 Off

Asahi Technologies Announces Affordable Cloud Computing Services in New York

By David

Grazed from PRWeb. Author: PR Announcement.

For an economy still recovering from recession, firms are burdened on the aspect of spending for expensive software and hardware. An aspect which is not financially viable in today’s business environment. To counter the increasing cost and resources spent firms are now increasingly migrating towards cloud computing environments. To cater to needs of small and mid level businesses access the benefits of cloud computing, Asahi Technologies a custom software firm in New York has announced affordable cloud computing solutions for PaaS(Platform as a service), SaaS (Software as a Service) and IaaS (Infrastructure as a service).

Cloud computing is essentially the provision of hardware, networks, interfaces and storage as a service to a group of end users. “It is an evolution of computing which has brought infrastructure to business processes under one cloud, which can be delivered as a service wherever and whenever required,” stated Vinod Subbaiah, CEO of Asahi Technologies…

July 12, 2012 Off

Pentagon unveils cloud computing strategy

By David

Grazed from The Times of India. Author: Editorial Staff.

The US Department of Defense has released a cloud computing strategy, saying it will move the department’s current network applications from a cumbersome and costly set of application silos to an end-state designed to create a more agile and cost effective service environment.

In announcing the strategy Wednesday, the Pentagon said the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) has been named as the enterprise cloud service broker to help maintain mission assurance and information interoperability within this new strategy, reported Xinhua…

July 12, 2012 Off

Agencies aren’t providing enough details about future cloud moves, GAO says

By David

Grazed from NextGov. Author: Editorial Staff.

Nineteen of 20 agency plans for future cloud computing projects are missing important elements, a watchdog said Wednesday.

For example, seven of the 20 blueprints submitted to the Office of Management and Budget do not include any cost estimates, according to the Government Accountability Office report. None of the 14 plans that involve migrating existing services to the cloud includes the cost of retiring or repurposing legacy systems, the watchdog said.

Without that information it’s not clear if the agencies will be able to wring all possible savings from the cloud projects, GAO said.

Technology officials have estimated the government can save $5 billion annually by moving 20 percent of its information technology infrastructure from agency-owned data centers to more nimble cloud computing…

July 12, 2012 Off

Inspector General finds that State’s cloud doesn’t measure up to NIST standards

By David

Grazed from FederalWeek. Author: Editorial Staff.

The State Department’s cloud computing environment doesn’t match the standards that the National Institute of Standards and Technology has established for clouds, according to a report from the department’s inspector general.

In the “Key Judgments” section of the report, issued in June, Deputy IG Harold Geisel wrote that State’s Systems and Integration Office (SIO) “has a knowledgeable, hardworking, and engaged management team that, for the most part, effectively dispatches its duties, which involve a wide range of new and old technologies, centralized and decentralized models of network management, budgetary items it can and cannot control, as well as colocated and dispersed physical locations.”…

July 12, 2012 Off

DISA to negotiate cloud contracts for DoD

By David

Grazed from FedLine. Author: Nicole Johnson.

The Defense Information Systems Agency will play a major role in deciding how the Defense Department adopts cloud computing services and products.

DISA will serve as the department’s enterprise cloud service broker, which means all DoD components must acquire government or industry-provided cloud services using DISA, according to a June 26 memo from DoD chief information officer Teresa Takai that was released Wednesday. The only exception is to obtain a waiver from a review authority designated by Takai.

DISA will work on behalf of the department to manage the use, performance and delivery of cloud services and negotiate contracts between cloud service providers and DoD consumers. The memo does not detail how DISA’s relationship with DoD will work in the event that DISA is competing for DoD’s cloud business. Currently, DISA provides cloud email services for the Army…

July 12, 2012 Off

Enterprise Clouds and Swiss Cheese

By David
Contributed Article by Carlos Escapa, CEO of VirtualSharp Software
CloudCow Contributed Article
 

Enterprise Clouds and Swiss Cheese

 
 The cloud is a very complex machine with lots of moving parts. The whirring and humming of modern data centers are caused by fans, air conditioners and power converters, but the “moving” parts are in fact pieces of solid state deep inside the cloud. We are referring to the huge number of software-controlled virtual components that work together to create the computing environment that we know as the cloud.

Computing clouds have become some of the biggest and most complex machines ever made by man. For every physical component in a cloud, there are easily 10 virtualized components corresponding to all layers where virtualization is present – including storage, networks, CPU, memory, operating systems and even applications. The entire set can easily run into the hundreds of thousands of components in an enterprise cloud, and tens of millions in a public cloud. By way of comparison, the space shuttle had 2.5 million parts1