Category: News

July 9, 2012 Off

Is the cloud the best solution for every small business?

By David

Grazed from PC Advisor. Author: Ben Dyer.

Cloud computing is currently one of the most talked about topics for many business, for a large percentage of whom it is the perfect solution. For a startup, low costs and simple entry are appealing features – while large corporates have the clout to mould cloud services to their will. However there is a third, multi-million pound market for which the cloud may not suit. Visit: Business Advisor.

For mid-market online companies, though, all that glitters definitely isn’t gold. The cloud can become a nightmare for security, data privacy and more – and many are returning to standalone self-hosted solutions to bring control back into their own hands.

The complexities of choosing a cloud provider are numerous – issues such as security management, attack response and recovery, system availability and performance, the vendor’s financial stability and its ability to comply with the law all need to be considered. But should your business even be thinking about moving to the cloud at all?…

July 9, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Big Data Goes Green

By David

Grazed from RenewableEnergyWorld.com. Author: Richard Baillie.

Cloud computing, where software is delivered as a service to end users over the internet, is currently receiving a lot of attention. The term describes data-processing operations that are outsourced to server farms, instead of being powered on-site. These range from websites and remotely hosted networks, to digital storage space and individual documents.

Such are the developments, that software delivered over the web looks very similar to software operating on a personal computer, and is accessible from any computer in the world. Consequently, some IT sector analysts are predicting the death of the personal computer while others believe it will simply become another device to access the on-line world. Increasingly, the engine of the IT sector is composed of large-scale data servers that are driving the cloud-computing revolution forward. With regard to energy, cloud computing should result in lower costs for users and fewer greenhouse gas emissions by streamlining information-crunching into single facilities on speedy machines…

July 9, 2012 Off

On ‘cloud’ IPOs, listen to the thunder

By David
Grazed from Globe and Mail.  Author: Debra Borchhardt.

Every cloud has its silver lining. That has certainly been the case with cloud-computing companies going public. New cloud stocks have been rising high within the IPO market.

The latest to billow was ServiceNow, which priced its shares at $18 on June 28. The initial range had been $15-$17 a share, and the stock is already trading at more than $26 a share.

It’s this kind of performance that has pushed many companies to promote themselves as cloud-based service companies even if they aren’t. They hope that investors won’t do their homework and not look beyond the claim of cloud, resulting in a successful offering…

July 9, 2012 Off

European Science Champions Score an Early Goal for Cloud Computing

By David

Grazed from MarketWatch. Author: PR Announcement.

‘Helix Nebula – the science cloud’, set up earlier this year to support the massive IT requirements of European scientists and create a cloud computing market for the public sector in Europe, has today announced the initial deployment of its first flagship applications in high energy physics, molecular biology and natural disaster recovery.

A collaboration between big science and big business, Helix Nebula joins the forces of leading IT providers and three of Europe’s leading research centres (CERN(1), EMBL(2), and ESA(3)), and has now received EUR1.8 million funding from the European Commission. The initiative strongly supports the Commission’s Digital Agenda for Europe: It stresses a unified approach to data protection regulations and lightweight, efficient governance; it also has ambitions to support European economic development by making its services available to the wider community.

First results of the initiative’s on-going Proof of Concept (PoC) phase now show that CERN, EMBL and ESA succeeded in deploying challenging scientific applications each involving tens of thousands of jobs running at data centres operated by Atos, CloudSigma and T-Systems…

July 9, 2012 Off

Cloud computing moves from fad to foundation

By David

Grazed from InfoWorld. Author: David Linthicum.

Despite some setbacks, such as the recent Amazon Web Services outages, cloud computing is beginning to cross from the experimental phase to production systems that businesses can rely on. This has not been an overnight occurrence: Enterprises have been quietly getting smart about cloud computing technology and applying it where appropriate.

Despite years of cloud hype by vendors, you rarely hear about enterprise successes. That’s because when enterprises make cloud computing work, they view the application of the technology as a trade secret of sorts, so there are no press releases or white papers. Indeed, if you see one presentation around a successful cloud computing case study, you can bet you’re not hearing about 100 more…

July 9, 2012 Off

PaaS uptake to increase over next five years

By David

Grazed from CIOL. Author: Editorial Staff.

Considering the major industry buzz and media hype around cloud computing over the past three years, the actual uptake of the solution has not been warranted, finds Frost & Sullivan.

In a rush to maximise cloud revenue and attract customers, providers are now creating platform-as-a-service (PaaS) services that ride on top of their cloud infrastructure services, or underlie their cloud software services.

In addition to development platforms, providers are offering platforms that comprise functionality for delivery, administration, and integration of software-as-a-service (SaaS)-based software. Moreover, in the complex ecosystem that exists to deliver SaaS applications to business users, PaaS services represent an important jump-off point for collaboration and integration among multiple vendors and participants…

July 9, 2012 Off

Information Technology Spending to Hit $3.6 Trillion in 2012, Report Says

By David

Grazed from New York Times. Author: Quentin Hardy.

Fueled by an accelerating move to cloud computing, and by a boom in associated telecommunications services, worldwide information technology spending is increasing somewhat faster than expected, according to industry analysts at Gartner.

Over all, people will spend $3.6 trillion on information technology in 2012, the research firm said. This represents a 3 percent increase from 2011, when $3.5 trillion was spent, Gartner said, and is up from the 2.5 percent increase projected three months ago.

The increase, while modest, is notable because it is happening in the face of a financial crisis in Europe, slow growth in the United States, and a slowdown in China’s economic growth…

July 9, 2012 Off

Managing risk in the wake of Amazon’s cloud outage

By David

Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Gery Menegaz.

You hear that Mr. Anderson? That is the sound of inevitability…Risk! With the recent Amazon Cloud outage many are suggesting that it brings Cloud Computing into question. And that Cloud Computing will now be more difficult to sell. I disagree.

Whether you’re considering the implementation of a cloud strategy, taking on a merger with the hopes of increasing revenue, or are thinking about implementing a new, emerging technology there is risk involved. How you manage that is risk is critical to business continuity.

The first step in managing risk is to understand the types of risk that organizations face. According to Robert S. Kaplan and Anette Mikes, whose recent article Managing Risks: A New Framework, risk falls into one of 3 categories. Preventable, Strategic, or External risk…

July 9, 2012 Off

Xsigo Improves Sales Compensation Agility and Performance with Switch to Xactly

By David
Grazed from Xactly Corporation.  Author: PR Announcement.

Xactly Corporation, the leader in cloud-based incentive compensation and sales performance management (SPM), today announced that data center fabric deployment and technology leader Xsigo Systems, Inc. has dramatically reduced compensation administration time for its growing sales team with Xactly Incent.

Xsigo develops data center fabrics that consolidate server connectivity to help enterprises achieve a more agile, software-configurable infrastructure for the private cloud. The rise of cloud computing has put a strain on traditional data center architecture and networks, resulting in a brisk uptick in demand for more efficient virtualized data centers, bolstering Xsigo’s global business.

As Xsigo’s sales team scaled up from 30 to 60 reps to meet the market demand, its operations team struggled to manage the increasing complexity of sales compensation on spreadsheets. With the addition of each new rep, sales operations had to make significant updates to comp structure – revising quotas, shifting territories and developing new comp plans – all time-intensive processes that kept the company from being as nimble as it needed to be. The company had already licensed an SPM solution from Callidus, but after a competitive review, decided to make the switch to Xactly to support an internal overhaul of its compensation initiatives. Xsigo chose Xactly Incent because its cloud-based architecture was flexible enough to meet its current and future demands, as well as for Xactly’s responsive, knowledgeable team.

July 9, 2012 Off

Staying competitive means moving to the cloud

By David
Grazed from TodayOnline.  Author: Damien Wong.

Last December research company International Data Corporation (IDC) noted that spending on the IT industry’s next dominant platform – built on mobile computing, cloud services, social networking, and big data analytics technologies – grew at about 18 per cent per year and is expected to account for at least 80 per cent of IT spending growth through 2020.

This is compelling evidence that a fundamental transformation is ongoing, where information is becoming the primary raw material in organisations and maximising the value created from that information is the increasingly strategic role of IT. Companies now have enormous opportunities to find and exploit previously non-existent market niches…