Category: News

July 5, 2012 Off

Cloud Technology Has Some Businesses Struggling for Bandwidth

By David
Grazed from Business Insider.  Author: Ramon Ray.

Over the years, businesses have grown comfortable with their bandwidth, turning the other way as employees stream internet radio services like Pandora while hard at work. As workplaces have advanced to large servers and fast internet connections, small business owners haven’t seen a need to lock down internet use. But thanks to Cloud computing, that may soon change.

“Back in April Proctor and Gamble announced that they have banned their employees from using Pandora and Netflix, precisely because they utilize Cloud technology and they needed to free up more bandwidth,” James McNeil of Walker Sands Communications says. “As implementation of Cloud technology continues to grow so will this issue.”…

July 5, 2012 Off

Vendor lock-in and cost fears over cloud justified

By David
Grazed from Computing.uk.  Author: Sooraj Shah.

Vendors can lock businesses into lengthy contracts to move to the cloud and the move itself could be more expensive than deploying on-premise tools, warns George Teixeira, CEO of storage virtualisation software vendor DataCore.

In an interview with Computing, Teixeira acknowledged Computing‘s research*, which found that 38 per cent of IT decision-makers said that vendor lock-in was one of their biggest security concerns about the use of the cloud.

However, he stated that DataCore was trying to differentiate itself from rivals to minimise this risk…

July 4, 2012 Off

A Different Look At Cloud Computing

By David
Grazed from CloudTweaks.  Author: Emma Joseph.

Take what you know and have fun with it

Business has locked down the idea of cloud computing. Cloud computing has taken the business world by storm, for sure. Think about it: endless open-ended space, applications, data storage and just about anything else a company could want.

But now something a bit more user friendly has come into play – cloud gaming. This now gives a new meaning to how a gamer can game and how information and saved data can be moved and used – cloud computing just got a little brother…

July 4, 2012 Off

Migrating Applications By Cutting Cloud Clutter

By David
Grazed from CloudTweaks.  Author: Kaamil Nakhasi.

Talk to any CIO of a good company about cloud computing and related terminology, and you will notice that words such as automation, security, management come up as if they were regulars like Coke and Pepsi. There has been a lot of clutter around the very basic definition of cloud computing. Not only do people have a lot of preconceived notions about the technology, but also fixed ideas about its deployment. However, what is rare is a discussion about the best practices to migrate your current applications from the present platform to the cloud computing platform they are intended for.

Very clearly, migration of your applications actually requires a business–service kind of approach. Cutting through the usual cloud computing clutter and identifying key insights, prescriptive guidance and trends is equally important for the successful migration of applications to a cloud services platform. However, this in itself is a job that needs to be managed, and a few basic principles need to be understood in order to efficiently carry out the task…

July 4, 2012 Off

Ticketmaster books a private cloud with Cisco

By David
Grazed from ComputerWorld.  Author: Jim Duffy.

Global entertainment giant Live Nation Entertainment, which operates online ticket sales site Ticketmaster and three other entertainment-related businesses, is putting its Ticketmaster and Live Nation Concert and Network operations into a private cloud.

It is a sizable undertaking. Live Nation has 7,000 employees in 153 offices spread across 18 countries. Its revenue in 2011 was $5.4 billion, of which Ticketmaster accounted for $1.56 billion and other Live Nation operations $3.8 billion.

The entertainment conglomerate conducts 22,000 concerts globally for 2,300 artists, operates recording studios at 80 venues — which include the House of Blues chain in North America — and interfaces with 200 million customers and potential customers…

July 4, 2012 Off

Is Cloud Computing Changing The Film Industry?

By David
Grazed from Cloud Tweaks.  Author: Catherine Balavage.

There are many things people think about when it comes to the film industry: glamour, money, success, movies stars; but IT is probably low on the list. However, it is cloud computing that is causing a revolution in the film industry.

The film industry has decided to fully embrace cloud computing. This makes sense: the film industry is vast and sprawling, it is not just based in Hollywood, but all over the world. The film industry is more like a global village. Someone in London can share files with someone in Los Angeles at the drop of a hat. You can stream, you can talk to people, you can save vast amounts of money. I asked some of my friends who work in the industry how cloud computing helped them…

July 4, 2012 Off

Virtualization Versus a Private Cloud

By David
Grazed from PC World.  Author: David Clarke.

Since the mid 2000s one of the prevailing trends in the IT world has been to move networks, data, operating systems and servers into an environment where they are not tied to a specific piece of hardware.

In the early days the emphasis was on virtualisation. Organisations concentrated on increasing the number of servers on one machine using a hypervisor program with the activities kept in-house.

More recently there has been an emphasis on cloud computing, with more functions passing into the hands of a third party. The latter includes the option for a private cloud, dedicated to one enterprise…

July 3, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Google Shaman Explains Mysteries of ‘Compute Engine’

By David

Grazed from Wired. Author: Cade Metz.

Google started work on the Google Compute Engine over a year and a half ago, and it was all Peter Magnusson could do to keep his mouth shut.

Magnusson is the director of engineering for Compute Engine’s sister service, Google App Engine, and over the past 18 months, as he spoke at various conferences and chatted with various software developers about Google’s place in the world of cloud computing, he couldn’t quite explain how serious the company is about competing with Amazon’s massively popular Elastic Compute Cloud and other commercial services that seek to reinvent the way online applications are built and operated.

Google entered the cloud computing game back in 2008, when it unveiled Google App Engine, a service that lets outside software developers build and host applications atop the same sweeping infrastructure that runs Google’s own web services, such as Google Search and Gmail…

July 3, 2012 Off

Smart storing on the cloud

By David

Grazed from LiveMint. Author: Editorial Staff.

With the advent of cloud computing, the Web is no longer used only as an application, but as a data provisioning system. Dropbox is one of the most popular tools available today for online file saving and syncing, and is one of the first steps towards full-scale cloud computing (true cloud would have the computer as only an input-output device; with Dropbox the storage and processing of your files happens on your own computer, and copies are saved online).

Dropbox allows its users to store at least 2 GB of free data, and has a number of incentives to add more free storage. In addition, there are paid data plans as well, with 50 GB costing $99 (Rs. 5,425) per year. You can access your data from any device connected to the Internet, using the Dropbox clients for Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and even the mobile clients for iOS, Android and BlackBerry phones. Here are things you don’t already know about Dropbox…

July 3, 2012 Off

Enterprise Software Firms Rush to Plant a Stake in the Cloud

By David

Grazed from The Motley Fool. Author: Daniel Ferry.

Enterprise software is typically a staid field. Customers in this industry tend to be sticky: businesses often stay with their incumbent provider due to the high switching costs of retraining staff and IT departments for a new system. This has been especially true while business software required physical installation on local machines.

However, as storage and processing increasingly takes to the cloud, companies are rethinking their software needs. Cloud computing is typically more efficient, as the machines that actually store and compute data in the cloud are far more powerful than local machines. It’s probably inevitable that most, if not all, enterprise customers will eventually migrate to the cloud. This creates a rare juncture for customers to choose new enterprise software en masse. In an industry with high customer retention rates, capturing a big market share today pays off well into the future. The rush for cloud computing customers therefore resembles an Old West-style race for prospectors to stake their claim in gold country…