Category: News

July 2, 2012 Off

Public Sector Behind the Curve as Cloud Computing Becomes Mainstream

By David

Grazed from PublicNet. Author: Editorial Staff.

Cloud computing has become mainstream in 2012 for providing IT facilities, but the public sector is slower to move into the cloud than private companies.

Cisco commissioned independent research amongst IT decision makers, in enterprises with more than 1,000 employees across a broad range of vertical sectors including government. The results clearly show that cloud has moved from hype to reality, with cloud now seen as a mainstream element of IT strategy.

Cloud computing, which allows oganisations to share resources, software and applications, has the potential to bring radical change to public sector ICT services. Using the cloud reduces costs and risks and brings scalability, and resilience…

July 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Computing: Who do you trust with your data?

By David

Grazed from Sydney Morning Herald. Author: Michael Hall.

Who should you trust with your data when every cloud promises a silver lining?

While vendors claim cloud computing is more secure than on-premise data centres others suggest only user experience will eventually allay security fears to break down adoption barriers for wary enterprises. After all, who now keeps cash under a bed?

Cloud computing refers to computer resources that can be turned on or off and scaled up or down, depending on demand. It is increasingly used by businesses to supplement or replace their on-site computing facilities…

July 2, 2012 Off

Big data is all the rage now, but don’t expect government spending frenzy

By David
Grazed from The Washington Post.  Author: Alex Rossino.

Three years ago, cloud computing was generating all of the hype in information technology. Now the spotlight is on “big data,” a term used to describe the exploding volume of data accumulated by federal agencies.

Despite the attention, big data spending within the federal government is likely to be limited at first and probably will not pick up until cloud computing is more established.

Private industry has already realized the value in the collections of data stored on their servers. This data can tell companies what their customers have bought, and what they might buy again, particularly if a targeted marketing campaign reaches them at the right time…

July 2, 2012 Off

Cloud Outages Show CIOs Still at Vendors’ Mercy

By David
Grazed from Wall Street Journal.  Author: Clint Boulton.

Some CIOs may face renewed questions about their cloud adoption strategies in the wake of Amazon.com’s well-publicized service disruption Friday night, the result of severe thunderstorms Friday night, and the outage that affected customers of Salesforce.com Thursday, the result of a glitch affecting communications between Salesforce.com’s storage and database systems.

Irrespective of the benefits of cloud computing, which allows companies to shift the capital expenditure and labor costs of managing software and computing infrastructure to external providers, many CIOs are also questioning how cloud vendors communicate with them during service interruptions…

July 2, 2012 Off

Amazon Web Services knocked offline; Observers say cloud outage raises questions

By David
Grazed from FierceCommunications.  Author:  Chris Rizo.

A quick-moving catastrophic storm late Friday night knocked part of Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) data center temporarily offline, and with the crash down came the websites of some of the marquee customers of Amazon.com’s (Nasdaq: AMZN) cloud-computing unit.

Downed was AWS’s vaunted Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) service, which remotely hosts the public-facing websites of movie-streamer Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX), cloud platform-as-a-service Heroku, photo-sharing service Instagram, and the social-networking site Pinterest, among other online services that similarly rest on Amazon’s digital infrastructure.

The content-delivery failures–blamed on a two-hour massive electrical storm–affected one AWS availability zone, the US-East-1 Region, which resides at Amazon’s data center in northern Virginia…

July 1, 2012 Off

Why performance will help Google steal cloud customers from Amazon

By David
Grazed from GigaOM.  Author: James Urquhart.

This week’s announcement by Google of its new Google Compute Engine cloud offering is a big deal, and GigaOM’s coverage to date has been pretty spot on. However, having read the excellent coverage by Om Malik and Derrick Harris, as well as some interesting analysis on other sites (like here and here), I’m stuck with the feeling that most are missing the real reason Google will get some stalwart Amazon Web Services customers to give Compute Engine a try. Google’s quest to win over users will be all about performance.

The Google Developers Blog post announcing the service broke down three key “offers” of GCE,  which I interpret as the three key differentiators from Google’s perspective of its service over the competition (not necessarily just AWS):…

July 1, 2012 Off

New E.U. Guidelines to Address Cloud Computing

By David
Grazed from New York Times.  Author: Kevin J. O’Brien.

The European Commission’s panel on privacy is expected to endorse Monday the concept of cloud computing as legal under the Continent’s privacy law and to recommend for the first time that large companies and organizations police themselves to assure that personal information kept in remote locations is protected.

The panel, known as the Article 29 Working Party, is expected to make the recommendation as part of its long-awaited guidelines on cloud computing, which have the potential, some industry experts say, to allay concerns over data privacy and pave the way for wider adoption of the remote-computing services that are more common in the United States.

The report will highlight the advantages of using cloud computing to encourage innovation and economic efficiency, said a person with knowledge of the recommendations, who spoke anonymously because he was not authorized to speak for the group. This would reflect a new, more practical approach by European officials to remote computing’s role in the broader economy….

July 1, 2012 Off

The enterprise needs a better network to the cloud

By David
Grazed from GigaOM.  Author:  Rick Dodd.

While much of the networking industry today is focused on improving speeds and feeds inside the data center, we need to recognize the importance of improving the networks that connect enterprise data centers to each other, and to the public cloud. If the industry can deliver an elastic network with programmable performance, then the walls between data centers could effectively disappear.

Trying to overlay cloud services on the same pipe being used for best-effort internet is going to disappoint users, and limit cloud service adoption. Specifically, we need to add speed and intelligence to these networks, and several factors are driving this requirement. For example:…

July 1, 2012 Off

Next Stop in Cloud Computing: How Can It Be Implemented?

By David
Grazed from Sys Con Media.  Author: Patrick Burke.

Cloud computing is being embraced by most enterprise IT shops – at least according to attendees and vendors at the 10th Cloud Expo in New York, writes Roger Strukhoff of Cloud Computing Journal. Many organizations now want to know how to harness the strengths of cloud computing.

The word of the day at Cloud Expo was "multi-cloud," Strukhoff explained:

"It turns out that enterprise IT is complex, and that cloud is not going to eliminate that complexity, at least with larger shops. However, it will continue the push in recent years to eliminate silos, decouple and loosely recouple services, get a grip on measuring things, and provide the vaunted ‘single pane of glass’ through which IT management can view and manage what’s going on," he writes…

July 1, 2012 Off

Eastern Storms Disrupt Amazon.com Data Centers

By David
Grazed from Wall Street Journal.  Author: John Letzing.

Large electrical storms on the east coast disrupted power for Amazon.com Inc. cloud-computing operations Friday night, causing outages for customers such as Netflix Inc. and photo-sharing service Instagram.

The Seattle-based online retailer operates data centers with servers that manage the Web operations of many other companies, a practice often called cloud computing. Power outages caused by catastrophic storms that blanketed the east coast affected Amazon’s operations in Virginia.

On Saturday afternoon, Amazon was still reporting performance issues for what it calls its elastic cloud compute, relational database and elastic beanstalk services. The problems appeared to have begun appearing on the site at around 11:21 p.m. EDT on Friday…