Category: News

May 23, 2012 Off

Red Hat could cash in with open-source cloud juggling act

By David
Grazed from The Register.  Author: Matt Asay.

Open … and Shut The good open source lord giveth, and it taketh away, and no one knows this better than Red Hat.

As Red Hat chief executive Jim Whitehurst declared at this week’s Open Source Business Conference in San Francisco, California, open source and its children – including cloud computing – are laying waste to the economics of how traditional enterprises do business, forcing them to gravitate to information to compete. Red Hat’s role in this tectonic shift? Arms dealer.

Or machine tool manufacturer. But I’m getting ahead of myself…
May 23, 2012 Off

Appnomic Systems Joins Open Data Center Alliance

By David
Grazed from MarketWatch.  Author: PR Announcement.

Appnomic Systems today announced its strategic decision to join forces with the Open Data Center Alliance (ODCA) through which the company hopes to help drive the Alliance’s focus on actively shaping the future of Cloud computing. Appnomic’s core technology and solution mirror the ODCA’s vision of seamless, secure environment.

Appnomic also announced its participation in the Open Data Center Alliance Forecast 2012 Conference in New York City on June 12, 2012. Appnomic president, Ray Solnik will present critical strategies and emerging technologies to ensure effective application performance optimization and management during the Rapid Fire Panel from 1:50 to 2:35 p.m. Eastern Time…

May 23, 2012 Off

IBM Releases Low Cost Cloud Computing Offering

By David
Grazed from CloudTimes.org.  Author: Editorial Staff.

IBM is set to roll out lower-cost products and services for cloud computing in order to attract more clients. In a move to compete against HP, Cisco, and Equinix, IBM will be offering cloud applications for continued interoperability with Norway’s Otrum, Dell, and Germany’s SAP AG. Instead of managing software applications by themselves, potential clients can choose from the wide varieties of cloud offerings IBM offers. According to IBM’s vice president for SmartCloud and Managed Services Marketing, Craig Sowell, the company will be offering optimized solutions because there is really no one-size-fits-all solution when it comes to cloud computing services.

Aside from the product offerings, IBM is also set to offer companies their data center management service as well as other software and services fitted for the customers’ needs. IBM’s revenue from services grew by 2% for the first quarter while software revenue rose by 5%. However, hardware sales were decreased by 7%. Net income rose by $3.1 billion or 7.1%. IBM’s program director for smart cloud services, Tim Kounadis, said that the company will be offering such products and services at a competitive price. Pricing will be according to the company’s needs and size…

May 23, 2012 Off

Just how big is The Cloud?

By David
Grazed from ExtremeTech.  Author: Sebastian Anthony.

Last month, ExtremeTech revealed to you the true scale of internet porn [1]. At any one time, streaming adult videos probably utilize around 30% of the internet’s total bandwidth, which equates to around 6 terabytes of porn being consumed every second. But what about the other 70%? Netflix, YouTube, and other non-adult video sites are huge bandwidth hogs, possibly accounting for as much as 40% of internet traffic. Digital file lockers, such as Rapidshare and Megaupload, account for around 10% of traffic worldwide. Web surfing and email (and spam!) are another 15%. And then there’s cloud computing.

Today, the vast majority of web services and sites are hosted in the cloud. By this I mean that, instead of companies (such as Ziff Davis/ExtremeTech) managing their own hardware, third-party cloud storage and computing services are used. Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google are three prominent examples of huge cloud clusters, but there are hundreds of smaller operations that range in size from a whole data center down to a few racks…

May 23, 2012 Off

The Sky is the Limit for Cloud Computing Hiring

By David
Grazed from PRWeb.  Author: PR Announcement.

During April 2012, more than 12,000 cloud computing jobs were seen advertised online, according to WANTED Analytics™ (http://www.wantedanalytics.com), the leading source of real-time business intelligence for the talent marketplace. Hiring increased almost 50% year-over-year when compared to April of 2011 and more than 275% versus April 2010.

Technology occupations saw the highest number of jobs. Some of the most commonly advertised cloud computing related job titles were Software Engineers, Java Developer, Systems Engineer, Network Engineer, and Websphere Cloud Computing Engineer. Other occupations with high demand for cloud computing skills were Marketing Managers, Sales Representatives, Management Analysts, Operations Managers, and Market Research Analysts…

May 23, 2012 Off

Quelling Concerns About Cloud Security With a Top-notch IaaS-based System

By David
Grazed from Computer Technology Review.  Author: Adam Stern.

It’s no wonder businesses moving their computing operations to the cloud are feeling a bit insecure these days. There is a considerable amount of information being disseminated about cloud security, and many businesses are left to sift through this information with little or no prior experience in cloud computing. Add to that the various choices – private, hybrid, public, SaaS (Software as a Service), PaaS (Platform as a Service) and IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) – and it can be a daunting change.

Who’s right? And what is the best – and most secure – choice for your business? Let’s examine one choice here – IaaS – and what constitutes a first-rate, secure IaaS-based system.

IaaS is the outsourced delivery of the computing infrastructure and includes managed hosting and development environments. It offers the user flexibility and scalability without the upfront cost of investing in hardware for an enterprise IT infrastructure. IaaS makes use of virtualization to provide users the number of servers they need, when they need them…

May 23, 2012 Off

MIT Sloan CIO Symposium takes on mobile, data, clouds

By David
Grazed from CNet.  Author: Gordon Haff.

Most discussions about where computing is and where it’s going end up touching on three big themes: mobility, big data, and cloud computing. Yesterday’s MIT Sloan CIO Symposium was no exception, whether those precise terms were used or not.

Perhaps the most striking example of just how rapidly mobile devices are forcing IT organizations to adapt came from Scott Griffith, the CEO of Zipcar, who said that "60 percent of interactions are now through an Android or an iPhone." He also noted that essentially BlackBerry’s entire share had shifted to Android over a period of about two and a half years…

May 23, 2012 Off

Microsoft to incubate 10 Indian start-ups in cloud computing

By David
Grazed from Economic Times.  Author: Editorial Staff.

"The start-ups will have access to our resources such as BizSpark programme and $60,000 in Azure credit through BizSpark Plus programme to take advantage of the cloud," Microsoft India (R&D) Managing Director Amit Chatterjee told reporters here unveiling the programme in the Indian sub-continent.

Start-ups that can build any application using the company’s cloud platform and operate in any business or market segment will be eligible to apply for the programme, being launched simultaneously in Beijing (China), Tel Aviv (Israel), Seattle (US) and Bangalore…

May 23, 2012 Off

Ciena Offers Up Virtual WAN, Tears Down Data Center Walls

By David
Grazed from Network Computing.  Author:  George Lawton.

Virtualization and cloud computing are hot topics at EMC World–but how do you deliver speed and data center resiliency, as well as scalability, in virtual and cloud environments? Ciena is focusing on tackling all three issues with its demonstrations at this week’s conference in Las Vegas.

Jim Morin, product line director, managed services and enterprise at Ciena, says the company’s technology platform for a virtual WAN will facilitate the deployment of ultra-low latency stock market applications and ease the distribution of synchronous virtual machine architectures. In the long run, it will allow the development of bandwidth-on-demand services for data -intensive cloud applications…

May 23, 2012 Off

Study: Patriot Act Gives US Government No Special Acess to Cloud Data

By David
Grazed from PCWorld.  Author: Grant Gross.

An often-repeated concern that the U.S. Patriot Act gives the U.S. government unequaled access to personal data stored on cloud services is incorrect, with several other nations enjoying similar access to cloud data, according to a study released Wednesday.

The governments of several other countries, including the U.K., Germany, France, Japan and Canada, have laws in place allowing them to obtain personal data stored on cloud computing services, said the study, by Hogan Lovells, an international law firm that focuses on government regulations and other topics.

The Patriot Act, passed as an anti-terrorism measure in 2001, is "invoked as a kind shorthand to express the belief that the United States government has greater powers of access to personal data in the cloud than governments elsewhere," wrote study co-authors Christopher Wolf, based in Washington, D.C., and Winston Maxwell, based in Paris. "However, our survey finds that even European countries with strict privacy laws also have anti-terrorism laws that allow expedited government access to cloud data."…