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Gartner: How and why cloud providers need to support their customers through Covid-19 – Cloud Tech

Cloud providers need to proactively support their customers through the tail end of the Covid-19 pandemic. They can do this by demonstrating the strength and adaptability of their service offerings.

Covid-19 has left many organisations unsure if their business continuity strategy is sufficiently robust, particularly when it comes to cloud services. The reliance on videoconferencing and collaboration tools has stressed the limits of back-end supporting services, while also increasing network traffic volume. However, cloud providers with robust and excess infrastructure, combined with disaster recovery plans to respond to such a crisis, are successfully managing in this new normal.

As IT leaders begin to consider longer-term cloud solutions to support the new portion of their workforce remaining remote, they are facing challenging questions about the resiliency and dependability of cloud services. At the same time as Covid-19 has pushed cloud to the spotlight, it has put providers in a unique position to reassure customers of their strength and adaptability.

The providers who will fail at this time are the ones still tackling the debate of on-premises data centres vs cloud. Customers are now asking about the adaptability of their current cloud service that they have been forced to adopt if they decided to continue using it post pandemic.

Providers need to prove that their services are resilient enough to handle random spikes in demand by showcasing their excess capacity to rapidly deploy new services when needed. To allow customers to rest assured, can providers prove they are themselves supported by underlying infrastructure that is sufficiently robust?

Here are the actions cloud providers must ensure in support of their clients and deliver uninterrupted service during the Covid-19 pandemic and beyond.

Cloud computing is a model that is inherently designed to satisfy fluctuating demand and well-architected, well-run cloud services are designed to handle unexpected spikes in demand. If implemented correctly, cloud services are well positioned to support rising requests, such as those exhibited during this Covid-19 crisis.

However, more reports of slowdowns or outright inability to handle increased loads are surfacing every day. The reasons for this are varied. Increased remote workers means increased load on VPNs and the servers that handle their connections. While companies have spent money to build out their existing capacity to handle remote work, few have come close to provisioning capacity many times their established norms. This means any reduction in service quality will appear to end users as limited bandwidth availability and slower loads.

For cloud providers that host VPN servers and private network connections for companies with workforces both large and small, it is of critical importance that you help customers understand their limitations and to expand them at a measured cost.

Cloud providers must engineer their networks to handle spikes without having to throw bandwidth at the problem, which can often be an expensive proposition. Deploying advanced traffic engineering technologies will be crucial.

In addition to managing increased traffic, operations teams must be able to maintain service availability and performance while they themselves are working remotely or with reduced staff. Furthermore, components powering the cloud data centre resources, such as chips or servers, may be in short supply due to supply chain disruptions facing manufacturing facilities. Customers who understand these realities want to be reassured that their provider is dealing with the potential bottlenecks in service smoothly and effectively.

By publicly stress testing cloud infrastructure and explaining the results in the context of periods of extreme variation, cloud providers will be well positioned to address customer resiliency concerns that naturally arise when comparing longer term solutions post pandemic.

Using the stress test data, cloud providers can develop and publish comprehensive service continuity plans for increased usage, remotely managing services and leveraging a geographically diverse engineering workforce for support.

Allowing customers in to this discussion will build their confidence in your resiliency plans.

Many cloud customers are facing revenue challenges during these unprecedented times and will remember the service providers who lent a helping hand. If you can act as stopgaps by offering financial relief to customers, especially small and midsize businesses then do so if you havent already. There are many possibilities to explore this initiative, the easiest is to consider providing cloud-based collaboration and conferencing capabilities at a discount or for free, at least for a limited period of time.

About the author: Daryl Plummer is VP, Distinguished Analyst, chief of Research and chief Gartner Fellow. Mr. Plummer is chief of research for cloud computing and a primary analyst covering multiple cloud topics, business process management, SOA and Web technologies. He manages the Gartner Fellows Program, which is designed to allow senior analysts the opportunity to explore new research ideas and to elevate the Gartner culture and brand with clients. He is also chief of Research for emerging trends and interacts with clients on topics ranging from application development to enterprise architecture.

Read more: Blog: How cloud companies are reacting to Covid-19 and services offered

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The Connection Between Cloud Service Providers and Cyber Resilience – Security Intelligence

Organizations in both the private and public sectors have increasingly turned to cloud service providers (CSPs) to support their technical infrastructure, primarily to reduce IT costs and increase the efficiency of computing resources. In many cases, CSPs can also offer protection from security threats and increased cyber resilience though customers often face trade-offs when they rely on cloud providers for these protections.

In the area of cyber resilience, in particular, organizations can offload much of the responsibility for keeping computer systems up and running by relying on cloud service providers, but this also means relinquishing much of their own control over those resilience measures.

The resilience of computer systems can mean slightly different things to different organizations. For some, it refers to maintaining a system that never goes down, while for others it refers to a systems capacity to recover from incidents and outages as quickly and painlessly as possible.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) defines the resilience of information systems as The ability of an information system to continue to: (i) operate under adverse conditions or stress, even if in a degraded or debilitated state, while maintaining essential operational capabilities; and (ii) recover to an effective operational posture in a time frame consistent with mission needs.

Although the types of incidents and their consequences vary from business to business, a 2014 estimate from Gartner puts the average cost of just one minute of IT downtime at $5,600, and a 2016 Ponemon Institute report raises that estimate to nearly $9,000 per minute. The ever-increasing reliance on IT services suggests that the financial consequences of unplanned outages are continually rising.

Since IT costs and efficiency are typically primary drivers of cloud service adoption, it makes sense that reducing costs due to IT outages and interruptions might also factor into the decision.

Cloud services can help organizations with both of the components of cyber resilience: operating continuously under adverse conditions and recovering rapidly from incidents with minimal business interruptions. CSPs typically operate infrastructure with much greater capacity than individual organizations, and they may also have significantly more resources to devote to security measures and attack prevention.

Way back in 2012, a report published by ENISA, the European Unions cybersecurity agency, determined that a cloud service providers ability to dynamically reallocate resources for filtering, traffic shaping, authentication, encryption, etc, to defensive measures (e.g., against DDoS attacks) has obvious advantages for resilience. In other words, a denial-of-service (DoS) attack that might otherwise cause company server outages can be easily absorbed by a cloud providers larger traffic capacity and greater ability to filter traffic.

Similarly, ransomware attacks that cut organizations off from their systems and data can be overcome with the assistance of cloud providers that produce and retain back-up copies of those systems.

Alternatively, a CSP can help customers respond to natural disasters that cut off power to servers in one region by shifting their traffic and systems to servers operated in a data center somewhere else.

A 2017 white paper titled Advancing cyber resilience with cloud computing, published by Microsoft, makes similar arguments: Cloud computing can be a practicable and valuable tool for cyber resilience and digital continuity, the authors assert. Thanks to its geographic replication of data, rapid scalability, security features and cost-effectiveness, cloud enables users to increase the efficiency of their operations and their agility in response to threats.

The impressive capabilities of cloud services have changed how businesses around the world operate, but ultimately, it is up to individual organizations to determine whether these long-known advantages outweigh the possible downsides.

The downside to relying on cloud services for resilience is that it can sometimes leave customers with little control over the resilience of their own computer systems and infrastructure and can also leave them vulnerable to attacks directed at their providers as well as any mistakes the providers might make.

As more organizations rely on the same small set of cloud service providers, the consequences of each individual outage may become greater, even if the number of outages decreases. But for many small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) that lack dedicated security staff, the risks of a cloud provider outage still wont beat out the benefit of having the enhanced security and resilience resources that large cloud providers can offer.

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Google And Dell Pave The Way For File Data In The Cloud – The Next Platform

A year ago, Dell Technologies made a significant push deeper into the fast-growing hybrid cloud space, unveiling its Dell Technologies Cloud initiative that includes hybrid cloud platforms that take advantage of the tight integration of technologies from Dell and VMware, which is majority owned by the larger company. The platforms leverage the VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF), designed to enable enterprises to manage virtual machines (VMs) and containerized applications in the hybrid cloud tightly integrated with the Dell EMC VxRail hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI).

As we noted at the time, platform options include Dell Technologies Cloud Platform, which includes both VxRail and VCF with flexibility regarding servers, storage and networking and provides an easier way to migrate workloads between on-premises environments and private and public clouds, and a Dell Cloud Data Center-as-a-Service, a fully managed service that brings cloud-like capabilities on premises and is based on VMware Cloud on Dell EMC, the productization of the Project Dimension program that VMware had introduced in 2018.

The overall cloud initiative was Dells way of pushing into the highly competitive cloud space that had not only traditional OEMs like Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Cisco Systems extending their reach into the public cloud through both innovation and partnerships, but top-tier public cloud service providers like Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud looking for ways to create a presence in the datacenter though both hardware (AWS Outposts) and software (Azure Stack and Googles Anthos).

It makes sense. Enterprises are moving more workloads and data including mission-critical applications into the public cloud to take advantage of such benefits as the greater agility, easy scalability and lower costs, which come with not having to invest in datacenter hardware or the people and time needed to manage such environments. However, for security, compliance and other reasons, theyre keeping some workloads in their own datacenters, creating hybrid environments, and using multiple public cloud providers (a mulitcloud situation).

Introducing OneFS for Google Cloud

The public cloud with its infinite scalability and access to a broad range of development tools is understandably attractive to organizations, according to Brian Payne, vice president of cloud product management at Dell.

Weve got customers that are off looking at how they modernize an media entertainment app or how they apply artificial intelligence to a given problem they have as a business and they discover that they dont have the right types of developers, the right types of tools, or they dont want to invest the time because they dont have it to get a product to market quickly or an offer to market quickly to go figure out what framework they want to use and how they put all this together, Payne tells The Next Platform. The public cloud offers pretty nice services with that regard.

But it doesnt have everything they need, which was a driver behind a partnership that Dell and Google Cloud announced this week. The companies unveiled OneFS for Google Cloud, an offering that enables enterprises to more easily to manage data-intensive workloads between on-premises datacenters and the Google Cloud. It leverages Dell EMC Isilon filesystems on premises and the analytics and compute services offered in Google Cloud to allow businesses to move workloads as large as 50 petabytes in a single filesystem between the two environments without having to make changes in the applications. It addresses the challenges facing organizations around performance and scalability when trying to store file data in public clouds.

What Google Cloud doesnt have and what customers have discovered and told us is the right file services in order to feed that AI engine to generate whatever results it is that the business users are looking for, Payne says. Thats where we saw an opportunity to partner with Google to offer within their environment, within their portal, their process engines and pair up their services with our OneFS file solution. That file solution can give the customers the enterprise-class capabilities that they need, the performance [and] scaling. Were talking about read-through performance that is above and beyond alternatives that are available today, talking about file capacity that is going into the extreme 50-petabyte range, these kinds of capabilities that are just not available in that domain. Were pairing those up. When I when I say that were looking comprehensively at what our customers need, we said, Look, theres a great opportunity. Yes, theres some compute going into the cloud, but ultimately the customers need this storage capability here and we can pair that up and make it available to our customers.'

There are myriad industries where being able to move and storage huge amounts of file data in the public cloud would be important, including genomics research and media and entertainment companies that have to manage massive files like 4K video, he says. Autonomous vehicles are another area.

Theyre generating today tons and tons and tons of data each time they do a test drive and thats getting uploaded into an environment, Payne says. Then they want to go run machine learning around that and then generate understanding and ultimately feed an algorithm that enables that autonomous driving. Thats an example where a company may be in a situation where theyre behind in the race, dont have time to find and recruit the developers and build the capabilities and build the frameworks. I just need to get to it quick. Ive got the data. I need to get it to the right location paired up with the service to get to a result faster. Theyre searching for a solution in a case where they say build vs. buy it, but dont have time to build. Heres where were filling out a key part of the solution on the storage side.

He declines to say whether there are plans to expand the OneFS solution to other cloud providers like AWS and Azure, but says the approach is one that we will extend. As were think about cloud, were thinking about the broader ecosystem and youve got to bring elements of the ecosystem together to package up a solution for a given problem. This approach that were taking here is certainly something that will extend as we build out an ecosystem around Dell Technologies Cloud.

The introduction of the Google Cloud partner also came as Dell unveiled enhancements to the Dell Technologies Cloud Platform, most of which highlight the tight integration between Dell and VMware technologies, which Payne says is a key differentiator from other OEMs that also are pushing their way into the cloud. That includes support in the cloud platform of VMwares Tanzu Kubernetes Grid and VCF 4.0 on the same VxRail infrastructure, enabling organizations to use the same tools for containerized workloads and traditional virtual machines. That capability comes as VMware gets ready to launch its Google Cloud VMware Engine this summer, which will enable enterprises to move and run VMware environments in Google Cloud.

Dell also is looking to make it easier for companies to embrace its Dell Technologies on Demand subscription program, starting with a configuration option with as few as four VxRail nodes. Before configurations started at eight nodes, which might be too much for some companies, Payne says. At the same time, the company also is unveiling a higher end configuration that includes a 42-rack infrastructure that includes more processors cores, memory options and NVM-Express all-flash storage. The vendor also is offering more appliance options for Dell EMC SD-WAN Solution powered by VMware and based on technology from VeloCloud, which VMware bought in 2017. The software defined-WAN solution is the entry point for companies that are coming onto VMware Cloud on Dell EMC and looking to run for such workloads as voice-over-IP, video streaming and virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI).

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Hybrid cloud: The key to surviving and thriving during the pandemic – WTOP

The coronavirus pandemic has put an accelerator on hybrid cloud adoption within both the federal and state governments.

This content is provided byRed Hat.

The coronavirus pandemic has put an accelerator on hybrid cloud adoption within both the federal and state governments. With the vast majority of government employees suddenly working from home in such a short period of time, business processes, workloads and servers have all had to be stretched and dispersed. Agencies that already had a hybrid cloud strategy were in a good place to adapt to this new paradigm. And if you didnt have a hybrid cloud before this, you do now.

But some hybrid cloud strategies are less comprehensive than others. The best include integration between services and applications to accelerate innovation. But those are few and far between.

What we found most was as soon as the pandemic hit certain resources, certain applications were stretched thin while others have been sitting idle. And we certainly didnt anticipate which services were going to need to scale prior to the pandemic, said Dan Domkowski, senior principal technology evangelist at Red Hat. For instance, we didnt know that all of a sudden, within a few weeks time, entire agencies were going to have to prepare for an entire workforce that was going to be remote.

The newly massive remote workforce required scaling networking infrastructure with virtual private networks and automated configuration of multi-protocol label switching tunnels in routing devices, among other adjustments. Ways to automate and be versatile became crucial. Agencies had no choice but to scale quickly, automate repeatable tasks and even increase the use of services offered on demand in the public cloud

Many may have done a great job at solving these in the near term. But developing a way in which thats going to last them through the rest of the year and onward is whats going to come next, Domkowski said.

One major example of this is unemployment applications within certain states, like New York State. They had to scale up via the cloud in order to handle the suddenly increased workload and still be able to provide unemployment services. The public cloud provides fast access to resources for delivery, but even components hosted in the cloud have dependencies located elsewhere. Its the integration of the those dependencies, how they are delivered, scaled, monitored, and secured together as a holistic digital system is what makes up a sound hybrid cloud strategy.

But hybrid cloud is helping agencies who werent as well positioned to handle this new work paradigm play catch-up. Experts have found that teams can innovate the most when they have control over their own tools. Thats a key reason for implementing hybrid cloud in and of itself. Different providers have different strengths and weaknesses around what tools they provide and workloads they handle.

So if one team decides they should be working with AWS, while another picks Azure, a hybrid cloud strategy helps both teams get the most out of those assets while allowing the agency to set certain controls and standards. It provides ways to say which tools and libraries are approved, and standards like application programming interfaces (APIs) and immutable infrastructure so that services can be discoverable, authenticated, and even portable. Agencies just need to be sure the environment is secure and manageable, and to institute rules and controls.

And thats important, because so many security controls and requirements are built around the assumption that even physical security is applicable to all employees. But now employees are mostly sitting in environments that cant be controlled by their employers. Connecting to critical business services and data is a worry for every enterprise, and that worry just got amplified as remote workforces exploded. Figuring out a way to adapt their security policies to this new world is critical for agencies to figure out. Enforcing things like two-factor authentication, VPNs, and approved/updated tooling and libraries can help, but agencies also have to be careful not to hinder innovation.

So finding that balance of allowing teams to innovate, giving them a chance to pick their path toward a desired outcome, while also providing guidelines or the lanes in the road is critical for delivering digital transformation in government, Domkowski said. Consumable and secure dont need to be mutually exclusive.

Agencies also need the flexibility to migrate and integrate applications, data and other resources from one environment to another if need be. The best outcome or tool for 2020 might not be the best for 2022, and agencies dont want to trade one set of lock-in vendors for another. Instead, they should prioritize being flexible, being portable, and following standards like creating and managing APIs and deploying on immutable infrastructure . Generally, technologies that have communities built around them tend to exist for a long time, which can help guide future movement, as well as encourage flexibility.

Hybrid cloud is also critical to understanding and developing these applications in order to get insights that allow agencies to build automation. Because applications can integrate without human interaction, they can learn from one another, which allows them to get to a result faster and accelerates both an organization and its performance.

The only thing thats certain is uncertainty. So, act as if uncertainty is always going to be our normal, Domkowski said. And if you do that, youll prepare your systems and your services to be portable, to be flexible, and to get the most out of them, no matter what gets thrown at us next.

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Veeam teams up with Kasten for containerised app backup Blocks and Files – Blocks and Files

Veeam has joined forces with Kasten to offer cloud-native application backup to its customers. The deal spans sales, marketing and technology.

This partnership solves a problem for Veeam how to get a foothold in cloud-native backup for cloud-native applications that run as a bunch of containers in a Kubernetes-orchestrated system.

Veeam aims to provide full spectrum backup to its customers, but has found that many are adopting a DevOps approach and running Kubernetes-orchestrated, cloud-native systems, sometimes with thousands of containers in clustered server systems. The company is facing a build, buy, or partner decision. Todays outcome is its decision to partner with Kasten and its K10 product.

Dan Kogan, Veeam product and solutions marketing VP, writes in a company blog: Weve been seeing our customers interest increase in Kubernetes as a critical piece of their cloud infrastructure, creating a new area around container-native data protection that they need help in addressing. To that end, were excited to share that we are partnering with Kasten, the leaders in backup solutions for containerised workloads.

In the virtual server world, a virtual machine (VM) and an application are often effectively identical, and always closely intertwined. Veeams genius was to gain deep awareness of how hypervisors schedule and run applications in virtual machines and so provide better VM backup.

The company has made a killing in providing backup and restore under a data availability theme, first for apps in virtual servers, then virtual servers in the cloud and also physical servers. But containerisation and DevOps style development has encroached onto the virtual server world. Where does Veeam fit in?

A containerised application needs a backup facility that understands the backup focus is the application, not the container. Veeam could move with VM environments that migrated to the cloud VMware Cloud Foundation, for example. But it had no capability for cloud-native backup for cloud-native apps.

This has opened up opportunities for specialist startups such as Kasten, which recognised that Kubernetes and its orchestrating ilk provides the same framework for container backup as hypervisors do for VM backup.

In Kubernetes there is no mapping of applications to servers or VMs. Instead, applications are mapped to a set and sequence of containers. VM-focused or server-focused backup is blind in the Kubernetes world. Containerised app atomicity is the sine qua non here.

Veeam has signed reseller deals before, for instance with N2SW, to underpin Veeam Availability for AWS. This provided a cloud-native agentless backup and availability system to protect AWS apps and data.

It bought N2SW for $42.5m in January 2018. Problems ensued involving Veeams then Russian ownership, non-US domicile and N2SWs federal business. Veeam sold N2SW in October 2019. Veeam is now US-domiciled, following the $5bn acquisition by Insight Partners in January 2020.

Kasten provides another route for Veeam into cloud-native backup. Will Veeam want to own its own containerised application backup technology? Blocks & Files thinks this is on the table, and Kasten, with total funding of $17m, is an inexpensive option.

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Global Bare Metal Cloud Market : Industry Analysis and Forecast… – Azizsalon News

Global Bare Metal Cloud Market is expected to reach USD 12.02 Billion by 2026 from USD XX Billion in 2018 at a CAGR of XX % (Detailed analysis of the market CAGR is provided in the report).

Global Bare Metal Cloud MarketThe report study has analyzed revenue impact of COVID -19 pandemic on the sales revenue of market leaders, market followers and market disrupters in the report and same is reflected in our analysis.

REQUEST FOR FREE SAMPLE REPORT: https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/request-sample/6841/

Bare metal cloud market is expected to witness the significant growth during the forecast period. Bare metal cloud offers features, such as pay-as-per pricing, on-demand capacity and self-automated service to the commercial customers and advantages such as hyper-scalability & flexibility, high-data transaction workloads and artificial intelligence applications.

The global bare metal cloud market based on service type, the identity and access management service type is expected to be major contributor for the market growth during the forecast period. It is a vital service for bare metal cloud as it majorly governs the IT resource access and improves the physical security of the bare metal cloud servers and storages. The market based on professional service type, the implementation services segment of bare metal cloud market is expected to hold largest shares of the market during the forecast period. This is due to its essentiality for the deployment of bare metal cloud services on the customer premises.

Geographically, the Bare Metal Cloud market has been segmented into North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East & Africa and Latin America. North America is expected to be largest market for bare metal cloud during the forecast period. The growth of this region is attributed to the large investment in the research and development activities.

The years that have been considered for the study are:

Base year 2018 Estimated year 2019 Forecast period 2019 to 2026

Key Highlights:

Global Bare Metal Cloud market analysis and forecast, in terms of volume and value. Comprehensive study and analysis of market drivers, restraints and opportunities influencing the growth of the global Bare Metal Cloud market. Global Bare Metal Cloud market segmentation on the basis of service type, professional service type, organization size, vertical and geography (country-wise) has been provided. Global Bare Metal Cloud market strategic analysis with respect to individual growth trends, future prospects along with contribution of various sub-market stakeholders have been considered under the scope of study. Global Bare Metal Cloud market analysis and forecast for five major regions namely North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, the Middle East & Africa (MEA) and Latin America along with country-wise segmentation. Profiles of key industry players, their strategic perspective, market positioning and analysis of core competencies are further profiled. Competitive developments, investments, strategic expansion and competitive landscape of the key players operating in the global Bare Metal Cloud market are also profiled.

DO INQUIRY BEFORE PURCHASING REPORT HERE: https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/inquiry-before-buying/6841/

Research Methodology:

Bloomberg, Hoovers, Factiva are some of the sites that are being referred to gain insights about global bare metal cloud market. Experts from top manufacturing companies along with other stakeholders have been considered. This is done to validate and collect critical information for evaluating trends related to this market during the forecast period. Top-down and bottom-up approaches have been used to estimate the global and regional size of this market. Data triangulation techniques along with other comparative analysis are also used to calculate the exact size of the global bare metal cloud market globally.

Global global bare metal cloud marketplace is growing with the presence of major companies holding a large market share.

Some of them operating in the market are given underneath:

IBM Corporation Centurylink Incorporation Oracle Corporation Rackspace Hosting, Incorporation Packet Internap Corporation Bigstep Scaleway Incorporation Dell Technologies, Inc. Spotinst Storm Joyent, Incorporation

Key Target Audience:

Bare metal cloud providers Managed service providers Application developers Bare metal hardware vendors Metal-as-a-service providers

The Scope of the Report:

The research report segments the global bare metal cloud market based on service type, professional service type, organization size, vertical, and geography

Global Bare Metal Cloud Market, By Service Type:

Compute services Database services Networking services Identity and access management services Volume and object storage services Professional services Managed services

Global Bare Metal Cloud Market, By Professional Service Type:

Business consulting services Training and support services Implementation services

Global Bare Metal Cloud Market, By Organization Size:

Large enterprises Small and medium-sized enterprises

Global Bare Metal Cloud Market, By Vertical:

Banking, financial services, and insurance IT and telecommunication Healthcare Government Manufacturing Retail Others

Global Bare Metal Cloud Market, By Geography:

North America Europe Asia Pacific Middle East & Africa Latin America

MAJOR TOC OF THE REPORT

Chapter One: bare-metal-cloud Market Overview

Chapter Two: Manufacturers Profiles

Chapter Three: Global bare-metal-cloud Market Competition, by Players

Chapter Four: Global bare-metal-cloud Market Size by Regions

Chapter Five: North America bare-metal-cloud Revenue by Countries

Chapter Six: Europe bare-metal-cloud Revenue by Countries

Chapter Seven: Asia-Pacific bare-metal-cloud Revenue by Countries

Chapter Eight: South America bare-metal-cloud Revenue by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Revenue bare-metal-cloud by Countries

Chapter Ten: Global bare-metal-cloud Market Segment by Type

Chapter Eleven: Global bare-metal-cloud Market Segment by Application

Chapter Twelve: Global bare-metal-cloud Market Size Forecast (2019-2026)

Browse Full Report with Facts and Figures of bare-metal-cloud Market Report at: https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/market-report/global-bare-metal-cloud-market/6841/

About Us:

Maximize Market Research provides B2B and B2C market research on 20,000 high growth emerging technologies & opportunities in Chemical, Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, Electronics & Communications, Internet of Things, Food and Beverages, Aerospace and Defense and other manufacturing sectors.

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Exabeam sees more than half of new and add-on recurring revenue from cloud offering – Help Net Security

Exabeam, the Smarter SIEM company, announced a significant performance milestone with Exabeam SaaS Cloud contributing more than half of Q1 FY21 new and add-on recurring revenue, signaling an accelerated transition of its business to the cloud.

This momentum has been built on consistent improvements to Exabeams cloud-first product and partner strategy, including the recent announcements of the Exabeam Cloud Platform and Google Cloud Security Partner status.

With organizations quickly deploying collaboration and virtual meeting apps to ensure business continuity and productivity in todays work-from-home reality, Exabeam has also announced support for the collection of logs from Zoom; further supporting security teams need to carry out their investigations across a diverse environment.

This new log source is included as part of the existing Exabeam Cloud Connectors solution. Clients who are already leveraging Cloud Connectors today will be able to ingest Zoom logs at no additional cost.

In addition to Zoom, Exabeam has extended its range of Exabeam Cloud Connectors to reliably collect logs from over 40 cloud services into Exabeam Data Lake, Exabeam Advanced Analytics, and any other security information and event management (SIEM) solution, providing visibility into cloud services from Workday, Ping Identity, Cloudflare and Fidelis.

Underlining its commitment to cloud-first organizations, Exabeam has also released a free trial of Exabeam SaaS Cloud, a powerful cloud security architecture that ingests and behaviorally analyzes data from any cloud or on-premises data source.

The availability of a trial version will enable organizations to experience first hand the benefits of a proven platform that allows analysts to collect unlimited log data, use behavioral analytics to detect and investigate attacks and automate incident response.

Achieving this performance milestone underlines our impressive recent momentum across sales and new product launches, with Exabeam products now available from 15 locations worldwide, commented Shahar Ben-Hador, VP of product management at Exabeam.

The broad extension of Exabeam Cloud Connectors and our status as a Google Cloud Partner provide further validation of our commitment to meet the security needs of businesses across the cloud economy.

With recent research revealing that many companies are beginning to migrate security tools to the cloud, a significant number still have concerns over data privacy, unauthorized access, server outages and integration.

The study underlines why visibility into cloud services is now vital and validates the strategy of organizations that are now taking a cloud-first approach to security.

Security teams must increasingly adapt to IT strategies that are moving more solutions to the cloud, said Oseloka Obiora, director of operations, RiverSafe. Exabeams technology and experienced team offer significant benefits for organizations compared to on-premises solutions not the least of which is delivering initial time-to-value through a smarter SIEM.

After reviewing the market and a number of providers, we chose Exabeam to champion our vision of maximizing what the cloud offers as it relates to our security program, said Marc Crudgington, chief information security officer, Woodforest National Bank.

Exabeams SaaS-based SIEM means we have no infrastructure or system operations to manage. A cloud-first approach gives our team efficiencies instead of overburdening them with operational management tasks; they can now focus on strategic security initiatives that continue to mature our enterprises cybersecurity program.

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‘What is Dropbox?’: How to use the cloud-based file-storage service for collaboration – Business Insider – Business Insider

Dropbox is a file hosting service, often referred to as a "cloud storage" service. Dropbox is one of the oldest and most popular cloud storage services in use today, though there are many alternatives, including Microsoft OneDrive, Box, Sync, and Google Drive.

When you subscribe to Dropbox, you are allotted a certain amount of storage space in an online server known as "the cloud." After installing the Dropbox app on your PC, mobile device, or both, any files that you store in your Dropbox locally will be copied to the Dropbox server as well.

Dropbox is a cloud storage service that keeps files in sync between an online server and your own devices. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

If you make changes to these files in one place, the updates are automatically mirrored everywhere. By synchronizing your Dropbox files locally and online, you can easily access these files anywhere and share them with others more easily.

While Dropbox is mainly online storage that keeps files in sync between your personal devices and the cloud, it offers a broad array of features beyond that basic functionality.

It's accessible via the web or in apps that you can install on Mac, PC, and mobile devices, both iOS, and Android. No matter which version of Dropbox you use, everything is securely encrypted with 256-bit AES.

Dropbox remembers and can restore files you've deleted. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

The service also keeps a history of your files with versioning so you can recover them in the event of a malware or ransomware catastrophe, or even just accidental deletion. The free version gives you 30 days of file recovery, while paid tiers go up to 180 days.

One of the key reasons to use Dropbox is how easy the service makes it to share files. You can control permission levels and share files and folders with specific people using a link, or make files public so anyone with the appropriate link can access your data. It's a convenient way to send files without using email attachments.

Dropbox includes collaboration tools as well. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

Dropbox even includes some collaboration tools such as Dropbox Spaces, which lets teams work together on documents, share notes, and edit in real-time.

The basic Dropbox service is free and includes 2 GB of online storage. Dropbox Plus costs $10 per month and increases storage to 2 TB. Dropbox Professional is the highest tier, priced at $20 per month, offering a storage capacity of up to 3 TB along with bonus features, such as fast full-text search and an extended 120-day file history with versioning. There are also business and enterprise versions of Dropbox with separate pricing.

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'What is Dropbox?': How to use the cloud-based file-storage service for collaboration - Business Insider - Business Insider

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OnShip Brings its Parcel & Freight Shipping Transportation Management Platform to the Cloud with Cameyo – Supply and Demand Chain Executive

Cameyoannounced that The OnShip Group selected Cameyo to enable their new OnShip Cloud offering. Utilizing Cameyo, OnShip was able to web-enable its powerful shipping software suite, allowing their customers to access OnShip, from the browser, with no software to install.

OnShip includes all the features and functionality of Fortune 1000 shipping software in an easily configurable and affordable package, accessible to companies of any size. The premise-based version of OnShip is currently used by hundreds of businesses to streamline workflows, reduce expenses, and maximize bottom-line revenues. But increasingly, OnShips customers needed the ability to quickly deploy OnShip to all employees who needed access across a corporate office and in multiple shipping locations.

We built OnShip to make powerful shipping software available for organizations of any size. When our customers began asking for any time, anywhere access to the software, we knew we needed to web-enable OnShip and make it available via the cloud, said Jay Rajcevich, President of The OnShip Group, Inc.

But to completely redevelop the application for the web would have taken months and require a significant financial investment. It also would have resulted in a web version without full-featured parity to their powerful premise-based software, which was a non-starter for OnShip.

Our customers choose OnShip because we offer the best of both worlds full-featured, powerful shipping software at a purposely low price point. In other words, our customers get all the features they need at a fraction of the cost of competitors still holding on to their overpriced, one-size-fits-all pricing models. We were not willing to pursue any path to web-enablement that would compromise the user experience or deliver anything less than the full power of our existing software suite, said Rajcevich. With Cameyo, we were able to make our full software version of OnShip available, across an enterprise, at any time, via a web browser. The customer experience doesnt change one bit, and theres nothing new they need to learnthats critically important.

While OnShip helps simplify and reduce the cost of shipping for any organization, the launch of OnShip Cloud makes OnShip easily accessible for smaller organizations that do not have full-time IT support. Cameyos virtual application delivery platform enables OnShip Cloud to be utilized by smaller organizations with no installation or management required.

Our premise-based shipping software is installed on a PC or server, behind corporate firewalls. However, most smaller shippers dont have dedicated IT resources, so that can sometimes present a challenge, said Rajcevich. By utilizing Cameyo, we can instantly give smaller shippers access to the platform and have them up and running without any IT support, because nothing needs to be installed or managed locally on their servers or employee workstations. And we can do all of this within hours, not weeks.

OnShip Cloud is the result of OnShips commitment to constantly enhance their platforms capabilities without compromising their users experience, said Andrew Miller, Co-Founder, and CEO of Cameyo. The launch of OnShip Cloud via Cameyo gives organizations of all size access to incredibly powerful and efficient shipping software, now simply and securely available. And as they continue to offer new capabilities over time, OnShip Cloud can provide users with instant access to those features without having to manage updates.

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Couchbase Announces $105 Million Equity Investment Led by GPI Capital to Fuel Its Next Phase of Growth and Cloud Innovation – GlobeNewswire

Santa Clara, May 21, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Couchbase, the creator of the enterprise-class, multicloud to edge NoSQL database, today announced that it has completed a $105 million all-equity Series G round of fundraising. The latest funding round, led by GPI Capital, also included oversubscribed participation from existing investors Accel, Sorenson Capital, North Bridge Venture Partners, Glynn Capital, Adams Street Partners, and Mayfield. Proceeds from this financing will be used to expand product development and global go-to-market capabilities.

Today more than 500 enterprises, including over 30% of the Fortune 100, rely on the Couchbase NoSQL database. In its latest fiscal year, Couchbase delivered over 70% total contract value growth, 50%+ new business growth, and 35%+ growth in average subscription deal size. The company has nearly $100M in committed annual recurring revenue.

Couchbase is accelerating its trajectory and will use the funding to build further differentiation in already industry leading products and services, while simultaneously expanding its customer facing operations. The company will complement feature development in its best-in-class enterprise NoSQL server and mobile database platform with Couchbase Cloud, a fully managed Database-as-a-Service offering. Now, more than ever, enterprises are accelerating their migration to both NoSQL databases and cloud deployments to increase agility and flexibility while simultaneously reducing costs.

To be competitive today, enterprises must transform digitally and use technology to get closer to their customers and improve the productivity of their workforces. To do so, they require a cloud-native database built specifically to support modern web, mobile and IoT applications. Application developers and enterprise architects rely on Couchbase to enable agile application development on a platform that performs at scale, from the public cloud to the edge, and provides operational simplicity and reliability, said Couchbase President and CEO Matt Cain. More and more, the largest companies in the world truly run their businesses on Couchbase, architecting their most business-critical applications on our platform. This has become even more pronounced today as all companies are closely evaluating their digital strategies while carefully managing their capital allocation plans. Completing this funding round in the current climate is a testament to the importance of modern databases and the relevance of Couchbase as we continue our path to becoming a large, public company.

We are excited to partner with Couchbase and view Couchbase Servers highly performant, distributed architecture as purpose-built to support mission critical use cases at scale, said Alex Migon, Partner of GPI Capital and new member of the companys board of directors. Couchbase has developed a truly enterprise grade product, with leading support for cutting-edge application development and deployment needs. We are thrilled to contribute to the next stage of the companys growth.

Khai Ha, Partner at GPI Capital, added, Having evaluated how companies innovate across a wide variety of industries and are increasingly turning to modern non-relational databases for their operational needs, we were pleased to see the increasing awareness of and growth acceleration at Couchbase. We look forward to serving as a partner to the company over the coming years.

The latest funding round occurs at a time when companies across all industries are looking to increase their investment in solutions that enable powerful digital experiences for both employees and customers. This reality is that the database market will undergo a generational market transition over the next many years. The market is already worth over $100 billion, and the NoSQL database market in particular is projected to grow at 32% CAGR from 2018-2023, according to 451 Research.

Since January, the company was named to JMP Securities Hot 100 List of Best Privately-Held Software Companies, has earned Top Rated 2020 Awards from TrustRadius for Best NoSQL Database, and was named a 2020 Bay Area Best Place to Work. Couchbases growing list of customers include American Express, Cisco, Comcast/Sky, Disney, LinkedIn, Tesco and more.

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About GPI Capital

GPI Capital is an alternative investment firm specializing in leading growth equity investments in technology, consumer and industrial companies. GPI focuses on identifying high quality businesses looking to accelerate growth and execute on transformational opportunities with an engaged and value-add partner. For more information about GPI, please visit http://www.gpicap.com/.

About Couchbase

Unlike other NoSQL databases, Couchbase provides an enterprise-class, multicloud to edge database that offers the robust capabilities required for business-critical applications on a highly scalable and available platform. As a distributed cloud-native database, Couchbase runs in modern dynamic environments and on any cloud, either customer-managed or fully managed as-a-service. Couchbase is built on open standards, combining the best of NoSQL with the power and familiarity of SQL, to simplify the transition from mainframe and relational databases. For more information, visit http://www.couchbase.com

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