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Cloud Computing Takes the Preakness – RFD-TV

May 22, 2017

At Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland. Cloud Computing is your 2017 winner of the142nd running of the Preakness Stakes.

In a major upset, Cloud Computing, who began the race a 13-to-1 long-shot, defeatedKentucky Derby and post-time favorite Always Dreaming to become the fourth horse in the last 34 years to win the Preakness after skipping the Kentucky Derby.

Cloud Computing crossed the finish line just a head in front of second-place horse, Classic Empire, with a winning time of 1:55.98.

In fourth was Lookin at Lee.Then it was Gunnevera. In 6th place you'll see Multiplier.Seventh was Conquest Mo Money'.Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming finished in eighth place. Hencetook ninth,with Term of Artfinishing in the final tenthplace spot.

Members of the Cloud Computing owners group talked with the press after the 13-to-1 long shot captured the second leg of horse racings Triple Crown.

The 142nd Preakness produced all-time records in both handle and attendance. The total handle for the 14-race program that included eight stakes, four graded, was $97,168,658, a 3% increase over last years betting total.

Despite ominous clouds during the day, a record 140,327 people showed up to celebrate the second jewel of the Triple Crown. That number easily surpassed last years record attendance of 135,256.

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On social media? Follow RURAL RADIO onFacebookandTwitterto get all the latest news and info. Get the full radio schedulehere.

Listen LIVE, online, or on the SiriusXM app! Download the apps here:

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Make sense of edge computing vs. cloud computing | InfoWorld – InfoWorld

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The internet of things is real, and its a real part of the cloud. A key challenge is how you can get data processed from so many devices. Cisco Systems predicts that cloud traffic is likely to rise nearly fourfold by 2020, increasing 3.9 zettabytes (ZB) per year in 2015 (the latest full year for which data is available) to 14.1ZB per year by 2020.

As a result, we could have the cloud computing perfect storm from the growth of IoT. After all,IoT is about processing device-generated data that is meaningful, and cloud computing is about using data from centralized computing and storage. Growth rates of both can easily become unmanageable.

So what do we do? The answer is something called edge computing. We already know that computing at the edge pushes most of the data processing out to the edge of the network, close to the source of the data. Then its a matter of dividing the processing between the edge and the centralized system, meaning a public cloud such as Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, or Microsoft Azure.

That may sound a like a client/server architecture, which also involved figuring out what to do at the client versus at the server. For IoT and any highly distributed applications, youve essentially got a client/network edge/server architecture going on, or if your devices cant do any processing themselves, a network edge/server architecture.

The goal is to process near the device the data that it needs quickly, such as to act on. There are hundreds of use cases where reaction time is the key value of the IoT system, and consistently sending the data back to a centralized cloud prevents that value from happening.

You would still use the cloud for processing that is either not as time-sensitive or is not needed by the device, such as for big data analytics on data from all your devices.

Theres another dimension to this: edge computing and cloud computing are two very different things. One does not replace the other. But too many articles confuse IT pros by suggesting that edge computing will displace cloud computing. Its no more true than saying PCs would displace the datacenter.

It makes perfect sense to create purpose-built edge computing-based applications, such as an app that places data processing in a sensor to quickly process reactions to alarms. But you're not going to place your inventory-control data and applications at the edge moving all compute to the edge would result in a distributed, unsecured, and unmanageable mess.

All the public cloud providers have IoT strategies and technology stacks that include, or will include, edge computing. Edge and cloud computing can and do work well together, but edge computing is for purpose-built systems with special needs. Cloud computing is a more general-purpose platform that also can work with purpose-built systems in that old client/server model.

David S. Linthicum is a consultant at Cloud Technology Partners and an internationally recognized industry expert and thought leader. Dave has authored 13 books on computing and also writes regularly for HPE Software's TechBeacon site.

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Cloud Computing Does Not Need Help From Washington – Cramer’s … – Seeking Alpha

Stocks discussed on the in-depth session of Jim Cramer's Mad Money TV Program, Monday, May 22.

The market went up on Monday, as investors were buying the companies with the best earnings numbers. Cloud computing emerged as a winner, as all stocks related to social, mobile and cloud were up. After Salesforce (NYSE:CRM) reported good numbers, CEO Marc Benioff said more companies are adapting to the cloud.

Apart from tech, stocks related to the stay-at-home economy did well, as investors flocked to buy them. Both Constellation Brands (NYSE:STZ) and Domino's (NYSE:DPZ) made big gains. PepsiCo (NYSE:PEP) gained 0.9% as well.

An RBC Capital analyst issued a note for a $1 trillion valuation for Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) on the strength of the upcoming iPhone and Apple services. It's a cheap stock based on earnings. If you consider Apple as a consumer stock, it is cheaper than most big consumer names.

Cramer said all these companies do not need help from Washington to rise. They are likely to continue their run even after Trump returns to the White House.

Ford (NYSE:F)

Ford CEO Mark Fields was fired, and Jim Hackett will take over as the new CEO. The stock rose on the news. Cramer opines Fields should have been given more time for a turnaround, as he had been at the helm for just three years. Ford got 64% of its sales from the US, a market which has plateaued for auto sales.

Fields was given the task of growing sales, cutting costs and investing in autonomous vehicles to meet the challenges of tomorrow. The company had lagging sales in China, and to add to the challenge, Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) surpassed Ford's valuation.

When Ford last reported, it told shareholders that 2017 would be a down year. There was also a debate with President Trump over building compact cars in Mexico. Cramer thinks Fields had many challenges and that it takes time and money to compete with the likes of Tesla.

Diageo (NYSE:DEO)

The one-year anniversary of the Brexit vote is coming up, and Cramer reviewed companies that would benefit from Brexit. It made Britain's currency cheaper, which is good news for UK companies with a lot of business overseas. One such company is the largest liquor manufacturer Diageo, whose stock is up 15% since the Brexit vote.

As the UK becomes independent, Diageo will gain massively. It derived 90% of its revenue from selling products outside the UK, where currencies are strong. All exporters in the UK are seeing benefits from a weaker currency.

Diageo is not only benefiting from currency, it is also taking market share from its competitors and seeing revenue growth. The company's earnings in January were solid, with scotch sales growing at 6%. Cramer thinks this trend will continue and that Diageo will have good numbers when it reports again in two months. He said he would be a buyer on weakness.

Credit card companies

When credit card companies like Synchrony Financial (NYSE:SYF) and Capital One (NYSE:COF) reported last week, their stocks got hammered due to higher charge-offs from weak underwriting and subprime credit. The bigger banks had these charge-offs as well, but they were offset by growth in other businesses. The pure-play credit card companies were hit the most.

These companies said on the call that credit card defaults are on the rise. Cramer said he cannot recommend pure-play credit card companies after listening to their conference calls. He added that American Express (NYSE:AXP) is also seeing a turnaround, but he put it in his "don't buy" list until he sees better numbers.

If you believe there will be two rate hikes this year, then buy the major banks.

CEO interview - CyrusOne (NASDAQ:CONE)

The stock of data center REIT CyrusOne is up 25% in 2017. Cramer interviewed CEO Gary Wojtaszek to find out his take on the industry.

Wojtaszek said data centers REIT are in high demand compared to regular REITs, and they are growing 5-6 times faster than the average REIT. The company offers growth and yields 3% as well.

CyrusOne has 9 of the top 10 largest cloud companies as customers, and a lot of Fortune 500 companies are outsourcing their data center activities. CyrusOne has data centers across the country, and it has a new facility under development in Washington, as it has the cheapest power rates due to extensive hydropower infrastructure.

Wojtaszek added that the company's footprint is based on the data needs. Some applications like photo and video storage do not require fast access times, while high-frequency stock trading requires super-fast access times, so they are located as close to the location as possible.

Cramer called CyrusOne a rare stock, as it offers both growth and value.

Viewer calls taken by Cramer

General Dynamics (NYSE:GD): It's a terrific company and Cramer's favorite of the group.

Snap (NYSE:SNAP): It could be in a good situation long term, but Cramer prefers Twitter (NYSE:TWTR), which has made many changes.

Ralph Lauren (NYSE:RL): The company has a new CEO, and it has hired services from Salesforce for its worldwide strategy. Cramer said he would not want to bet against the company.

Yum China (NYSE:YUMC): Cramer likes YUMC and thinks there is no point betting against the stock. It's expensive, and he advised investors to hold the stock.

Panera Bread (NASDAQ:PNRA): Book profits on the stock.

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Jim Cramer's Action Alerts PLUS: Check out Cramer's multi-million dollar charitable trust portfolio and uncover the stocks he thinks could be HUGE winners. Start your FREE 14-day trial now!

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Roundup Of Cloud Computing Forecasts, 2017 – Enterprise Irregulars (blog)

By Louis Columbus on May 23, 2017

Cloud platforms are enabling new, complex business models and orchestrating more globally-based integration networks in 2017 than many analyst and advisory firms predicted. Combined with Cloud Services adoption increasing in the mid-tier and small & medium businesses (SMB), leading researchers including Forrester are adjusting their forecasts upward. The best check of any forecast is revenue. Amazons latest quarterly results released two days ago show Amazon Web Services (AWS) attained 43% year-over-year growth, contributing 10% of consolidated revenue and 89% of consolidated operating income.

Additional key takeaways from the roundup include the following:

Wikibon Worldwide Enterprise IT Projection By Vendor Revenue

Rapid Growth of Cloud Computing, 20152020

Worldwide Public Cloud Services Forecast (Millions of Dollars)

Deloitte IT-as-a-Service Forecast

Worldwide Cloud IT Infrastructure Market Forecast

Cloud investment by type today and in three years

AWS Segment Financial Comparison

Comparing AWS Revenue and Income Contributions

Public Cloud Adoption, 2017 versus 2016

60% of IT Market Growth Is Being Driven By The Cloud

CFOs say cloud investments deliver the greatest measurable impact

Cloud investments are fueling new job throughout Canada

APIs are fueling a revolution in cloud enterprise apps

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(Cross-posted @ A Passion for Research)

Posted in Featured Posts, Technology / Software | Tagged 2017, Amazon AWS, Amazon Web Services, aws, CIO, Cloud Computing, Cloud computing enterprise adoption, Cloud computing forecasts, cloud computing landscape, iaas, IaaS Forecast, Louis Columbus' blog, salesforce.com, Selling SaaS Applications, software as a service |

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Cloud Native Computing Foundation adds the CoreOS-backed CNI as latest hosted project – GeekWire

An overview of the Container Network Interface project, now hosted by CNCF.

The Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) has voted to approve the Container Networking Interface (CNI) as the new open-source project under its umbrella, the organization plans to announce later on Tuesday.

The CNI, backed by CoreOS and supported by important cloud computing projects like Kubernetes, Apache Mesos, and Red Hat, describes a method for hooking containers up to networking resources. It will become the 10th project and the first networking-related project to become part of the CNCF family.

While the CNI was being considered alongside a Docker-based specification called the Container Network Model, the CNCF does not endorse projects as would-be standards, said Ken Owens, chief technical officer at Cisco and a member of the CNCFs Technical Oversight Committee who sponsored the CNI project.

We kind of look at this environment as a consistently changing environment, (and) we have to be a little more flexible and less rigid in the way we address and manage the foundation, Owens said. The Technical Oversight Committee which includes Docker CTO Solomon Hykes voted unanimously to bring CNI into the CNCF, he said.

The CNI got the nod because it already has a great deal of industry support, and because it could use a little help getting to the 1.0 release stage, Owens said.

Were trying to provide that project extra resources to help it document and test and become more of an ecosystem model, he said. A CNCF-hosted project has access to technical writers that improve documentation, and some basic testing technology for debugging and monitoring.

The CNCF is trying very hard to take a light-touch approach to its endorsements of these projects, claiming to have learned many a lesson from previous industry organizations that governed with too strong a hand. One of the things were trying to do is not be like OpenStack, Owens said, referring to the open-source cloud project that once hoped to challenge Amazon Web Services.

But even if the CNCF is officially vendor-neutral, as Owens said, its endorsements can signal a de-facto standard approach to cloud computing. A lot of its work is targeted at making the projects under its umbrella suitable for cloud latecomers that are looking for direction.

Our main goal is to help enterprise companies understand how to make sense of this new model, Owens said.

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Cloud computing, Galeria Inno and change at Deka – Delano.lu


Delano.lu
Cloud computing, Galeria Inno and change at Deka
Delano.lu
Luxembourg's financial sector watchdog, the CSSF, has published a circular, providing detailed regulation about the outsourcing of cloud computing infrastructure services. The 19-page document, which has been one year in planning, sets the regulatory ...

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Hitachi, IBM to collaborate in mainframes in the cloud era – Nikkei Asian Review

TOKYO -- Hitachi will supply IBM-made mainframe computers loaded with its own operating systems starting in fiscal 2018, beating a retreat from hardware development in the age of cloud servers.

The arrangement was announced Tuesday. Hitachi will continue developing operating systems for mainframe machines.New products will offer improved compatibility with Hitachi's "internet of things" platform Lumada.

Mainframes have been widely used across Japan's public and private sectors for in-house computer systems since they emerged in the 1950s. Japan was a particularly big market, with Hitachi, IBM, NEC, Fujitsu and others all competing for a piece of the pie at one point.

But the tide turned in the 1990s, when computer servers loaded with Windows and Linux operating systems became widespread. Japan's mainframe shipments topped 1 trillion yen ($8.94 billion) in the mid-1990s, but slid to below 45 billion yen in fiscal 2015, according to the Japan Electronics and Information Technology Industries Association.

That changing market climate prompted Hitachi's eventual exit from hardware. At the same time, the company recognizes persistent demand among companies that value stable system operation and security. There is also promise for use in the internet of things, a business Hitachi sees as a growth field.

The turning fortunes of IBM are symbolic of the technological shift. The company's sales fell for a 20th straight quarter in the January-March period of this year. The company was hit by the advent of servers and then by the spread of cloud servers.This is in stark contrast to Amazon.com's cloud business, which is the world's largest. The business logged $890 million in operating profit in the January-March period, accounting for 90% of the company's profit.

In Japan, where cloud computing has not become as widespread, IT companies have been logging relatively solid earnings. Yet, Fujitsu, NEC and Hitachi all saw revenue in the IT segment decline in the year ended in March. Making it imperative for them to respond to the growth of cloud computing.

(Nikkei)

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Chef expands its cloud and container menu – ZDNet

Chef, a leading DevOps company, announced at ChefConf 2017 that it was adding new capabilities to it flagship Continous Automation/DevOps program, Chef Automate. This enables enterprises to transition from server- and virtual machine- (VM) based IT systems to cloud-native and container-first environments with consistent automation and DevOps practices.

What is DevOps and why does it matter?

New to some, old hat to many and a source of puzzlement to more than a few, there is no doubt that DevOps is a hot topic. Read on to find out what it's all about.

Chef started as an open-source cloud configuration management and deployment application. It's meant to help anyone orchestrate servers in a cloud or just in a departmental data center. Instead of system administrators sweating over management programs that were designed for single, stand-alone servers, Chef enables DevOps users to spin up dozens or hundreds of server instances in seconds.

That's still it's primary use, but in the eight-years since Chef was created, we've moved from server- and VM-dominated data centers to container and cloud-based infrastructures. That's where Chef Automate steps in. Ken Cheney, Chef CMO explained, "We're helping organizations with where they are at today, but we provide a bridge to the future, (showing) how they can go about delivering software across those environments."

While Chef Automate was only introduced in 2016, it was already facing stiff competition. Container orchestration programs such as Kubernetes, Mesosphere Marathon, and Docker swarm mode, are already major players. Still, that isn't stopping Chef from trying to move from server and VM DevOps to cloud and container DevOps.

Chef Automate is being extended with capabilities for:

Chef also released InSpec-AWS, InSpec-Azure, and InSpec-vSphere as incubation projects that bring code compliance to the cloud. These projects provide resources to test, interact, and audit these cloud platforms directly and easily access their configuration inside of InSpec.

In addition, Chef released its Habitat Builder service. This is a software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform to build Habitats for packaging, managing, and running apps. Habitat's mew productivity capabilities, include:

Chef can do all this on most popular public clouds. This includes: Amazon Web Services (AWS) OpsWorks; Microsoft Azure, and VMware vRealize 7 on both Windows and Linux platforms.

For companies already using Chef as their DevOps tool of choice, this makes Chef even more promising as they move to a cloud-native, container-driven IT world. For those who haven't committed to Chef, it gives them reason to try Chef for their IT meals. I think it quite possible they'll find Chef's recipes delicious.

Related stories:

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Op-ed: Utah’s tech renaissance threatened unless Congress acts to update archaic law – Deseret News

Some of the worlds most innovative cloud computing companies are based in Utah, but an international patchwork of outdated and conflicting laws on how law enforcement can access our online data threatens the entire industry. Fortunately, Sen. Orrin Hatch has taken a leadership role in pressing Congress to establish clarity for U.S. companies doing business overseas, to protect our individual privacy rights and to help law enforcement do its job more effectively.

As a longtime Utah resident and a technology and marketing consultant based in Salt Lake City, I am incredibly proud of the renaissance of entrepreneurship and innovation taking hold across our state. At the heart of this growth are startups building powerful cloud computing software services, which run on internet-connected servers located around the globe. For example, Farmington-based Pluralsight is redefining the future of learning with its education-on-demand platform, and in American Fork, Domo is revolutionizing business management through its much-lauded business cloud solutions.

Cloud computing technology allows even the smallest, most remote companies to serve clients around the globe, and the cloud works most efficiently when it allows them to store their data where it makes the most technical, rather than the most geographical, sense. However, the future of cloud computing opportunities for Utahs innovators remains murky unless we update the legal framework governing how law enforcement can access data stored overseas.

Implemented in 1986, years before the cloud was even invented, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) is outdated and ambiguous and proving harmful to the success of our business, the trust of our customers, and the ability of law enforcement to do their jobs effectively. Because of the ambiguities codified within this statute, companies providing cloud services are caught precariously between international legal jurisdictions. For example, when faced with a U.S. law enforcement request to gather data stored in a cloud server in Italy, American companies are forced to choose between abiding by the data access laws of the United States or Italy.

This ambiguity is having an unintentional chilling effect on our ability to do business around the world. Without clarity on where and how U.S. warrants may be used to access cloud data, Utah companies I work with can be hesitant to store data overseas. Meanwhile, foreign companies are increasingly hesitant to house data in the United States because they are concerned about the privacy of their data.

The result has been a series of time-consuming lawsuits in the U.S. Court of Appeals with differing outcomes, while uncertainty for companies and citizens builds and law enforcements access to data is not clarified. Congress needs to act.

Hatch helped jump-start Congress interest in this issue last year when he introduced the International Communications Privacy Act (ICPA). Though it did not pass, this legislation would have helped to clarify the responsibilities of businesses storing data overseas, ensure law enforcement has the tools it needs to access information abroad and restore the trust of foreign companies storing data in the United States. This week, legislators on the Senate Judiciary Committee have an opportunity to revisit this vital issue.

Its imperative that Congress quickly address the ambiguity within our current law. As every company becomes a software company, we need legislation that supports our companies ability to store data overseas, protects our individual privacy rights and helps U.S. law enforcement do its important job. Utahs tech renaissance, and the success of cloud-driven companies across our country, depends on it.

Jeff Hadfield is the founder of 1564B, based in Salt Lake City. 1564b focuses on technical markets and helps companies in Utah, and across the country, reach their marketing, sales and content goals.

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