Page 5,432«..1020..5,4315,4325,4335,434..5,4405,450..»

Cloud Computing vs. Real Cloud Computing

Many so-called cloud vendors have adopted the safe and sure approach of separate spindles and virtual servers to define something that by rights ought to be collective and multitenant. In Oracle's case, it is even more amazing that the company that builds the database on which so much of true cloud computing rests, chooses to go a different way when it comes to its enterprise customers.

Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) re-introduced its new cloud/social constellation of stuff last week that it had announced back at OpenWorld. If I count the analyst briefing I got in Redwood Shores in April, it was a re-re-introduction. Oracle is not the only company to follow this strategy . For example, Salesforce follows a conventional triple-tell approach too -- tell them what you're going to say, say it, tell them what you said. But each time Salesforce repeats itself, the messaging gets clearer. When Oracle does it, the message only gets louder.

There was important back channel chatter over Larry Ellison's claim that there are 100 Fusion applications now available on the Oracle cloud, which many experts of my acquaintance found dubious, though the mainstream press, such as The New York Times, seemed to report as straight news.

Perhaps because of this news and the skepticism with which it was greeted in some quarters, we should take this as one of a dwindling number of opportunities to call bullpucky on the new cloud establishment. Or as I would prefer to call it, "legacy to cloud hybridization." It's quite a mouthful but here are some points to consider.

Every major legacy software house I know of has adopted cloud messaging and some form of "data center in the sky" technology to stamp "paid" on its obligation to take its customers to the promised land. However, the vast majority of these solutions have merely harvested the low-hanging fruit from multi-tenant cloud and used it to solidify and prolong their hold on the customer base.

So we have data centers hosting conventional applications, which supposedly qualify as cloud, A.K.A. Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS). If you add conventional applications to this, in some circles you automatically get Software as a Service (SaaS), and the further addition of development tools yields Platform as a Service (PaaS).

But if you are like me, you ask how moving the conventional circus to another location really changes anything. You might reap some cost savings from outsourcing some IT management functions, but that is a poor substitute for outsourcing the whole enchilada and enabling people to concentrate on the business.

The big sticking point has, for the last 10 years or more, been the issue of where the data resides and who has access to it. Some of us have become adept at worrying about data leaking out of one database and materializing, like Schrodinger's cat, elsewhere and causing serious business problems. To me, this is comical and it tells me that although we have invented this high technology, we are not much further advanced from our hominid ancestors.

As Edward O. Wilson recently put it in his latest book, The Social Conquest of Earth, "We have created a Star Wars civilization, with Stone Age emotions, medieval institutions, and godlike technology." Nowhere do all of these ideas converge as perfectly as in cloud computing.

The cloud computing debate, especially as it refers to data security, might learn from the late medieval or early Renaissance institution we refer to as "banking." Banks might represent the first multi-tenant human invention, followed closely by water utilities and sanitation services, because they comingle money and overlay it with the metadata of accounts, passwords and statements all designed to keep your money separate from mine.

Continued here:
Cloud Computing vs. Real Cloud Computing

Read More..

Cloud secrecy: Will it cause a system meltdown?

Summary: The tendency of cloud providers to keep the internal details of their infrastructure secret could cause problems that could wreak havoc in the cloud, a researcher has warned.

Microsofts general manager for Windows Azure, Bill Hilf, thinks it is okay for cloud providers to hang onto the secrets of their internal infrastructure, and says if customers are designing applications that live or die on the basis of very specific requirements, they should not be going to the cloud in the first place.

Youve picked a hammer instead of a screwdriver for a screw, Hilf says. He stresses that less than one percent of the Windows Azure customers he talks to have requirements that go this far, and they tend to be from the government.

Hilf was reacting to a paper published by a Yale academic that argues the secrecy with which cloud providers treat their infrastructure could lead to wide-ranging problems.

In his Icebergs in the Clouds: the Other risks of cloud computing (PDF) academic Bryan Ford argues the lack of disclosure about the inner workings of clouds could put service providers on a collision course with one another.

As diverse, independently developed cloud services share ever more fluidly and aggressively multiplexed hardware resource pools, unpredictable interactions between load balancing and other reactive mechanisms could lead to dynamic instabilities or meltdowns, he writes.

The problems he identifies come in two classes - programming issues and interdependency problems - and look set to become more prevalent over time as cloud providers and services interlace with one another. He presented his paper on Tuesday at the Hotcloud 12 conference in Boston.

A programming issue he identifies is where an application providers load balancer eventually syncs its update cycles with the hardware power optimiser operated by a separate provider. This leads to a death spiral where as power is cut to one server the load balancer moves workloads to another and all incoming traffic ends up oscillating between one server and the other, cutting the systems overall capacity in half - or worse if more than two servers are involved, he writes.

This problem would not arise if cloud providers disclosed the internal technologies they use to scale power, distribute loads and perform other detailed infrastructure management techniques, he argues, as developers would be able to see problems before they arose.

Ford believes the cloud business model encourages providers not to share with each other the details of their resource allocation and optimisation algorithms - crucial parts of their secret sauce - that would be necessary to analyse or ensure the stability of the larger, composite system.

See the original post:
Cloud secrecy: Will it cause a system meltdown?

Read More..

SPEC Forms Cloud Benchmarking Group

GAINESVILLE, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Standard Performance Evaluation Corp. (SPEC) has formed a new group to research and recommend application workloads for benchmarking cloud computing performance.

The group functions under SPECs Open Systems Group (OSG) and is working in cooperation with other SPEC committees and subcommittees to define cloud benchmark methodologies, determine and recommend application workloads, identify cloud metrics for existing SPEC benchmarks, and develop new cloud benchmarks.

Current participants in OSGCloud include AMD, Dell, IBM, Ideas International, Intel, Karlshuhe Institute of Technology, Oracle, Red Hat and VMware. Long-time SPEC benchmark developer Yun Chao is a supporting contributor. The group collaborates with the SPEC Research Cloud group, which is working on gaining a broader understanding of cloud behavior and performance issues.

A major shift

While cloud performance takes into account many of the same characteristics as current SPEC benchmarks throughput, response time and power, for example it also brings into play new metrics such as elasticity, defined as how quickly a service can adapt to changing customer needs.

Cloud computing is on the rise and represents a major shift in how servers are used and how their performance is measured, says Rema Hariharan, chair of OSGCloud. We want to assemble the best minds to define this space, create workloads, augment existing SPEC benchmarks, and develop new cloud-based benchmarks.

Call for wider participation

The group targets three types of users for the workloads and benchmarks it will create:

OSGCloud has already developed a 50-page report that details its objectives, benchmark considerations, characteristics of a cloud benchmark, and tools for creating metrics.

Read the original here:
SPEC Forms Cloud Benchmarking Group

Read More..

Web Host Savvis Adds Canadian Cloud Hosting Solutions

ST. LOUIS, June 12, 2012 Savvis, a CenturyLink company (NYSE: CTL) and global leader in cloud infrastructure and hosted IT solutions for enterprises, today announced the availability of Savvis Symphony Virtual Private Data Center (VPDC) cloud solutions to clients in Canada through Savvis data center in Toronto.

Savvis continues to experience rapidly increasing global demand including in Canada for our proven, enterprise-ready cloud services, said John Witte, vice president and regional leader, Canada. The launch of Symphony VPDC on Canadian soil enables regional enterprises and global Savvis clients to improve their business agility through improved efficiency from their IT infrastructure.

Symphony VPDC is one of the industrys first enterprise-class virtual private data center cloud solutions with multi-tiered security, service and network profiles. The flexible service levels (Essential, Balanced and Premier) provide a range of features, support levels and performance to suit broad infrastructure profiles that enterprises demand. With industry-leading security elements, quality of service and service-level agreements (SLA), Symphony VPDC meets a range of needs including web hosting, test/development, mission-critical and other applications.

Symphony VPDC also can be integrated seamlessly to support hybrid cloud solutions that leverage Savvis managed hosting, colocation and network services.

Meridians Toronto-based software development division uses Symphony VPDC as a virtualized component of its overall IT solution to power its mzero software platform. Meridian, a kiosk and self-service device manufacturer, creates bundled self-service technology utilizing software and quality manufactured kiosk solutions.

As a Savvis colocation client based in Toronto, moving to the cloud was a natural progression. And now, with Symphony VPDC available in Canada, our options for powering our mzero platform are even stronger, said Paul Burden, director of software development at Meridian. Savvis provides us with industry-leading, flexible cloud and managed hosting solutions that meet our business requirements.

Leading analyst firm Gartner Inc. recently recognized Savvis as a Leader in two cloud-focused magic quadrants based on ability to execute and completeness of vision: the Magic Quadrant for Managed Hosting and the Magic Quadrant for Public Cloud Infrastructure as a Service.

Globally, Savvis operates a Tier 1 application transport network and more than 50 data centers with more than 2 million square feet of raised floor space designed to support enterprise IT operations.

The announcement of the Canada launch of Symphony VPDC follows recent Savvis announcements about cloud expansions in Hong Kong and Japan.

About Savvis

Read this article:
Web Host Savvis Adds Canadian Cloud Hosting Solutions

Read More..

RiverMeadow and cloudTP Enter Into Strategic Alliance to Deliver Rapid Cloud Migration Services to Enterprise Customers

WESTFORD, MA and BOSTON, MA--(Marketwire -06/12/12)- RiverMeadow Software Inc., developer of the enCloud automated virtualization and cloud migration software platform, and Cloud Technology Partners Inc. (cloudTP), the leader in transforming businesses with cloud solutions, today announced a strategic alliance that will dramatically ease and accelerate enterprises into-and-between clouds while keeping costs at a minimum.

The two companies already have a successful track record in working with global clients. Collaborating on a project at Korea Telecom, cloudTP and RiverMeadow successfully migrated over one thousand physical servers to the cloud in just three months. The combination of cloudTP's unique transformational service approach and the enCloud software platform's unmatched ability to migrate servers and live-workloads as-is drastically minimized the cost and complexity typically associated with large datacenter migration projects. The result was an accelerated time to production without any service interruption.

"Working with cloudTP aligns RiverMeadow with an industry leader in strategic cloud transformation and tactical execution. Through their strategic transformation consulting and application implementation services, they deliver incredible value and efficiencies to enterprise clients seeking to migrate to the cloud," said Mark Shirman, President of RiverMeadow. Shirman continued, "cloudTP's deep expertise in enterprise cloud transformation requirements makes them an ideal partner."

"enCloud will enable cloudTP to more easily and affordably migrate enterprise datacenters into public, private and hybrid clouds," said Chris Greendale, Founder and CEO, Cloud Technology Partners (cloudTP). Greendale added, "cloudTP's transformational services are enhanced by the enCloud platform's flexible cloud deployment capability which provides the enterprise with the agility required to optimize their cloud lifecycle strategies."

About RiverMeadow Software RiverMeadow Software Inc., based in Westford, MA, is accelerating cloud adoption with the leading software for automated cloud onboarding and public, private and hybrid cloud agility. RiverMeadow enCloud, without agents or interruption, can help enterprises, service providers, and cloud brokers exploit Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) with less cost and complexity.

enCloud is the key to cloud self-service onboarding, enabling the migration of enterprise servers and live workloads from physical, virtual and cloud environments to-and-between clouds. The enCloud software platform, delivered via licensed software or SaaS model, provides a platform for rapid customer onboarding to the cloud and dramatically reduces the cost and complexity associated with traditional cloud migrations. Without templates, agents or server interruption, enCloud moves servers "as-is" with the least operator effort and the shortest start-to-finish time. In support of hybrid public-private clouds, enCloud supports round-trip moves back to any cloud stack.

RiverMeadow and enCloud are trademarks or registered trademarks of RiverMeadow Software. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. For further information visit: http://www.rivermeadow.com, email: info@rivermeadow.com, or call: (978) 467-4090.

About Cloud Technology Partners (cloudTP)

Based in Boston, MA, Cloud Technology Partners (cloudTP) is the leader in transforming businesses with cloud solutions. From strategic transformational consulting to application implementation, cloudTP provides enterprises with solutions to plan and execute migration of business processes, applications and customer data to private, public or hybrid clouds. By doing this, companies are able to reduce costs, increase efficiencies, accelerate business growth, enhance agility, drive innovation and increase competitive advantage. For further information, please visit: http://www.cloudtp.com, email: info@cloudtp.com, or call: (617) 674-0874.

Read more from the original source:
RiverMeadow and cloudTP Enter Into Strategic Alliance to Deliver Rapid Cloud Migration Services to Enterprise Customers

Read More..

Dell Drives Public and Hybrid Cloud Adoption with vCloud Trial, Global Expansion

PLANO, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

To make it easy for customers to test and adopt secure, enterprise-class hybrid cloud solutions, Dell is expanding availability of its Dell Cloud with VMware vCloud Datacenter Services into Canada and Europe, and offering an introductory trial offer. The offer, which is currently available in the U.S. and Canada for $999, provides organizations of all sizes and industries an easy way to experience Dells hybrid and public cloud offerings, including full security, support and deployment from Dell Services.

While public clouds can offer on-demand computing capacity, more agility and lower entry-level costs than private clouds, some organizations may be hesitant to move to a public cloud due to concerns about security. A recent study by Dell, Intel and TechTarget found that adoption of hybrid and private clouds is outpacing public cloud adoption. Dell Cloud with VMware vCloud Datacenter Services addresses security concerns by offering some of the industrys most robust security services, including active monitoring from SecureWorks, data encryption services from Trend Micro, and multiple layers of virtual and physical security in Dell data centers. All of these are now included in the current trial offer.

Dell Cloud with VMware vCloud Datacenter Service is enterprise-class Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) hosted in a secure Dell data center. It can provide the software, hardware and services to become an extension of a companys data center environment, allowing VMware customers to transition existing VMware virtualized workloads to the cloud and manage them using their existing VMware cloud infrastructure. In addition, it is built using a common management platform based on open, industry cloud standards. The use of the same VMware cloud infrastructure for connectivity across private and public cloud creates a compatible virtual datacenter, enabling application portability across clouds.

I dont want to be in the data center business. I want to leverage a service provider like Dell to help me easily scale my business. The Dell Cloud enables us to offer our customers top-notch services, and if issues should arise, Dell will handle them quickly knowing that we cannot afford downtime, Oz Yosef, CEO, Gratifn S.A., a telecommunications company in Panama. It was easy to set up my applications in the Dell Cloud, I was up and running in less than a day. If any questions came up, the Dell Services people just walked me through them. It was very easy and user friendly. I didnt feel like I was taking this on by myself.

Dell Cloud with VMware vCloud Datacenter Service is backed by Dell ProSupportTM,* which provides 24x7x365 expert phone support to help customers minimize downtime or interruption.

With the Dell Cloud, pooling of servers, networks and storage can increase agility, thus helping to reduce the time and budget needed to stand up and maintain traditional physical environments. On-demand capacity allows customers to quickly respond to new business opportunities, seasonal or cyclical trends, and other fluctuations that affect the need for capacity.

Our goal is to help make the journey to the cloud easy, secure and accessible for customers of all sizes, said Ricky Santos, vice president, cloud solutions for Dell. The Dell Cloud with VMware vCloud Datacenter Service gives customers control and flexibility to manage and extend IT resources for private, public or hybrid cloud without having to retrain IT staff. Our Dell Services experts can help guide them as they experiment and implement a solution that fits within their IT environments.

Dell believes that cloud isnt a technology, its a corporate strategy and that true business agility comes from an integrated, hybrid approach that links applications, data and infrastructure seamlessly wherever they are. Dell Cloud with VMware vCloud Datacenter Services is one part of Dells secure enterprise-class cloud portfolio focused on delivering real business value. Dells pragmatic approach helps customers leverage their current IT investments to build and operate an on-premise private cloud infrastructure, and access secure multi-tenant or community clouds.

The introductory offer is available in U.S. and Canada through July 31, 2012 for only $999. When the trial is over, customers can continue to use VMware vCloud offerings thatprovide single or multi-tenant environments and either compute-by-the-hour or compute-by-the-month rates of consumption.

See the original post here:
Dell Drives Public and Hybrid Cloud Adoption with vCloud Trial, Global Expansion

Read More..

As Apps Move to the Cloud, Next up Is Optimizing Them

As enterprises continue to open up to the idea of hosting applications in the cloud, a slew of companies are looking to optimize how they're managed in the new cloud environment.

Experts say cloud application management could be an area ripe for further innovation. Cloud users want to more easily be able to move legacy applications to the cloud or be able to transfer applications from one cloud provider to another. A Silicon Valley startup named Appcara is hoping its tools, which migrate away from a server-template model and toward an application-database setup, are one way for easier application lifecycle management.

[MORE CLOUD: Researcher: Interdependencies could lead to cloud 'meltdowns']

[CLOUD NEWS: Microsoft opens Azure to IaaS, Linux]

Traditionally cloud applications -- including anything from software-as-a-service enterprise resource management tools (SaaS-based ERP) to applications that run entire data centers -- use server-template technology to configure the underlying compute hardware to run the application. The problem with that approach, says Appcara founder and CEO John Young, is that applications are inevitably dynamic and the resources they require change. Creating new server template models for each new iteration of an application is time-consuming and prone to human error.

Appcara instead uses a database approach to managing cloud applications. Appcara's cloud-based software creates an application layer above either public or private clouds to capture information about what the application needs to run on the server. Specific application needs related to the components, configurations and dependencies and any changes of those are stored in real-time and automatically updated to a database. When changes are made to the application's resource needs, the database is updated automatically, allowing the application to configure the hardware that's needed on its own. Doing so eliminates the need for new server templates to be created, and removes the step of manual configuration of servers for application deployments.

So far it's worked for American Internet Services (AIS), a San Diego cloud service provider that focuses on cloud offerings in Southern California and specifically for life sciences companies. AIS is one of Appcara's earliest commercial deployments and CTO Steve Wallace says he was looking for a way to more efficiently manage the large number of applications the service provider hosts for clients.

"You may not realize the true potential of this until you really try to scale up," he says. The traditional server-template model, he says, requires manual configuration of the hardware to the specifications of the application. "If you're working with 80 Web servers that all need to be configured, you're talking about not only a time-consuming, error-prone process," he says. AIS is using the Appcara platform to manage its applications that run its cloud offering and those for customers.

Appcara announced last week it would be releasing the second version of its software, AppStack 2, in July, which will incorporate a marketplace where dozens of applications will already be pre-configured for use in the Appcara software. Other applications can be integrated to work on the software as well.

Here is the original post:
As Apps Move to the Cloud, Next up Is Optimizing Them

Read More..

ServInt Announces Grand Opening of Its New Data Center in Amsterdam

MCLEAN, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

ServInt, a pioneering provider of managed cloud hosting for enterprises worldwide, today announced the grand opening of its newly constructed European data center in Amsterdam, known as ServInt EU. The Company is now taking orders for hosting services at the new facility.

ServInt EU is the newest data center in ServInts multinational network. It enables ServInt to provide low-latency, high-availability hosting and cloud infrastructure services to customers who require their content to be housed in the EMEA region. ServInt has already begun activating ServInt EU accounts for many new customers in the region who pre-ordered ServInt hosting services over the past two weeks.

ServInt EU is our second major expansion after ServInt LA in California and represents our first data center presence outside North America, said ServInt COO Christian Dawson. Offering quality servers and support to customers around the globe is our mission, and broadening our footprint to include servers based in Europe is an important step toward achieving that goal.

ServInt is now offering its full suite of Flex VPS products at ServInt EU. In the future, ServInt expects to expand the products available at ServInt EU to include all Flex Private dedicated servers, as well as the Jelastic Java cloud hosting platform.

Customers can visit http://www.servint.net to order hosting at ServInt EU.

About ServInt

ServInt is a pioneering provider of high-reliability, managed cloud hosting services for enterprises worldwide. Founded in Northern Virginia in 1995, ServInt provides a range of IaaS, PaaS, VPS and dedicated server packages to hosting service resellers, web designers, developers and online businesses in more than 130 countries. To learn more about ServInts cloud, VPS and dedicated hosting solutions, please call 1-800-573-7846 from the USA, +1-571-766-1000 from outside the USA or visit http://www.servint.net.

Continued here:
ServInt Announces Grand Opening of Its New Data Center in Amsterdam

Read More..

SmartVault Tour with Cloud9 Real Time – Video



10-06-2012 21:13 - SmartVault integrates with Cloud9 Real Time perfectly to offer an ideal Cloud accounting solution with the added benefits of attaching documents directly to QuickBooks transactions in the full desktop version of QuickBooks with anytime, anywhere access. SmartVault, a leading provider of Software as a Service document storage and sharing solutions, provides accounting professionals and businesses with an easy and affordable solution for users to store, view, and share files securely any time and from anywhere. SmartVault's unique integration with popular small- and medium-sized business applications like QuickBooks creates a seamless user experience for scanning, attaching, and finding documents within a familiar application. Cloud9 Real Time's Private Cloud solutions offer application hosting to fit your needs! With over 250 applications currently on the systems and growing daily, the possibilities are endless. Outsource your server and get all of your apps in the Cloud in one central location for singular login.

More:
SmartVault Tour with Cloud9 Real Time - Video

Read More..