Cloud Recovery

Thoughts and Topics Around Cloud Backup and Recovery

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 4 other followers

  • Subscribe

  • RSS Cloud Security

    • GoGrid Security Breach
      Bad news for GoGrid customers as today we received the following breach notification by email… Dear Valued Customer: In the normal process of reviewing our system activity, our Security Team discovered that an unauthorized third party may have viewed your account information, including payment card data. We immediately took action to protect our custom […]
  • RSS Cloud Computing Journal

    • Cloud Expo New York Speaker Profile: Chris MacGown – Piston Cloud Computing
      With Cloud Expo 2012 New York (10th Cloud Expo) now less than three three weeks away, what better time to start introducing you in greater detail to the distinguished individuals in our incredible Speaker Faculty for the technical and strategy sessions at the conference... We have technical and strategy sessions for you every day from June 11 through June 14 […]

Archive for the ‘Cloud Computing’ Category

Google coding tool advances cloud computing

Posted by brennels on May 25, 2010

by Stephen Shankland

“Google has released a programming tool to help move its Native Client project–and more broadly, its cloud-computing ambitions–from abstract idea to practical reality. 

The new Native Client software developer kit, though only a developer preview version, is designed to make it easier for programmers to use the Net giant’s browser-boosting Native Client technology. 

“The Native Client SDK preview…includes just the basics you need to get started writing an app in minutes,” Google programmer David Springer said Wednesday in a blog post announcing the SDK, a week before the developer-oriented Google I/O conference. “We’ll be updating the SDK rapidly in the next few months.” 

Native Client, or NaCl, is designed to let browsers run programs at nearly the speeds of those compiled to run natively on a computer system. It’s fast enough to handle tasks such as video decompression and first-person shooter video games, and it’s designed to handle adjusted versions of existing software, not just programs written from scratch.”

Read the full article here on CNet.com

Posted in Cloud Architecture, Cloud Computing, Cloud Hosting, Cloud Providers, Google | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Salesforce’s Benioff: Microsoft, IBM play catchup in cloud computing

Posted by brennels on May 20, 2010

 

 ”Benioff has been championing the service as disruptive technology for more than a decade. Technology Live caught up with Benioff shortly after he delivered this keynote presentation at a Google event promoting Google Apps Marketplace. Excerpts of that interview:

CEO Mark Benioff is a champion of cloud services.
With Google, IBM and Microsoft suddenly racing to deliver Software-as-a-Service to small businesses, Marc Benioff, outspoken co-founder and CEO of Salesforce.com, couldn’t be more tickled.”
Read the full article here

Posted in Azure, Cloud Architecture, Cloud Computing, Google, IBM Big Blue, SaaS | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

EMC chief sees the future in cloud computing

Posted by brennels on May 18, 2010

by Hiawatha Bray Globe Staff / May 11, 2010

EMC Corp. chief executive Joe Tucci said yesterday that the true revolution in digital technology is only just starting, as cloud computing technology begins to link billions of computers and cellphones into seamless information networks.

“We’re now going through what I believe is pretty much going to be the biggest wave in the history of information technology,’’ said Tucci, adding that Hopkinton-based EMC is in position to ride that wave to more success.”

Read the full article here on Boston.com

Posted in Cloud Architecture, Cloud Computing, Cloud Providers | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Cloud computing is a private affair

Posted by brennels on May 13, 2010

By Harshal Kallyanpur, InformationWeek, May 10, 2010

It would be safe to say that today, cloud computing is a reality in India. Once regarded with great apprehension, this IT delivery model is slowly beginning to find a fair share of takers in the country.

Over the past few months major software and hardware vendors announced partnerships with telecom and data center service providers to provide a cloud-based service-oriented IT delivery model in India. Organizations such as Reliance Communications, Tata Communications, Wipro, IBM and Sify recently announced their cloud-based services. Other organizations such as Netmagic have been offering cloudbased services for almost a year now.”

Read full article on informationweek

Posted in Azure, Cloud Architecture, Cloud Computing, Cloud Providers, SaaS, Server Recovery, Storage Virtualization | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

New Cloud Computing Report Shows Redshift Effect

Posted by amcanty on April 19, 2010

Big Growth Scene on Eve of Fifth Cloud Expo in New York

By Roger Strukhoff

I’ve been involved with, for better worse, emerging markets for my entire career in the technology business. I edited a “portable” computing magazine in the early 80s. Was on the job during “The Year of the LAN” in 1984, and shortly after that, was editing a UNIX magazine in the age of “bang” email addresses. Covered CD-ROM in the late 80s, computer games in the early 90s, client/server before Jonathan Schwartz had a ponytail. Web services, SOA, open source. Got JavaOne off the ground. Heck, I was even country, when country wasn’t cool.

The joke everyone told about all of those emerging technologies was that we were often part of “a zero-billion-dollar market.”

Well, joke no more, because the great thing about cloud computing is that it’s not an emerging technology, but rather, an emerging way of doing business, and it already commands several billions of dollars of market share. Now, according to a new report just issued out of Dublin, it will be a $100-billion-market by 2016. This type of growth, viewed from where we are standing now, will have a serious redshift aspect to it.

The tricky stuff is to determine how much new IT business will be created by Cloud Computing, but in any case, there are few, if any, technology vendors with no cloud strategy today. And even with reports of significant minorities of IT purchasers having serious concerns about cloud computing, the reality is that this term was not on the radar screen five years ago, and all technology buyers are studying it, if not yet endorsing it.

The Dublin report comes from Wintergreen Research, and has been released on the eve of the Fifth International Cloud Expo, which will be held at the Javits Center in New York.

Here are some outtakes:

* “Cloud computing markets totaling $20.3 billion in 2009 are anticipated to reach $100.4 billion by 2016.”

For the rest of the outtakes from the report, click here!

Posted in Cloud Architecture, Cloud Availability, Cloud Backup, Cloud Computing, Cloud Hosting, Cloud Providers | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Cloud Computing: Early Adopters Share Five Key Lessons

Posted by amcanty on April 15, 2010

By Robert Lemos on Thu, April 15, 2010

“Look, Ma, no data center. Many of today’s start-up companies find cloud services such as Amazon EC2 essential to their business model. You can benefit from the lessons already learned by these early cloud adopters.

While some large enterprises have moved their information-technology infrastructure to a third-party managed service to save costs, small firms—especially startups—have come to rely on cloud services to cut initial outlays and help them focus on the core services and products.

Infrastructure-as-a-service offerings, such as Amazon’s Elastic Computing Cloud (EC2), typically are used by larger enterprises to give research-and development groups flexibility in resources. For startups, eliminating the large capital expenditure of a data center at the outset has allowed many to reduce seed money and keep their burn rates that much lower, says Oliver Friedrichs, CEO of antivirus firm Immunet, which launched its first product last August.

“It’s a big win for smaller companies to leverage the cloud because you are really saving a lot—it is really avoiding a large, up-front investment,” says Friedrichs. “Five years ago, we would have had to build out a data center and the sheer cost of that would have made it much more difficult to launch our business.”

Immunet has no datacenter of its own. Instead, the company uses Amazon’s EC2 to analyze malicious code for patterns that can help its product, Immunet Protect, recognize viruses and Trojan horses. The firm also uses the cloud to keep antivirus service available to its more than 125,000 users, adding new virtual servers as its user base grows.

The cost savings and scalability of infrastructure-as-a-service offerings are well known advantages. Yet, there are others. In interviews, three small companies that use the cloud—and one that does not—share the lessons learned from growing up with cloud infrastructure.

1. From IT management to software development

Foregoing a datacenter immediately saves small companies a significant cost: Server administrators and datacenter managers. Yet, rather than reduce headcount, many companies are instead using the reclaimed budget to invest in software developers that have experience working in the cloud.

“In a traditional data center, we would need an IT person to rack the system, maintain the servers, and own the hardware,” says Immunet’s Friedrichs. “So rather than hiring someone, we now have software developers that are writing on a very flexible platform that Amazon maintains.”

For sales forecasting and analytics firm Right90, the cost savings of moving its infrastructure to the cloud was too advantageous to ignore. Right90 didn’t start its business using third-party infrastructure, but the cost savings and flexibility of cloud services beckoned. Last year, the company moved out of its data centers in Calgary, Ontario and San Francisco, California and adopted Amazon EC2 with backup to servers located at the firm’s own offices. The lack of servers to manage has freed up Right90′s IT management team, says Arthur Wong, the firm’s CEO.”

To read the rest of the key lessons, click here!

Posted in Amazon, Cloud Architecture, Cloud Backup, Cloud Computing, IaaS | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Double-Take® Software and Amazon Web Services to Host Webinar on Cloud Recovery

Posted by amcanty on April 14, 2010

SOUTHBOROUGH, Mass.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Do you want the ability to backup and recover your data in the cloud? If you answered yes, then you won’t want to miss Double-Take® Software (NASDAQ: DBTK) and Amazon Web Services’ upcoming webinar on cloud recovery, which will provide information and answer questions about a new solution that is changing the disaster recovery landscape by eliminating the need to own and manage a datacenter.

This webinar will explain how businesses of any size can create a highly efficient and effective disaster recovery plan with Double-Take® Cloud, a solution that leverages Amazon Web Services’ extensive capacity on an as-needed basis through the cloud. As a result, the need for costly dedicated disaster recovery data centers and the associated hardware, software, real estate, power, cooling and management overhead is eliminated – providing end users with a simple, easy-to-use and affordable disaster recovery solution.

The webinar will cover how to:

  • Backup and recover in the cloud, eliminating the need to own and manage a datacenter.
  • Set up world-class disaster recovery for any Windows server in about an hour.
  • Reduce downtime to minutes, recover any Windows server into Amazon Web Services easily and protect any database or application server with no additional hardware.

Attendees will also be able to ask questions during the live Q&A session with Amazon Web Services and Double-Take Software experts, Brian Matsubara and Peter Laudenslager.

Webinar Details:

What:         Double-Take Cloud & Amazon Web Services: Worried at Breakfast, Protected by Lunchtime
When:         Wednesday, April 21, 2010; 11:00 am – 12:00 pm ET
Who:         Brian Matsubara, Amazon Web Services, and Peter Laudenslager, Double-Take Software
Where:         http://bit.ly/9c4Nao

For more information, go to www.doubletake.com or register for the webinar here.

For the full article, click here!

Posted in Amazon, Backup and Recovery, Cloud Architecture, Cloud Backup, Cloud Computing, Cloud Recovery, Webinar | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Double-Take Software and Amazon Web Services Host Joint Webinar!

Posted by amcanty on April 12, 2010

Register for our live webinar with Double-Take Software and Amazon!

Register today for our joint webinar with Amazon!

Posted in Amazon, Cloud Backup, Cloud Computing, Cloud Providers, Webinar | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

More technology CFOs migrate to the Cloud

Posted by amcanty on April 8, 2010

“(CPI Financial Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) This year, according to an annual study by BDO, a majority (56 per cent) of chief financial officers (CFOs) at leading US technology businesses are currently using cloud computing in some capacity. Further, the vast majority (90 per cent) report their use of cloud computing will remain the same or increase this year.

CFOs cite cost flexibility (32 per cent), increased scalability (32 per cent) and improved business ability (29 per cent) as the driving reasons for embracing cloud computing instead of provisioning IT services from their own data centre.

The majority of tech CFOs (64 per cent) are familiar with cloud computing. Still, despite the allure of cost savings, some CFOs (44 per cent) have resisted the shift to the cloud and list security concerns (39 per cent), the hassle and expense (29 per cent) and limited application features (14 per cent) as their reasons.

“Security threats remain the top concern for tech CFOs looking to implement cloud computing within their organisation, but this risk is substantially minimised given world-class cloud providers, such as Amazon and Microsoft and the emergence of numerous other vendors now competing in the space,” said Jay Howell, a Partner in the Technology Practice at BDO.

“Cost savings have proved cloud computing’s strong ROI potential, and this is driving continued investment, resulting in increasing robustness and business ability of cloud-based applications.”

For the full article, click here!

Posted in Cloud Computing | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Stats Show Improving Numbers for Cloud Services

Posted by amcanty on April 7, 2010

By Hovhannes Avoyan

April 6, 2010 09:00 AM EDT

“A recent batch of statistics shows some very encouraging news for the IT industry recovery – particularly the cloud computing sector.

First, over the next five years, expect the cloud computing services market, such as cloud platform monitoring, to balloon to $222.5 billion, fueled by end-users modernizing their networking infrastructure, further proliferation of the Internet and the tumultuous economy, says a new report released by Global Industry Analysts. A perfect storm will combine, and companies will upgrade their networks to cut costs and boost performance.

“As companies modernize their enterprise networking infrastructure, driven by the need to remain competitive, and retain critical survival capabilities, such as, agility and flexibility in a fast changing marketplace, it is opportunities galore for technologies like cloud computing and virtualization, among others,” says the report, according to an account I read. “Simplicity in implementation and low costs are prime factors driving adoption of clouds by large and small enterprises alike.”

Also behind the blistering growth in cloud computing services are the increased number of vendors and offerings and the movement toward more virtualization and green IT efforts.

A survey released in March from Sand Hill Group, which provides investment and management advice to companies in the enterprise software, services and solutions market, found that, while 70% of companies it polled spend only 3% of their IT budgets on the cloud, by 2013, 80% will spend between 7% and 30%.”

For the full article, click here!

Posted in Cloud Computing | Tagged: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.