Cloud Recovery

Thoughts and Topics Around Cloud Backup and Recovery

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Archive for the ‘Amazon’ Category

Topics on Amazon EC2

Amazon CTO Counters Skepticism on Cloud Security

Posted by brennels on August 2, 2010

Jon Brodkin, Network World Wednesday, July 28, 2010

(07-28) 15:49 PDT – Amazon’s cloud computing division is planning to “raise the bar” on security, and provide better security than most enterprises can achieve on their own, says Amazon CTO Werner Vogels.

But some analysts believe Amazon is not transparent enough about its internal security practices, judging by comments after a presentation Vogels made at the Burton Group Catalyst conference in San Diego Wednesday.

Amazon called out over cloud security, secrecy

Vogels provided an optimistic view of cloud security, saying that cloud networks such as Amazon’s already provide better security, and disaster recovery, than most enterprises are capable of. “I believe the cloud is the area where we have to raise the bar for enterprise security,” Vogels said.”

Read the rest of the article on Networkworld.com

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

What’s New in AWS Security: Vulnerability Reporting and Penetration Testing

Posted by brennels on July 23, 2010

“Security is a top priority for Amazon Web Services. Providing a trustworthy infrastructure for you to develop and deploy applications is a responsibility we take very seriously. One important aspect of gaining your trust is being open and transparent about our security processes and continually working toward achieving industry-recognized certifications. Other important aspects include providing you with mechanisms for contacting us about potential security issues and enabling you to conduct security tests of the applications you deploy on AWS. I’m pleased to announce today two new policies: one that outlines our vulnerability reporting process and one that describes how to receive permission to conduct penetration tests of the applications running on your EC2 instances.”

Read the full post on the Amazon Web Services Blog here

Posted in Amazon, Cloud Computing, Cloud Hosting, Cloud Providers, IaaS, Security | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Amazon’s early efforts at cloud computing? Partly accidental

Posted by brennels on June 30, 2010

Posted by: Carl Brooks ITknowledgeexchange.techtarget.com

Former ‘Master of Disaster’ at Amazon Jesse Robbins has a couple of fun tidbits to share about the birth of Amazon EC2. He said the reason it succeeded as an idea in Amazon’s giant retail machine was partly due to his inter-territorial corporate grumpiness and partly due to homesickness–not exactly the masterstroke of carefully planned skunkworks genius it’s been made out to be by some.

Robbins said Chris Pinkham, creator of EC2 along with Chris Brown (and later joined by Wiljem Van Biljon recruited in South Africa)was itching to go back to South Africa right around the time Amazon started noodling around with the idea of selling virtual servers. At the time, Robbins was in charge of all of Amazon’s outward facing web properties and keeping them running.

“Chris really, really wanted to be back in South Africa,” said Robbins, and rather than lose the formidable talent behind Amazon’s then VP of engineering, Amazon brass cleared the project and off they went with a freedom to innovate that many might be jealous of.”

Read the full article here on ITknowledgeexchange.techtarget.com

Posted in Amazon, Business Continuity, Cloud Architecture, Cloud Providers, IaaS, RaaS | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Recovery.Go Moved To Amazon Cloud

Posted by brennels on June 23, 2010

This is an ironic story I cam across today posted on informationweek May 13th, 2010 “Recovery.gov Moved To Amazon Cloud”. With all the talk about using the cloud for recovering servers the irony is that the economic recovery trackings system is being moved becuase SaaS and the SLA of Amazon EC2 is more cost effective than attempting to build the data infrastructure required to host such a high volume critical application. I wonder how long it will take the public sector to begin to realize these benefits of using cloud computing as a recovery platform?

“Recovery.gov Moved To Amazon Cloud” by J. Nicholas Hoover InformationWeek May 13, 2010 04:14 pm

“The federal government hopes moving the stimulus-tracking Web site to Amazon EC2 will allow the recovery board to save money and refocus on its core mission.

The federal government has moved Recovery.gov, the Web site people can use to track spending under last year’s $787 million economic stimulus package, to Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud infrastructure-as-a-service platform, the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board announced Thursday. The move marks a milestone for the Obama administration’s cloud computing initiative. Federal CIO Vivek Kundra said in a conference call with reporters it is the first government-wide system to move to a cloud computing infrastructure. It’s also the first federal government production system to run on Amazon EC2, Kundra said.”

 Read the full story here on informationweek.com

Posted in Amazon, Business Continuity, Cloud Architecture, SaaS | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

New: CloudWatch Metrics for Amazon EBS Volumes

Posted by brennels on June 15, 2010

Here are some interesting metrics that Amazon posted on their AWS blog

If you already have some EBS (Elastic Block Store) volumes, stop reading this post now!

Instead, open up the AWS Management Console in a fresh browser tab, select the Amazon EC2 tab and click on Volumes (or use this handy shortcut to go directly there). Click on one of your EBS volumes and you’ll see a brand new Monitoring tab. Click on the tab you’ll see ten graphs with information about the performance of the volume.

For those of you without any EBS volumes (what are you waiting for?), here’s what you are missing:”

Read the full article here on the AWS blog

Posted in Amazon, Cloud Providers | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

After Microsoft, also Red Hat extends RHEL licensing to Amazon EC2 deployments

Posted by brennels on May 4, 2010

Written by  Alessandro Perilli   |   Monday, May 3rd, 2010   | virtualization.info

 ”The adoption of cloud computing implies facing and solving a number of remarkable challenges. The security aspect is probably the most discussed ever but another key point that ISVs, cloud providers and customers have to agree on is licensing.

 Licensing of guest operating systems and their applications in Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) cloud platforms is a critical aspect to consider when evaluating the economics of this technology. And really a few players are actively discussing it. 
So it’s with a lot of interest that virtualization.info reports about the activity around Amazon and its Xen-based EC2 IaaS cloud.

Last month Microsoft and Amazon announced a new pilot program that allows their customers to extend their existing Windows Server Enterprise Agreement (EA) licenses, plus Software Assurance (SA), to the instances they have inside EC2.”

Read the full article here on virtualization.info

Posted in Amazon, Cloud Architecture | Tagged: , , , | 1 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 »

IT shops applaud Amazon’s response to recent outage

Posted by brennels on April 5, 2010

By Carl Brooks, Technology Writer| SearchCloudComputing.com

“Amazon Web Services has improved the way it responds to service issues, and users are responding positively. AWS suffered a no-fooling-around stroke of bad luck on April 1, with a three-hour partial outage at its North Virginia data center.

 Access to the application programming interface (API) that lets users communicate with and control their AWS services went down for three hours in the early morning. In a move hailed by users, AWS posted a lengthy, frank and very detailed explanation of the problem, including missteps the company made in initially diagnosing the issue.

“While our deployment safeguards should have prevented this issue entirely, it also took our team too long to diagnose the root cause and recover. This issue should have been significantly easier for our technical teams to understand and resolve,” the AWS blog statement read in part.”

Read the full article here on SearchCloudComputing.com

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

 
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