Cloud Recovery

Thoughts and Topics Around Cloud Backup and Recovery

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Archive for the ‘Cloud Providers’ Category

Topics that include or mention Various Cloud Providers

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 »

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 »

Ebix Unveils Cloud-Computing Strategy

Posted by brennels on May 11, 2010

From Businesswire

ATLANTA, May 05, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Ebix, Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!ebix/quotes/nls/ebix (EBIX 15.20, +0.50, +3.40%) , a leading international supplier of On-Demand software and E-commerce services to the insurance industry, unveiled today its strategy for Cloud-computing and announced the new Ebix Cloud family of products and services for the Insurance market.

Within the Cloud-computing model, all Ebix solutions and software will be delivered as a utility or on a pay-per-use model basis. Built on top of the current Ebix product portfolio, these offerings would provide a range of services from collaboration infrastructure to data integration solutions. Ebix’s Cloud-computing platforms will allow an insurance entity to outsource data center and application hosting across multiple platforms to a single managed service provider. This will work to drive costs down and improve overall performance and reliability.

Read full article here

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

Large Companies Save More With Private Clouds — Sometimes

Posted by brennels on May 10, 2010

By Sumner Lemon from PCWorld.com

 ”Although cloud computing service providers can help companies cut IT costs, many large and mid-size companies can achieve equivalent or greater savings with in-house systems based on the same technologies. But there are no clear guidelines that dictate when a company should keep their systems in house, or when they should look for an external service provider, an IBM executive said Tuesday.

Large companies and organizations with thousands of systems may see greater cost savings from building a private cloud, or using a hybrid model that combines public and private clouds. “If managed well, that’s pretty close to the asymptote of economy of scale that lets you do it very, very efficiently,” said Alan Ganek, chief technology officer and vice president of strategy and technology at IBM’s Software Group.”

Read the full article on PCWorld here

Posted in Cloud Architecture, Cloud Providers, IBM Big Blue, SaaS | Tagged: , , | Leave a 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 »

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 »

 
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