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2010
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- October(1)
- August(2)
- July(9)
- June(30)
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May(38)
- Pano Logic launches “VDI capex buster:” Everything...
- Re-Engineering a Leader's Value
- The Mall Is Undead, but Maybe Not for Long
- MIT CIO Symposium: Why Silos Must Go
- Release: Quest/Vizioncore vRanger Pro 4.5 DPP
- Wow. And there you have it. At the close of Wed...
- Are you ready for the big Internet crunch?
- At EMC World, New Steps to the Private Cloud
- Google Unveils New Cloud Data Storage for Developers
- HP brings performance testing to the cloud
- Virtualization Savings in the House
- DNA Could Power Computers
- Infographic: Future Force Warrior (I think someone...
- Infineta Systems
- Cloud Computing as an Energy Saving Tool
- The Most Important Leadership Quality for CEOs? Cr...
- Software Firm Double-Take Agrees to $242 Million B...
- Infographic: The Growth of Cloud Computing
- How to Motivate People: Skip the Bonus and Give Th...
- Google Sneaks in Microsoft's Back Door
- Microsoft Office vs. Google Apps: The Business Brawl
- Storage Virtualization: When to Invest
- Infographic: Rise of Digitization in the US
- Quote of the Day: John McCarthy on Utility Computing
- Review: Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud
- 15 Cloud Companies to Watch
- John Titor?
- Large Companies Save More with Private Clouds -- S...
- NIST: Visual Model of NIST Working Definition of C...
- Evolution of Cloud Computing part 2: More Definitions
- Global Data Storage Demands to Rocket in Next Decade
- The Evolution of Cloud Computing
- Sandforce
- Microsoft, Oracle Differ on Cloud Visions
- Beware the Black Market Rising for IP Addresses
- Cisco, Others Dance Around 40G Ethernet for Data C...
- Banks Have Not 'Turned a Corner'
- Infographic: Social Media Demographics
- April(92)
Blog Archive
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2010
(172)
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May
(38)
- Pano Logic launches “VDI capex buster:” Everything...
- Re-Engineering a Leader's Value
- The Mall Is Undead, but Maybe Not for Long
- MIT CIO Symposium: Why Silos Must Go
- Release: Quest/Vizioncore vRanger Pro 4.5 DPP
- Wow. And there you have it. At the close of Wed...
- Are you ready for the big Internet crunch?
- At EMC World, New Steps to the Private Cloud
- Google Unveils New Cloud Data Storage for Developers
- HP brings performance testing to the cloud
- Virtualization Savings in the House
- DNA Could Power Computers
- Infographic: Future Force Warrior (I think someone...
- Infineta Systems
- Cloud Computing as an Energy Saving Tool
- The Most Important Leadership Quality for CEOs? Cr...
- Software Firm Double-Take Agrees to $242 Million B...
- Infographic: The Growth of Cloud Computing
- How to Motivate People: Skip the Bonus and Give Th...
- Google Sneaks in Microsoft's Back Door
- Microsoft Office vs. Google Apps: The Business Brawl
- Storage Virtualization: When to Invest
- Infographic: Rise of Digitization in the US
- Quote of the Day: John McCarthy on Utility Computing
- Review: Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud
- 15 Cloud Companies to Watch
- John Titor?
- Large Companies Save More with Private Clouds -- S...
- NIST: Visual Model of NIST Working Definition of C...
- Evolution of Cloud Computing part 2: More Definitions
- Global Data Storage Demands to Rocket in Next Decade
- The Evolution of Cloud Computing
- Sandforce
- Microsoft, Oracle Differ on Cloud Visions
- Beware the Black Market Rising for IP Addresses
- Cisco, Others Dance Around 40G Ethernet for Data C...
- Banks Have Not 'Turned a Corner'
- Infographic: Social Media Demographics
-
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May
(38)
Pano Logic launches “VDI capex buster:” Everything you need for $489 per desktop
Two of the biggest arguments against VDI have been (1) it’s too complicated, and (2) it costs more to buy and implement than just buying traditional desktops.Link here.
Re-Engineering a Leader's Value
Just as companies seek to re-engineer the value propositions of their products, managers should consider doing the same. Companies do it by adjusting the features, benefits and pricing of their offerings; managers do it by re-evaluating the services they offer their employees.
Link here.
The Mall Is Undead, but Maybe Not for Long
The $3.4 trillion in commercial debt currently outstanding in the U.S. By 2014, $1.4 trillion of that will reach maturity, and as much as half is owed to small banks which are decidedly not too big to fail. In February, the Congressional Oversight Panel concluded that a "significant wave of commercial mortgage defaults would trigger economic damage that could the touch the lives of nearly every American."Link here.
MIT CIO Symposium: Why Silos Must Go
At the end of the day, a CIO's #1 job is to be a business person, with specialty in technology.The story of my life. :)
Link here.
Release: Quest/Vizioncore vRanger Pro 4.5 DPP
Link here.
This week Vizioncore released the first major update for its backup/recovery product vRanger Pro since the 4.0 version made available in July 2009.
With this release, still part of the Data Protection Platform effort, Vizioncore is clearly going after PHD Virtual, as two key new features are part of competing products or have been announced to be part of them.
At the close of Wednesday's stock trading session, Apple's market capitalization stood at $222 billion, surpassing Microsoft, which had a value of $219 billion. Tech watchers hailed Apple's feat as the end of an era, changing of the guard, pick your metaphor.Link here.
Are you ready for the big Internet crunch?
The Internet as we know it is reaching its limits.Link here.
Within 18 months it is estimated that the number of new devices able to connect to the world wide web will plummet as we run out of "IP addresses" -- the unique codes that provide access to the Internet for everything from PCs to smart phones.
At EMC World, New Steps to the Private Cloud
A major announcement at the conference was EMC’s introduction of V-Plex. As VMware’s vMotion has done with virtual machines (VMs), V-Plex enables vMotion over distance, allowing for "active-active" storage (I/O on both the local and remote site sides) and the ability to begin accessing storage immediately as soon as the VM appears on the host, in a matter of minutes. The needs for this can be many: natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina highlighted the need to have a solid backup and recovery plan in place. In other instances, efficiencies are key: perhaps when an organization is looking to keep certain data/resources in one data center for a certain period of time, but may move to another when the data is no longer needed, and can be stored.Link here.
Google Unveils New Cloud Data Storage for Developers
The word is that Google will be taking advantage of the Google I/O conference--Google's largest developer event of 2010--to unveil Google Storage for Developers. The cloud-based data storage service pits Google against similar services such as Amazon's S3, but with a specific focus on developers.Link here.
HP brings performance testing to the cloud
With more applications being built for the Web, performance testing is critical to determining the proper approach to scaling both applications and infrastructure. But for many years performance testing was largely a rich-man's game, primarily because of the expense of setting and maintaining a large server infrastructure that can simulate real-world traffic.
Hosted testing solutions make a lot of sense from both the user and provider perspective. Considering the vast computing power available at your fingertips there are few reasons why you would want to own the infrastructure, or not take advantage of the latest offerings from providers both large and small.
To that end, Hewlett-Packard is slated on Wednesday to announce LoadRunner in the Cloud, a new application performance testing suite running on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2).
Link here.
Virtualization Savings in the House
Link here.
The U.S. House of Representatives has cut its electricity bill by about US$2,000 a day, thanks to efforts in virtualization and server consolidation.
The project came about as part of a House initiative to cut the amount of power used by this branch of Congress by 50 percent, said Jack Nichols, the director for enterprise operations at the U.S. House of Representatives Office of the Chief Administrative Officer. He talked about the two-year effort of consolidating the House's data centers at the Uptime Institute Symposium 2010, being held this week in New York.
DNA Could Power Computers
Engineers have long dreamed of using DNA as the backbone for the next generation of computer circuits. New research shows just how it might be done.Link here.
Infographic: Future Force Warrior (I think someone is a Halo fan.)
Infineta Systems
“Infineta Systems delivers solutions based on several technologies that significantly reduce the amount of traffic running across today’s data center WAN interconnect. Our groundbreaking innovation centers on the patent-pending Velocity Dedupe Engine™, the industry’s first-ever hardware deduplication (“dedupe”) engine. Unlike alternatives, the Velocity Dedupe Engine enables our solutions to maintain the highest levels of data reduction at multi-gigabit speeds while guaranteeing port to port latencies in the few 10s of microseconds. As a result, Infineta’s solutions enable customers to accelerate all data center applications (such as replication and backup) – including ones that are highly latency sensitive. It does so while reducing overall costs incurred by this growing, bandwidth-hungry traffic.”
Link here.
Cloud Computing as an Energy Saving Tool
I am not convinced, yet.
“As the data center industry grows increasingly obsessed with energy efficiency, cloud computing presents a compelling opportunity to reduce data center power bills, according to a leading expert on IT power issues.
‘There are powerful economic factors pushing us towards cloud computing,’ said Jonathan Koomey , a researcher who has studied data center energy use at Stanford and Lawrence Berkeley National Labs. ‘One of the major reasons is the more efficient use of power by cloud computing providers.’”
Link here.
The Most Important Leadership Quality for CEOs? Creativity
“For CEOs, creativity is now the most important leadership quality for success in business, outweighing even integrity and global thinking, according to a new study by IBM. The study is the largest known sample of one-on-one CEO interviews, with over 1,500 corporate heads and public sector leaders across 60 nations and 33 industries polled on what drives them in managing their companies in today's world.”
Link here.
Software Firm Double-Take Agrees to $242 Million Buyout
Good replication software.
“In late 2006, software security firm Double-Take Software (DBTK) went public at $11. While there was an initial rise in the stock, the past couple years have seen it fall to less than half that, and while it recovered somewhat, its value remains a bit below that IPO price today.
Now, Double-Take has agreed to a $242 million buyout from private-equity firm Thoma Bravo, which will be organizing the deal under the auspices of one of its portfolio companies, Vision Solutions, which develops availability and disaster recovery solutions for IBM (IBM) products.”
Link here.
How to Motivate People: Skip the Bonus and Give Them a Real Project
“Science has managed to reveal some crazy things that fly in the face of almost every commonly accepted management practice. Here's the latest: Rewards for top performers lead them to worse performance. And if you want to foster innovation, bonuses won't work either. Rather, it's all about letting people slip from under line management and strike out on their own, on projects they care about.”
Link here.
Google Sneaks in Microsoft's Back Door
“Forget McGruber. Now we've got MicGoogle -- Microsoft(MSFT) and Google(GOOG) are seemingly accidentally creating a bona fide small-business action hero.”
Link here.
Microsoft Office vs. Google Apps: The Business Brawl
“Google Apps may not be a true threat to Microsoft's enterprise business now, but Google's cloud-based productivity apps have forced Microsoft to tinker with Office, a key part of its business model. Both rivals face mighty challenges in the valuable battle for Web apps in the enterprise.”
Link here.
Storage Virtualization: When to Invest
"What's Happening :: Storage virtualization is becoming more common as companies realize the benefits of consolidating storage-area networks and streamlining their management. As with applications and servers, storage virtualization enables IT departments to decouple data from dedicated devices. An appliance serves as a go-between from applications and operating systems to the mass storage, enabling you to manage them all using one console. Thirty-eight percent of IT professionals surveyed recently by CIO said they are piloting or have deployed virtual storage technology, and another 31 percent are interested in it.
Why you care…"
Link here.
Quote of the Day: John McCarthy on Utility Computing
“If computers of the kind I have advocated become the computers of the future, then computing may someday be organized as a public utility just as the telephone system is a public utility... The computer utility could become the basis of a new and important industry.”
John McCarthy, MIT Centennial (famous for coining the term ‘Artificial Intelligence’)
Review: Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud
The challenge with using Ubuntu for anything Enterprise is that the support group is limited. How do you stand in front of your boss with no army of tech support behind you when the fit hits the shan?
“If you're building an internal or private cloud, Canonical wants you to use Ubuntu Linux 10.04 as your operating system of choice. To that end, the newest version of Ubuntu includes a feature set called Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud. In keeping with its open source pedigree, Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud is integrated with the open source Eucalyptus http://www.networkworld.com/slideshows/2009/110909-open-source-companies-list.html#slide4 private cloud platform, making it possible to create a private cloud with much less configuration than installing Linux first, then Eucalyptus.”
Link here.
Large Companies Save More with Private Clouds -- Sometimes
Virtualization and/or cloud computing are not silver bullets for your company’s woes. Be smart about how you will support the business. The challenge is for business leaders to communicate to IT the priorities of the organization so that IT can build systems which turn those into realities. Too often, there is a communication breakdown between the business leaders and the IT leaders.
“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 (IBM) executive said Tuesday.”
Link here.
NIST: Visual Model of NIST Working Definition of Cloud Computing
Evolution of Cloud Computing part 2: More Definitions
There are five essential characteristics of Cloud Computing which define the underlying service standard.
Characteristics
On-Demand Self-Service -- A consumer can unilaterally provision computing capabilities, such as server time and network storage, as needed automatically without requiring human interaction with each service’s provider.
Broad Network Access -- Capabilities are available over the network and accessed through standard mechanisms that promote use by heterogeneous thin or thick client platforms.
Resource Pooling -- The provider’s computing resources are pooled to serve multiple consumers using a multi-tenant model, with different physical and virtual resources dynamically assigned and reassigned according to consumer demand. There is a sense of location independence in that the customer generally has no control or knowledge over the exact location of the provided resources but may be able to specify location at a higher level of abstraction.
Rapid Elasticity -- Capabilities can be rapidly and elastically provisioned, in some cases automatically, to quickly scale out and rapidly released to quickly scale in. To the consumer, the capabilities available for provisioning often appear to be unlimited and can be purchased in any quantity at any time.
Measured Service -- Cloud systems automatically control and optimize resource use by leveraging a metering capability at some level of abstraction appropriate to the type of service. Resource usage can be monitored, controlled, and reported providing transparency for both the provider and consumer of the utilized service.
Deployment Models
Based on these characteristics, there are five deployment models that can be mixed and matched to accommodate the service levels stipulated for your systems, predominantly as it relates to performance and availability.
Public Cloud – The cloud infrastructure is made available to the general public or a large industry group and is owned by an organization selling cloud services.
Private (Internal) Cloud – The cloud infrastructure is operated solely for an organization. It may be managed by the organization or a third party and may exist on premise or off premise.
Enterprise Cloud – The cloud infrastructure is shared by several organizations and supports a specific community that has shared concerns. It may be managed by the organizations or a third party and may exist on premise or off premise.
Hybrid (Federated) Cloud – The cloud infrastructure is a composition of two or more clouds that remain unique entities but are bound together by standardized or proprietary technology that enables data and application portability.
Virtual Private Cloud – a cloud service that simulate a private cloud inside a public cloud infrastructure.
Global Data Storage Demands to Rocket in Next Decade
The success of Virtualization is predicated on storage.
“The amount of information in the world is set to rise 44-fold in the next decade according to IDC, with much of that increase coming from the rise in cloud computing.”
Link here.
The Evolution of Cloud Computing
Today begins a brief series on the Evolution of Cloud computing. Cloud Computing is taking hold of the Data Center compute model and is shaping the way businesses think about their interaction with compute resources. While the term “Cloud Computing” is still somewhat nebulous, a definition is beginning to take shape and standards are forming around the core offering. Let’s explore those definitions, those standards, and take a look at the challenges we face in achieving the ultimate vision.
The following describes the topics that will be covered:
1. Defining the Cloud
2. Roots
3. Virtualization’s Role
4. Major players
5. Vision
6. Where are we today?
7. Challenges
8. Cloud Economics
9. Case Studies
Defining the Cloud
Let’s start with a definition. So many folks are vying for the opportunity to put their own spin on what Cloud Computing means, it’s appropriate for a 3rd party to aggregate the community’s thoughts and posit something we can all agree upon as the baseling. I prefer to work with the following definition from the National Institute of Standards and Technology:
“Cloud computing is a model for enabling convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction. This cloud model promotes availability and is composed of five essential characteristics, three service models, and four deployment models.”
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
Source: http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/SNS/cloud-computing/
Sandforce
SSD is the next major hurdle in terms of storage speeds and electricity consumption reduction.
Sandforce is a company that makes an ASIC, which becomes the enterprise engine behind even commodity SSD.
This will be an interesting company to watch.
“SandForce transforms data storage by pioneering the use of commodity flash memory in enterprise and client computing applications with its innovative SSD Processors. The world’s most demanding applications are driving the need for ultra-reliable, high-performance and power efficient data storage solutions – they demand SandForce.”
Link here.
Microsoft, Oracle Differ on Cloud Visions
Public? Private? The service models are different and certainly the value propositions are different.
“At the Cloud Computing Expo held this week in New York, executives from Microsoft (MSFT) and Oracle (ORCL) shared how they see cloud computing working its way into the enterprise.
The companies offered disparate visions, however, with Microsoft emphasizing its public cloud offerings and Oracle touting tools for building out internal clouds.
Both software giants agreed, however, that enterprise use of clouds is best done on an as-needed basis, in what their executives called ‘a hybrid model.’”
Link here.
Beware the Black Market Rising for IP Addresses
ARIN has been clamping down over the last 18 months or better to make sure that public IPv4 space isn’t misallocated, now that the supply is getting short. In the early days, ISPs tossed out IPs like corn feed and now the chickens are coming home to roost. So with the impending IPv6 rollout, what is happening? Shady men with trenchcoats are pushing IPv4 space in dark alleys.
“Organizations slow to adopt IPv6 take heed: Surging requests for IPv4 addresses are quickly drying up the available store, raising the specter of an IPv4 black market that could dramatically increase the cost of obtaining a presence on today's Internet.”
Link here.
Cisco, Others Dance Around 40G Ethernet for Data Centers
Connectivity – external and internal – continues to grow. Aside from Cisco-Kerr black holes and the random Data Center wormhole, are we reaching a speed limit? How does this impact multi-locational compute clusters?
“Notwithstanding an aggressive first strike by Extreme Networks, switching vendors are largely mum on when and in what configurations they will ship 40G Ethernet products.
Extreme announced and demonstrated four-port 40G Ethernet modules for its Summit X650 stackable edge and BlackDiamond modular switches at the Interop conference here this week. Extreme is pricing the modules aggressively: $1,000 per port, which is only $85 more than the average selling price of a 10G Ethernet port, according to Dell'Oro (DELL) Group.”
Link here.
Banks Have Not 'Turned a Corner'
Not your typical IT-related post, but worthy of reading to understand where the markets are right now. IT is a function of business and if the business is sour, if money is tight, then often IT is one of the first places to feel the pressure to “do more with less.” IT is often considered a cost-center for an organization and this designation means that no matter how hard IT works, the best it will ever do is not spend AS much as was planned. Turning IT into a revenue-center is the first step in putting IT in the light it belongs as a serious support mechanism for organizational and revenue growth. For most of us, IT is central to the modern marketplace as both support and sales.
“Wall Street was upbeat in mid-April because the country's four largest banks (Bank of America (BAC), JPMorgan Chase(JPM), Citibank(C), and Wells Fargo(WFC)) all reported what Wall Street considered "turning the corner" earnings and all the CEOs except Bank of America's Moynihan were positive on the immediate future. The data, however, do not lead to such conclusions.”
Link here.
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