Preventive IT Analytics

Managing software application performance is complex and increasingly challenging. Surprisingly, even today, massive IT resources remain chained to ensuring applications and infrastructures are up and running smoothly, rather than proactively leveraging strategic technologies to solve business problems or achieve competitive advantage.
That world is changing.
A new generation of preventive analytic technologies is emerging in the APM (Application Performance Management) industry, unlocking untapped value in this $2+ billion market that is growing $300 million per year. These technologies are only now achievable via revolutionary machine learning technologies, advanced quantitative analytics, and the natural evolution of BI … as BI-like analytics are bleeding into the APM world.

read more

SYS-CON.tv Interview: Cloud and Big Data Strategy

“Big Data genuinely fits well with cloud computing. It’s fundamentally a clustering architecture and it’s fundamentally possible because cloud offers the best price performance for processing any type of computing task,” observed John Keagy, CEO of GoGrid, in this SYS-CON.tv interview with Cloud Expo Conference Chair Jeremy Geelan at the 10th International Cloud Expo, held June 11–14, 2012, at the Javits Center in New York City.
Cloud Expo 2012 Silicon Valley, November 5–8, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA, will feature technical sessions from a rock star conference faculty and the leading Cloud industry players in the world.

read more

Terracotta’s BigMemory Capacity Swells

Terracotta put out a new 3.7 version of its BigMemory Wednesday that can squeeze 10x more data into in-memory where it can hug ultra-fast processing and search. Poof, instant analysis of real-time Big Data.
The move will let it support the multi-terabyte servers that are now becoming standard fare. Those boxes now come with 2TB-4TB of RAM. Terracotta’s compression technology can squeeze a terabyte of data into 500 gigs of inexpensive RAM and multi-terabyte servers can be added linearly to create massive in-memory Big Data solutions.

read more

Symantec Dumps Its CEO

Symantec Wednesday pushed its CEO and president of three years Enrique Salem out and installed its chairman, former Intuit CEO Steve Bennett, in his place. Shares rose a cheery 13.5% to $14.96 on the news.
“While progress has been made over the last three years in many areas,” Bennett said in a statement, “it was the board’s judgment that it was in the best interests of Symantec to make a change in the CEO.”
“My view is that Symantec’s assets are strong and yet the company is underperforming against the opportunity. I’m looking forward to working with the team to build upon the significant assets in place to help Symantec accelerate value creation for all of its stakeholders.”
He intends to follow up on Symantec’s push into mobile security. He also intends to conduct a 90- to 120-day review and interview customers, employees and partners to figure out what’s wrong.

read more

SYS-CON.tv Interview: The On-Premise Private Cloud

“We have 25,000 Eucalyptus Clouds started up every year, over 20% of the Fortune 100 running Eucalyptus, and more reference deployments last year than all of our competitors put together,” noted Brady Murray, Vice President of Alliances for Eucalyptus Systems, in this SYS-CON.tv interview with Cloud Expo Conference Chair Jeremy Geelan at the 10th International Cloud Expo, held June 11–14, 2012, at the Javits Center in New York City.
Cloud Expo 2012 Silicon Valley, November 5–8, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA, will feature technical sessions from a rock star conference faculty and the leading Cloud industry players in the world.

read more

AppFog Promises Cloud-on-the-Cheap

Two-year-old AppFog, which started out in life as PHP Fog, is proposing to rent out cloud infrastructure that it in turn rents from Amazon, Azure, Rackspace and HP charging only for the total amount of RAM used in deployments.
It doesn’t matter if it’s coming from multiple backend infrastructure vendors it’s a flat price and promises the fast servers available.
It claims it can set people up on multiple cloud and multiple availability zones to avoid the inevitable cloud crash for less than it would cost them to make the arrangements directly with the infrastructure vendors.

read more

News on Windows 2012, Office 365 and Canadian Police

I had the pleasure of attending the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in Toronto, Canada earlier this month and worldwide it was as 16,000 attendees squeezed into the Air Canada Center for Microsoft’s morning key note speeches.  That’s the most that arena has seen inside its snug confines since Vince Carter was dunking on opposing players, or I guess when Vince Carter could dunk period.  It was a week where Microsoft spent making some big announcements, covered some important changes and showcased some new products “Eh.”

The first major announcement was Microsoft’s Office 365 cloud solution which later this year will be available for purchase under the Open Licensing Program.  Office 365 was released last summer and has been solely available for customers to purchase online, although partners like GreenPages would assist with quoting the subscription, ultimately customers would purchase the monthly subscription directly from Microsoft, which can be a little painstaking and nevertheless confusing (like this sentence is).  Now with the announcement that Office 365 will be available through volume licensing, we’ll be able to invoice the customer directly like we would with an on-premise product, making the process much simpler for you.  Now you’ll have another avenue to purchase the subscription.  Most likely it will be available through the Open Value program and details are still being ironed out, so be on the lookout as we’ll provide the latest information as to when this will be available through volume licensing.

The other news is the announcement of Windows 8 set to be released to manufacturing in August and general availability in October.  Microsoft is very excited about this new release as they said it is the most anticipated release they’ve had since XP.  They showcased some pretty nifty touchscreen laptops with Windows 8 Professional loaded on which, I would have loved to bring back to the States, and I would have, assuming the Royal Canadian Mounted Police didn’t finally catch up with me at the Boarder.

The biggest news is the upcoming release of Windows 2012 which is scheduled for General Availability in early September and will offer new enhancements centered around Hyper-V. Along with the new features there are some major licensing changes, loss of an edition (nice knowing you Enterprise) and upgrade paths if you have current Software Assurance.

The first change with Windows 2012 is it will move to a more consistent licensing model and each edition will have the same exact common features, however the editions have been reduced.  With Windows 2012 there will only be two editions: Standard and Datacenter. Windows Enterprise, on the other hand, has been cut from the team and will not be at training camp when Windows 2012 debuts.  So you’re probably wondering, if Standard and Datacenter have the exact same features and can perform the same tasks than what is the difference between the two?   It’s all in the licensing, but before we get into the licensing, let’s check out the new features in Windows 2012 Standard edition which previously were only available in the premium editions.

Both Windows Standard and Datacenter will include these features among others.

-Windows Server Failover Clustering

-BranchCache Hosted Chache Server

-Active Directory Federated Services

-Additional Active Directory Certificate Services capabilities

-Distributed File Services

-DRS-R Cross-File Replication

Along with the new features there is a new licensing model for Windows 2012.  Both Windows 2012 Standard and Datacenter will now be licensed by the processor and the days of per server licensing are now gone and the biggest reason for that is virtualization.  What differentiates the two editions is the number of Virtual Machines (VMs) that are entitled to be run with each edition.  A Standard edition license will entitle you to run up to two VMs on up to two processors.  A Datacenter edition license will entitle you to run an unlimited number of VMs on up to two processors. Each license of Standard and Datacenter will cover two processors so for example if you have a quad-processor host, you would purchase 2 x Two-Processor licenses.  The Two-Processor license cannot be split up, meaning you can’t put one processor license on one server and the other processor license on another, nor can you combine a Standard and Datacenter license on the same host.  The processor license does not include Cals.  Windows Cals would still have to be purchased separately.

Ok, now that I have dropped this knowledge on you, what should you expect moving forward?  Let’s talk about pricing and what this new model is going to cost you.  A Two-Processor license of Datacenter will retail for $4,809, which breaks down to $2,405 a CPU.  The current retail price for Windows 2008 R2 Datacenter per Processor license is $2,405 so nothing has changed there.  For Windows 2012 Standard, a Two-Processor license retails for $882.  For those of you who were accustomed to purchasing Windows 2008 R2 Enterprise for $2,358 MSRP so you could use the 4-VMs that came with it will notice that the price to get 4-VMs of Windows 2012 (2 x Two-Processor Windows 2012 Standard = $1,764) is actually going to be less than what Windows 2008 R2 Enterprise costs.  The issue will be for those who need Windows Standard for a physical server.  Since there is no Windows 2012 license for physical servers, you’ll have to purchase the Two-Processor license.  Currently, Windows 2008 R2 Standard edition runs for $726 retail so you will be paying more to use Windows on physical servers.

Once Windows 2012 is released, you’ll still be able to use prior versions, which is known as downgrade rights.  Windows 2012 Datacenter edition can downgrade to any prior version or lower edition.  Windows 2012 Standard edition gives you rights to downgrade to any prior version of Standard or Enterprise edition.

In addition, if you have current Software Assurance (SA) on your Windows 2008 R2 license you are entitled to Windows 2012.  If you have Software Assurance on Datacenter edition you will be entitled to Windows 2012 Datacenter edition.  Today Datacenter edition covers 1 processor and Datacenter 2012 license with cover 2 processors, so for every two current Datacenter licenses with Software Assurance, you will receive one Windows 2012 Datacenter edition license.  If you have Software Assurance on Enterprise edition, you will be entitled to receive 2 x Two-Processor Standard 2012 edition licenses, that way you still have coverage of 4-VMs.  Lastly, if you have Software Assurance on Standard edition you’ll receive one Windows 2012 Standard edition license for each Standard edition license you own.

As you’re taking this news in, there are a few things I’d recommend considering.  The first of which is if you’re looking to purchase Windows over the next couple of months prior to Windows 2012’s release, you should look at purchasing it with Software Assurance because that will give you new versions rights to Windows 2012 once it’s ships.  Keep in mind you don’t have to load Windows 2012 right away, but by having Software Assurance it will give you access when you decide to. Also, there may be instances where you need to add VMs to your host, specifically those running Windows Standard and the only way to add more VMs is to purchase additional Windows Standard licenses.  Secondly, if you think you’ll be adding a substantial amount of VMs in the future, but don’t want to invest in Datacenter today, what you can do is purchase Windows Standard with Software Assurance through these participating license programs: Open Value, Select and Enterprise Agreement and by doing so you will be eligible to  “Step-Up”  your Standard License to Datacenter.  Step-Up is Microsoft’s term for an upgrade.  This Step-Up license will allow you to upgrade from your Standard edition license to Datacenter edition, thus providing you unlimited VMs on that host.  Again the Standard license would have to have current Software Assurance and be purchased through the aforementioned licensing programs.

Obviously this is big news and will create many more questions and we’re here to assist and guide you through the purchase process so feel free to reach out to your GreenPages Account Executive for more details.

Three strikes and out? Microsoft, Twitter, Google clouds suffer

It’s been a pretty heavy week for the cloud, with three major providers suffering outages of varying severity, giving us another reminder that no cloud is perfect.

Microsoft’s Windows Azure cloud was down across Western Europe for approximately two and a half hours, with a flag on the Azure service dashboard stating:

“We are experiencing an availability issue in the West Europe sub-region, which impacts access to hosted services in this region. We are actively investigating this issue and working to resolve it as soon as possible”.

Indeed, the situation was eventually resolved with full service functionality restored. Similar problems were experienced in the West US region concerning management degradation; this took just over four hours to rectify.

This isn’t the first time Windows Azure has felt the wrath of the cloud gods. Back in February Microsoft’s cloudy outing was down for several hours, and during …

SYS-CON.tv Interview: The IT Expectation Gap

“We have serviced the traditional IT marketplace for 23 years and we wanted to extend SHI’s capabilities along what appears to be the logical path of IT. We wanted to be able to offer the complete continuum of products and services from traditional infrastructure build to cloud services,” stated Henry Fastert, Chief Technologist and Managing Partner at SHI, in this SYS-CON.tv interview with Cloud Expo Conference Chair Jeremy Geelan at the 10th International Cloud Expo, held June 11–14, 2012, at the Javits Center in New York City.

read more