Sematext Blog on @DevOpsSummit | @Sematext [#DevOps]

SYS-CON Media announced today that Sematext launched a popular blog feed on DevOps Journal with over 6,000 story reads over the weekend.

DevOps Journal is focused on this critical enterprise IT topic in the world of cloud computing. DevOps Journal brings valuable information to DevOps professionals who are transforming the way enterprise IT is done.

Sematext is a globally distributed organization that builds innovative Cloud and On Premises solutions for performance monitoring, alerting and anomaly detection (SPM), log management and analytics (Logsene), and search analytics (SSA). We also provide Search and Big Data consulting services and offer 24/7 production support for Solr and Elasticsearch.

read more

Sematext to Exhibit and Present at @DevOpsSummit | @Sematext [#DevOps]

Application metrics, logs, and business KPIs are a goldmine. It’s easy to get started with the ELK stack (Elasticsearch, Logstash and Kibana) – you can see lots of people coming up with impressive dashboards, in less than a day, with no previous experience. Going from proof-of-concept to production tends to be a bit more difficult, unfortunately, and it tends to gobble up our attention, time, and money.
In his session at DevOps Summit, Otis Gospodnetić, co-author of Lucene in Action and founder of Sematext, will share the architecture and decisions behind Sematext’s services for handling large volumes of performance metrics, traces, logs, anomaly detection, alerts, etc. He’ll follow data from its sources, its collection, aggregation, storage, and visualization. He will also cover the overview of some of the relevant technologies and their strengths and weaknesses, such as HBase, Elasticsearch, and Kafka.

read more

The Microservices Pattern By @DavidSprott | @DevOpsSummit [#DevOps]

For those of us that have been practicing SOA for over a decade, it’s surprising that there’s so much interest in microservices. In fairness microservices don’t look like the vendor play that was early SOA in the early noughties. But experienced SOA practitioners everywhere will be wondering if microservices is actually a good thing. You see microservices is basically an SOA pattern that inherits all the well-known SOA principles and adds characteristics that address the use of SOA for distributed, finer grained software services. And like all patterns, microservices are not applicable to all situations, and it’s very important to understand the cost/benefit equation. Those folks that are heralding microservices as the «new SOA» or «the right way to do SOA» are flat wrong. Microservices is a specialization of SOA that has applicability to a relatively narrow problem space.

read more

Equinix: Telecity acquisition is better alternative to Telecity, Interxion merger

Equinix said its acquisition of TelecityGroup would be better for shareholders than a Telecity-Interxion merger

Equinix said its acquisition of TelecityGroup would be better for shareholders than a Telecity-Interxion merger

Equinix confirmed it is currently in discussions which could lead to its acquisition of UK datacentre specialist TelecityGroup, a move it said would significantly enhance its standing in the region.

The American datacentre incumbent last week offered TelecityGroup £2.3bn in a cash-and-shares deal that would see Equinix acquire its assets, a move that would likely jeopardize a recent Telecity merger proposal with Interxion.

Telecity has a market cap of about £1.4bn with datacentres dotted around Northern Europe; Interxion is valued at £1.27bn and has close to 40 datacentres all over the Europe.

“The Board of Equinix believes that this opportunity represents attractive shareholder value creation potential for Equinix, complementing and extending Equinix’s geographic footprint in Europe and enabling increased network and cloud density to better serve customers,” the company said in a statement.

“In the United Kingdom, the acquisition of TelecityGroup would add capacity in Central London and Docklands that would complement the focus of Equinix’s current operations in Slough. Additionally, the acquisition would add capacity in several of Equinix’s current locations throughout Europe, and extend Equinix’s footprint into new locations with identified cloud and interconnection needs including Dublin, Helsinki, Istanbul, Milan, Stockholm and Warsaw.”

“In addition, the Board of Equinix believes that a potential transaction with TelecityGroup would create a more compelling combination than the proposed merger with Interxion Holding N.V. and would deliver greater value for TelecityGroup shareholders,” the company added.

Equinix, which has a month to firm up its final offer to Telecity, has well over 100 datacentres in about 15 countries, and most of those are concentrated in major metropolitan areas.

Mirantis, Pivotal team up on OpenStack, Cloud Foundry integration

Mirantis and Pivotal are working to integrate their commercial deployments of OpenStack and Cloud Foundry, respectively

Mirantis and Pivotal are working to integrate their commercial deployments of OpenStack and Cloud Foundry, respectively

Pivotal and Mirantis announced this week that the two companies are teaming up to accelerate integration of Cloud Foundry and OpenStack.

As part of the move Pivotal will support Pivotal CF, the company’s commercial distribution of the open source platform-as-a-service, on Mirantis’ distribution of OpenStack.

“Our joint customers are seeking open, bleeding-edge technologies to accelerate their software development and bring new products to market faster,” said James Watters, vice president and general manager of the Cloud Platform Group at Pivotal.

“Now, with Pivotal Cloud Foundry and Mirantis OpenStack, enterprises across various industries can rapidly deliver cloud-native, scalable applications to their customers with minimal risk and maximum ROI,” Watters said.

The move comes just one month after Mirantis announced it would join the Cloud Foundry Foundation in a bid to help drive integration between the two open source platforms. At the time, Alex Freedland, Mirantis co-founder and chairman said an essential part of rolling out software to help organisations build their own clouds includes making it as easy as possible to deploy and manage technologies “higher up the stack” like Cloud Foundry.

“Enterprises everywhere are adopting a new generation of tools, processes and platforms to help them compete more effectively,” said Boris Renski, Mirantis chief marketing officer and co-founder. “Mirantis and Pivotal have made Pivotal Cloud Foundry deployable on Mirantis OpenStack at the click of a button, powering continuous innovation.”

Joint customers can install Pivotal Cloud Foundry onto Mirantis OpenStack using the companies’ deployment guide, but the two companies are working towards adding a full Pivotal CF installation into the application catalogue of the next OpenStack release, Murano.

The Best 6 PHP Platforms for the Small Business | @CloudExpo [#Cloud]

In the 21 years since its inception, PHP has become the world’s most popular server side scripting language. Known as a powerful, easy to learn language, PHP, according to one metrics site, is used by 82% of all the websites whose server-side programming language is known. In more cases than not, if you encounter a desktop application that has a user-interface, such as an e-commerce applications or social media sites, the likelihood exists that it’s coded in PHP.

read more

How Often Should You Shut Down Your VM?

We’ve come to give an answer to that oftentimes perplexing question: how often should you shut down your Parallels Desktop virtual machine? The answer: it depends. Just like the debate on whether or not you should shut down your computer every day, it really depends on your needs. Think of your VM like your computer. […]

The post How Often Should You Shut Down Your VM? appeared first on Parallels Blog.

How to Remotely Access Your Mac from Your iPhone

Sometimes you need access to your Mac on the go—whether it’s because you forgot a file, need to send yourself something, or just want to edit something on the fly. The easiest way to access your Mac from your iPhone? Using Parallels Access. See for yourself: I’m the person who needs to be able to […]

The post How to Remotely Access Your Mac from Your iPhone appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Case Study: #Containers and #Microservices By @XebiaLabs | @DevOpsSummit [#DevOps]

Andrew Phillips recently spoke on the topic of “Mindset, Tools, and Goals: From Continuous Delivery to Containers” where he answered the following questions:

Why are we writing software in the first place?
Relation to Continuous Delivery and Devops: need to have delivery to the user in mind as the goal, not a “tech fest.”
How to balance incremental improvement via Agile/Devops/CD with transformative innovation: what’s missing in the “bi-modal” approach?
“Case study:” applying all this to containers and microservices.

read more

Cloud-based voice and telephony services continues apace

(c)iStock.com/iStockFinland

Almost half of companies surveyed by Britannic Technologies said they had cloud-based voice and telephony services, while two thirds said they had a partial voice solution in the cloud.

84% of respondents said they understood the proposition of cloud computing, yet there were some intriguing responses as to why companies aren’t putting their voice services in the cloud. Almost half (48%) of those polled said they were concerned about security worries, while 38% were worried over reliability, 29% found it difficult to integrate into existing systems, 19% were worried they couldn’t manage it in-house, and 19% didn’t understand it.

Interestingly, the most likely executive to approve cloud-based telephony was the IT director (49%), followed by the CEO (31%) and the rest of the board (31%). Cost savings (60%) were the main reason why voice and telephony services were being moved to the cloud, followed by greater business agility (55%), speed of deployment (40%), and freeing up the IT team to work on other areas (33%).

These figures, which were described in part as “staggering” in the press material, yet the wider story here may be the uptake – or lack of – of unified communications (UC) services. A recent report from Research and Markets described the trend as Unified Communications as a Service (UCaaS), and there are still plenty of partnerships taking place; StarHub announcing a deal with Avaya, and ShoreTel, Ingram Micro and HP partnering up in separate deals.

Yet the majority of recent research around the area has not been positive. The overall UC market of $21.1 billion is dwarfed by the global telephony market of $1.65 trillion.

As reported by CBR Online, a recent PwC report argues the case of there being two different markets: UC 1.0, used by more than half of small businesses which has a degree of integration between fixed and mobile telephony; and UC 2.0, companies having a more integrated solution which naturally commands a smaller audience. Similarly, a survey from Easynet argues European companies, while understanding the benefits of UC, aren’t utilising it to its full potential.

Jonathan Sharp, Britannic sales and marketing director, commented on today’s findings: “Senior managers are now aware that technology helps businesses differentiate themselves in today’s competitive marketplace. It also enables employees to work in more collaborative ways and essentially service customers better.”