Containers ready for the primetime, Rackspace CTO says

John Engates was in London for the Rackspace Solve conference

John Engates was in London for the Rackspace Solve conference

Linux containers have been around for some time but only now is the technology reaching a level of maturity enterprise cloud developers are comfortable with, explained John Engates, Rackspace’s chief technology officer.

Linux containers have been all the rage the past year, and Engates told BCN the volume of the discussion is only likely to increase as the technology matures. But the technology is still young.

“We tried to bring support for containers to OpenStack around three or four years back,” Engates said. “But I think that containers are finally ready for cloud.”

One of the projects Engates cited to illustrate this is Project Magnum, a young sub-project within OpenStack building on Heat to produce Nova instances on which to run application containers, and it basically creates native capabilities (like support for different scheduling techniques); it effectively enables users and service providers to offer containers-as-a-service, and improves portability of containers between different cloud platforms.

“While containers have been around for a while they’ve only recently become the darling of the enterprise cloud developers, and part of that is because there’s a growing ecosystem out there working to build the tools needed to support them,” he said.

A range of use cases around Linux containers have emerged over the years – as a transport method, as a way of quickly deploying and porting apps between different sets of infrastructure, as a way of standing up a cloud service that offers greater billing granularity (more accurate / efficient usage) – the technology is still maturing and has suffered from a lack of tooling. Doing anything like complex service chaining is still challenging with existing tools, but that’s improving.

Beyond LXC, one of the earliest Linux container projects, there’s now CoreOS, Docker, Mesos, Kubernetes, and a whole host of container-like technologies that bring the microservices / OS ‘light’ architecture as well as deployment scheduling and cluster management tools to market.

“We’re certainly hearing more about how we can help support containers, so we see it as a pretty important from a service perspective moving forward,” he added.

Citrix XenApp Licensing vs. Parallels 2X RAS

Reduced hardware requirements, simplified desktop management, and mobility solutions are the three important aspects that make desktop virtualization inevitable for most businesses. According to CIO Insight, 15 million applications are already deployed in virtual infrastructures, and 86% of server loads are expected to be virtualized by 2016. XenDesktop and XenApp from Citrix are popular broker […]

The post Citrix XenApp Licensing vs. Parallels 2X RAS appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Dropbox opens up on enterprise cloud strategy with security and integration updates

(c)iStock.com/KIVILCIM PINAR

Dropbox has announced new features in administration, security and integration in a bid to change the way the cloud storage provider works for business.

The company is introducing tighter account security through two-step verification, tiered administrative controls, as well as an extension to the Dropbox for Business API, with new capabilities for shared folders.

CloudLock, Netskope and SkySync are among the data migration providers who are already beginning to build integrations, alongside Israeli firm Adallom, which recently announced it was looking after the security for Dropbox for Business.

“This is a major milestone for Dropbox for Business,” said UK country manager Mark van der Linden. “We’re making a step change to ensure we help businesses be the best place to get work done. We listened to our customers and we’re delivering the features they need most in the areas of security, administration and integration.”

Dropbox is making a series of plays to beef up its enterprise portfolio in a bid to convince businesses they can safely store their business critical data with the cloud storage provider.

 In May, Dropbox announced it had achieved ISO/IEC 27018 privacy standard certification, running through to September 2017.  Other competitors, such as Box, are still waiting for the go ahead with their FedRAMP certification, despite announcing a big customer win in the form of the US Department of Justice.

Dropbox for Business has over 100,000 global customers, including MIT, News Corp and National Geographic, while the business itself is also expanding; the company has opened up seven new global offices since the beginning of 2014.

The Stories We Tell By @CenturyLinkCld | @CloudExpo #IoT #Cloud

In his General Session at 16th Cloud Expo, David Shacochis, host of The Hybrid IT Files podcast and Vice President at CenturyLink, will investigate three key trends of the “gigabit economy” though the story of a Fortune 500 communications company in transformation.
Narrating how multi-modal hybrid IT, service automation, and agile delivery all intersect, he will cover the role of storytelling and empathy in achieving strategic alignment between the enterprise and its information technology.

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Intellectual Property Law in Cloud Computing: Part 2 | @CloudExpo #Cloud

The growing cloud computing industry brings many new opportunities, but with success comes litigation, both from competitors seeking to gain an edge in a crowded market and opportunists seeking to make a quick buck. Valid patents and good innovations deserve due respect and consideration, but the vast majority of infringement actions are started by non-practicing entities (aka “patent trolls”) that acquire and assert broad patents, many with questionable validity. There is no question that patent litigation is costly. Litigation that goes to trial can cost over $3 million, and result in damage awards that can exceed $15 million. Being involved in or losing patent infringement suits also impacts customer relationships and marketing opportunities, translating to even bigger losses. Even so-called “nuisance suits” cost time and money to defend. With the presumption of validity that each patent enjoys, and the current backlog of cases in the most popular district courts, the scales have been tipped in favor of patent holders. Tech companies are faced with a no-win situation: pay money to settle meritless lawsuits quickly or invest substantial time and money in their defense.

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Cisco, IBM spend big in OpenStack-focused land grab

Cisco and IBM have both acquired OpenStack vendors this week

Cisco and IBM have both acquired OpenStack vendors this week

Cisco and IBM have both signed deals to acquire OpenStack vendors this week, with Cisco acquiring Piston Cloud Computing, a firm specialising in OpenStack-based private cloud software and IBM buying up managed private cloud provider Blue Box.

Piston offers what it calls Piston CloudOS, a supped up version of OpenStack for private clouds alongside custom cluster management and monitoring software and APIs. Underneath that sits a custom Linux micro-OS that contains all of the necessary code to run CloudOS; the company said it can be characterized as a “bare-metal operating system that is tailor-made for pools of hyper-converged, commodity resources.”

Cisco said Piston will help it deliver on its Intercloud vision, which sees a Cisco-based set of cloud services that can federate with one another; OpenStack seems increasingly to be at the heart of that effort.

“Paired with our recent acquisition of Metacloud, Piston’s distributed systems engineering and OpenStack talent will further enhance our capabilities around cloud automation, availability, and scale. The acquisition of Piston will complement our Intercloud strategy by bringing additional operational experience on the underlying infrastructure that powers Cisco OpenStack Private Cloud,” said Hilton Romanski, corporate development lead at Cisco.

“Additionally, Piston’s deep knowledge of distributed systems and automated deployment will help further enhance our delivery capabilities for customers and partners,” he added.

The move will also give Cisco some strong in-house OpenStack expertise. One of Piston’s co-founders, Chris MacGown, was among the originating members of OpenStack’s Nova-core (compute) development team.

This is the second big OpenStack-focused acquisition Cisco has made in recent months. In September last year Cisco acquired Metacloud, a provider of commercially supported OpenStack. Metacloud also had IP in the networking technology it has integrated into its OpenStack distribution, which gave Cisco’s OpenStack play an SDN boost.

IBM, meanwhile has acquired managed private cloud provider Blue Box, which the company said would help bolster its hybrid cloud and OpenStack strategy.

The company said the move would enable it to provide a public cloud-like experience within its customers’ datacentres by allowing it to offer a remotely managed OpenStack offering, which it hadn’t previously.

“IBM is dedicated to helping our clients migrate to the cloud in an open, secure, data rich environment that meet their current and future business needs,” said IBM general manager of cloud services Jim Comfort. “The acquisition of Blue Box accelerates IBM’s open cloud strategy making it easier for our clients to move to data and applications across clouds and adopt hybrid cloud environments.”

IBM said it will continue to support Blue Box customers and use the company as a channel to sell its own cloud services.

Both acquisitions are a sign the old-hat vendors are putting their money where their mouths are when it comes to OpenStack – particularly when some of them, like HP and Red Hat, are digging their heels in and aggressively pushing their OpenStack wares.

Skyscape, DeepSecure strike cloud data compliance deal

Skyscape is partnering with DeepSecure to bolster its security cred

Skyscape is partnering with DeepSecure to bolster its security cred

Cloud service provider Skyscape is partnering with DeepSecure in a move the companies said would help public sector cloud users meet their compliance needs.

DeepSecure traditionally sells to the police, defence and intelligence sectors and provides secure data sharing and data management services as well as cybersecurity systems, and the partnership will see Skyscape offer its customers DeepSecure’s suite of data sharing and security services.

The move could give Skyscape, which already heavily targets the public sector, a way in with some of the more heavily regulated clients (security-wise) there.

“We’re delighted to announce our partnership with DeepSecure, a likeminded company with a significant track record when it comes to helping organisations share data securely,” said Simon Hansford, chief executive of Skyscape Cloud Services.

“DeepSecure is certainly a good cultural fit for us as a fellow UK sovereign SME that specialises in delivering secure digital services to the UK public sector.  The firm also shares our commitment to offering a consumption-based pricing model for its security services, which aligns with our own pay-as-you-go model for our full catalogue of assured cloud services,” Hansford said.

Leap Second Adjustment Reminder

Very quick post here. In case you haven’t heard, or to serve as a reminder, the International Earth Rotation & Reference Systems Service has called for an extra second to be added to Coordinated Universal Time on June 30th to ensure the correct alignment of astronomical and atomic time. It’s the 26th leap second adjustment since 1972. This could affect your environment!

Here is some more information on the leap second adjustment.

Let us know if you have any questions about the impact this could have on your organization.

leap second adjustment

 

 

By Chris Ward, CTO

 

Photo credit: blog.shareaholic.com

Ormuco taps HP Helion for mid-market hybrid cloud offering

Ormuco is partnering with HP on hybrid cloud

Ormuco is partnering with HP on hybrid cloud

Ormuco is partnering with HP to launch a Helion OpenStack-based hybrid cloud solution the company said is designed specifically with workload portability in mind.

Hybrid cloud is still high on the agenda for many CIOs but challenges abound – security and compliance management, service automation and orchestration and of course, workload portability. The company is relying on HP’s implementation of OpenStack to solve some of those challenges, and said its ConnectedCloud offering will help enterprises move their workloads across OpenStack-based private and public clouds.

“Ormuco is entering the cloud services market since there is a vital need for a hybrid cloud solution with streamlined functionality for enterprise customers,” said Ormuco chief executive Orlando Bayter. “HP Helion OpenStack and Ormuco’s new data centres enable us to create environments that focus on service delivery regardless of the underlying infrastructure.”

Ormuco has datacentres in Dallas, Texas; Sunnyvale, California and Montreal, Quebec, and said it has others planned for New York and Seattle as well as an expansion into Europe with datacentres in Frankfurt and London.

The company is a member of HP’s Helion Partner Network, a federation of HP-certified OpenStack cloud incumbents globally that private cloud users can burst into, which is for the time being primarily how the company delivers scale.

“Ormuco requires extensive geographic reach and the ability to meet customers’ in-country or cross-border cloud requirements,” said Steve Dietch, vice president, HP Helion, HP. “With HP Helion OpenStack and the HP Helion Network, Ormuco’s Connected Cloud customers will have access to hybrid cloud services from a global, open ecosystem of service providers.”

Real-time cloud monitoring too challenging for most providers, TFL tech lead says

Reed says TFL wants to encourage greater greater use of its data

Reed says TFL wants to encourage greater greater use of its data

Getting solid data on what’s happening in your application in real-time seems to be a fairly big challenge for most cloud services providers out there explains Simon Reed, head of bus systems & technology at Transport for London (TFL).

TFL, the executive agency responsible for transport planning and delivery for the city of London, manages a slew of technologies designed to support over 10 million passenger journeys each day. These include back office ERP, routing and planning systems, mammoth databases tapped in to line-of-business applications as well as customer-facing app (i.e. real-time travel planning apps, and the journey planner website), line-of-business apps, as well as all the vehicle telematics, monitoring and tracking technologies.

A few years ago TFL moved its customer facing platforms – the journey planner, the TFL website, and the travel journey databases – over to a scalable cloud-based platform in a bid to ensure it could deal with massive spikes in demand. The key was to get much of that work completed before the Olympics, including a massive data syndication project so that app developers could more easily tap into all of TFL’s journey data.

“Around the Olympics you have this massive spike in traffic hitting our databases and our website, which required highly scalable front and back-ends,” Reed said. “Typically when we have industrial action or a snowstorm we end up with 10 to 20 times the normal use, often triggered in less than half an hour.”

Simon Reed is speaking at the Cloud World Forum in London June 24-25. Register for the event here.

The organisation processes bus arrival predications for all 19,000 bus stops in London which is constantly dumped into the cloud in a leaky-tap model, and there’s a simple cloud application that allows subscribers to download the data in a number of formats, and APIs to build access to that data directly into applications. “As long as developers aren’t asking for predictions nanoseconds apart, the service doesn’t really break down – so it’s about designing that out and setting strict parameters on how the data can be accessed and at what frequency.”

But Reed said gaining visibility into the performance of a cloud service out of the box seems to be a surprisingly difficult thing to do.

“I’m always stunned about how little information there is out of the box though when it comes to monitoring in the cloud. You can always add something in, but really, should I have to? Surely everyone else is in the same position where monitoring actual usage in real-time is fairly important. The way you often have to do this is to specify what you want and then script it, which is a difficult approach to scale,” he said. “You can’t help but think surely this was a ‘must-have’ when people had UNIX systems.”

Monitoring (and analytics) will be important for Reed’s team as they expand their use of the cloud, particularly within the context of the journey data TFL publishes. Reed said its likely those systems, while in a strong position currently, will likely see much more action as TFL pursues a strategy of encouraging use of the data outside the traditional transport or journey planning app context.

“What else can we do to that data? How can we turn it around in other ways? How can other partners do the same? For us it’s a question of exploiting the data capability we have and moving it into new areas,” he said.

“I’m still not convinced of the need to come out of whatever app you’re in – if you’re looking at cinema times you should be able to get the transportation route that gets you to the cinema on time, and not have to come out of the cinema listings app. I shouldn’t have to match the result I get in both apps in order to plan that event – it should all happen in one place. It’s that kind of thinking we’re currently trying to promote, to think more broadly than single purpose apps, which is where the market is currently.”