Philips throws weight behind AllSeen in IoT standards push

Philips is backing the AllSeen Alliance

Philips is backing the AllSeen Alliance

One of the largest Internet of Things (IoT) solution providers, Philips, announced this week that it would support the AllJoyn standards initiative.

AllJoyn, an open source software connectivity and services framework for IoT devices, is being coordinated by the AllSeen Alliance, a 170-member organisation focused on developing cross-sector IoT standards.

Its members include Electrolux, Haier, LG, Microsoft, Panasonic, Qeo, Qualcomm Connected Experiences, Sharp, and Sony.

Philips is one of the world’s largest IoT vendors, offering a range of services around healthcare linking medical devices and sensors to a cloud-based platform that can be used to analyse and generate medical advice from the data they generate.

“Healthcare will change substantially in the coming years, with a growing role for health self-management. Addressing the needs of personal health requires a new perspective and innovative technologies like the AllJoyn software framework,” said Liat Ben-Zur, senior vice president and head of digital technology at Philips.

“Philips also values the potential of collaborative partnerships to advance markets and improve consumer experiences forever. We look forward to working with the other members of the AllSeen Alliance to advance connectivity and digitalization in the personal health area based on AllJoyn as part of a truly connected world,” Ben-Zur said.

The company is a big player in the healthcare space and the move may give a massive boost to AllSeen, which is rivaled by the Intel-backed Open Interconnect Consoritum – a cross-industry consortium pushing IoTivity, its answer to AllJoyn.

Philip DesAutels, senior director IoT for the AllSeen Alliance said: “With a global leader with expertise connecting technology between home and healthcare, we’re in a position to advance AllJoyn as the software leveraged by all healthcare solutions.”

Dropbox sets the enterprise in its sights with new hires

Dropbox is boosting its investment in personnel to add enterprise users

Dropbox is boosting its investment in personnel to add enterprise users

Cloud storage provider Dropbox is doubling down on the enterprise, hiring experts in traditional small and medium size IT channel and direct sales and product design to help gain traction with businesses.

Just over a week ago the company hired Thomas Hansen, who most recently served as worldwide vice president of small and medium business at Microsoft where he led SME sales globally, to the newly created role of global vice president of sales & channel.

“We’re scaling at an extraordinary pace, and Thomas’ insights will help us accelerate Dropbox adoption even further,” said Dennis Woodside, Dropbox’s chief operating officer. “We have a huge opportunity ahead of us, and we’re building an incredible team to go after it.”

And just this week the company also hired Todd Jackson, Dropbox’s first vice president of product. Jackson hails from Twitter, where he most recently served as director of product management and led the company’s content and discovery teams. He has also held fairly senior product design positions at both Facebook and Google.

Jackson is replacing Ilya Fushman, Dropbox’s former head of product who left for Index Ventures two months ago.

With the new hires Dropbox is looking to bolster its position in the enterprise, the quickest way to gaining seats, against rivals like Box, which heavily targets niche verticals and large traditional organisations as well as startups and smaller firms. Dropbox claims to have over 100,000 business using its platform while Box maintain it has closer to 44,000 organisations as customers.

IBM targets IoT with developerWorks

IBM is targeting IoT developers with developerWorks

IBM is targeting IoT developers with developerWorks

As part of the recently announced developerWorks initiative IBM is creating a community, developerWorks Recipes, aimed specifically at developers creating Internet of Things (IoT) services.

The developerWorks Recipes community will offer participating developers access to IBM’s Bluemix platform as well as tutorials and technical guides on how to develop and deploy IoT services like connected car, healthcare device or industrial machine monitoring and diagnostic services.

“IBM has long been a leader in offering innovative tools for developers to create the applications of our future.  Now, IBM is expanding that focus so anyone – from the software novice to the experienced hardware engineer – can easily and quickly access materials providing guidance in the creation, management and connection of IoT devices to each other and the cloud,” said Christopher O’Connor, general manager, offerings, Internet of Things at IBM.

“With developerWorks Recipes, IBM provides easy access to new analytics and operational insight capabilities that tap into the vast data from many connected devices, home appliances or cars,” O’Connor said.

IBM just launched developerWorks last week, a cloud-based platform that provides access to Bluemix and emerging IBM tech and expertise in the form of blogs, informational videos and other multimedia, as well as the opportunity to collaborate with specialists.

Jone Rasmussen, general manager of IoT developer tool startup Bitreactive said the platform has the potential to help companies that want to develop new services quickly at a time when device development and vendor activity is expanding rapidly and standards scarcely available.

“Developers just can’t be experts on each new ‘thing’ that gets added to the IoT,” Rasmussen said. “To control costs of IoT projects, developers need easy, repeatable ways to quickly extract data from devices.”

How are developers using cloud to develop IoT services? Click here to download the whitepaper created by BCN and IBM to find out.

Alibaba Pours $1 Billion Into Its Cloud Computing Component Aliyun

Alibaba Group, a Chinese e-commerce company operating international and domestic online marketplaces, announced earlier that they plan to invest $1 billion (on top of investments already made) into its cloud-computing unit Aliyun. This investment will be used to expand Aliyun into other international markets. It currently has data centers in China, Hong Kong, and Silicon Valley.

 

Their plan is to target the markets in Europe, Singapore, Japan, and the Middle East, where they recently formed a joint venture with Dubai-based holdings company Meraas.

 

Along with the investment announcement, Aliyun also stated that they formed a new partnership with Yonyou Software, which claims to be the largest software vendor in China. This partnership will help Aliyun score more enterprise consumers in need of cloud computing, big data, digital marketing, and e-commerce solutions all throughout Asia.

 

Another component of global expansion is Aliyun’s Marketplace Alliance Program, which is designed to reach new clients in North America, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East through partnerships with tech companies. Examples of such partnerships include Intel, Singtel, PCCW, LINKBYNET, and Towngas.

 

Amazon Web Services is a direct competitor of Aliyun. A backing from Alibaba allows Aliyun to experiment with different technologies that could help save them money as they deploy a new infrastructure.

 

cloud1-1440x564_c

Aliyun is proof of Alibaba’s scope of being more than just an e-commerce company. They have powered projects like the first “cloud hospital” in China. If these ventures are successful, Alibaba and its units will hold stakes in almost every aspect of daily Chinese life.

 

Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang has said that “Aliyun has become a world-class computing service platform that is the market leader in China… This $1 billion investment is just the beginning; our hope is for Aliyun to continually empower customers and partners with new capabilities, and help companies upgrade their basic infrastructure.”

The post Alibaba Pours $1 Billion Into Its Cloud Computing Component Aliyun appeared first on Cloud News Daily.

New report shows finance sector becoming more comfortable with cloud adoption

Analysing cloud adoption across industry verticals, the banking and financial industry is as good a yardstick as any to assess progress due to its stringent data security requirements. A new report from CipherCloud shows financial firms have an increased confidence in cloud technologies; 100% of respondents said they put certain personally identifiable information (PII) in the cloud.

This does not extend to all PII however – only one in three respondents said they use the cloud to store particularly sensitive data, such as social security numbers, birth dates and tax IDs. Yet there is a clear trend from financial firms to improve security as the sensitivity of data increases. 40% of organisations polled say that for the most sensitive information, they use tokenisation and strong encryption.

One of the more interesting facets of the report related around how companies classify their data. CipherCloud asked respondents to put their data in four categories; highly sensitive PII; regular PII; personal finance data; and business sensitive data. Intriguingly, a piece of ‘highly sensitive’ data at one company can be relegated to standard ‘regular PII’ at another. The most extreme example is ‘Name’ – some banking firms, perhaps more associated with private banking or high net worth customers, see this as highly sensitive information.

The report also examined the differences over businesses using encryption or tokenisation to protect data. For business sensitive data, the response was a clear 100% for encryption. 15% of finance organisations use tokenisation for personal finance data and 13% for regular PII.

“It’s not surprising to see that encryption is the predominant choice for those seeking to protect business-sensitive data,” the report notes. “As this category of data is typically non-critical, few are utilising heavyweight tokenisation to protect business sensitive data.”

The report also examined the protection techniques companies utilised for structured PII fields; for email addresses, 91% of those polled used format-preserving encryption, while that number dropped to 82% for phone numbers. The other respondents favoured tokenisation (9% email) or length-restricting encryption (18% phone).

[session] The Power of Linked Open Data Cloud By @UmeshKanade24 | @CloudExpo #Cloud

Most organizations are wondering how to utilize data science to improve decision making and business intelligence. What holds up this process is lack of data for analytics teams. To some extent this dilemma has been resolved by the Open Data initiative publishing large datasets in the cloud and making it freely available.
In their session at 17th Cloud Expo, Umesh Kanade, GM of Technology Solutions at Harbinger Systems, and Asheesh Choksi, Senior Architect at Harbinger Systems, will describe how to access, re-organize and load useful data from the Linked Open Data Cloud in your environment to enable Big Data analytics. They will also present a case study on how healthcare providers benefit by such datasets from open data cloud to make informed decisions in their practice.

read more

[video] Managed IT Services with Paul Mazzucco | @CloudExpo #Cloud

“Our biggest growth area has been the security services, the managed services – the things that differentiate us in the market that there is no client that’s too small and there’s no client that’s too big,” explained Paul Mazzucco, Chief Security Officer at TierPoint, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at 16th Cloud Expo, held June 9-11, 2015, at the Javits Center in New York City.

read more

Why your organisation deserves a ‘real’ open cloud

(c)iStock.com/baona

Worldwide, there’s a growing appreciation for the many benefits of the open dource way. Clearly, being truly open is a frame of mind that can apply to just about anything in life – including the development and nurture of a progressive company culture that’s equipped for the challenges and opportunities of today’s Global Networked Economy.

Jim Whitehurst, CEO of Red Hat, recently launched his new book entitled “The Open Organisation” – Igniting Passion and Performance. He says, “The conventional approach to business management was not designed to foster innovation, address the needs and expectations of the current workforce that demands more of jobs, or operate at the accelerated speed of business.”

Granted, savvy senior executives within numerous multinational companies across the globe have already embraced the open way, and others will surely follow. Why would any forward-thinking CEO settle for the constraints of a legacy organisation model, when the modern alternative is so much more rewarding?

Furthermore, when given the choice of an open business technology architecture that’s designed for the 21st century, is there any logical reason to accept the apparent limitations of an underlying IT infrastructure that was conceived in a bygone era of the post-industrial society?

How do you rationalise an ongoing investment in a legacy IT platform that has inherent high-cost software license handicaps and built-in undesirable technical limitations that severely impact both the ROI and operational performance?

My point: don’t let your prior sunk IT investments sink your future open cloud options.

Cloud computing platform trends

Cloud computing infrastructure assets are a key foundation for enabling strategic digital business transformation projects. It’s the essential platform that positively impacts all emerging areas of IT service design, development and consumption. It also provides the basis for many of today’s emerging big data, enterprise mobility and social commerce solutions.

International Data Corporation (IDC) predicts the number of new cloud-based solutions will triple in the next four to five years. They’ve examined the current status of cloud computing deployment in several vertical industries, and have unveiled the first of four special reports on this topic.

Their latest global market study identifies industry-specific drivers and barriers of using cloud computing technology and presents insights in terms of how to leverage cloud computing to create new commercial value.

According to the IDC assessment, industry-specific cloud-native applications will be a driving force, as perceptive CIOs look for solutions that can be easily configured to their unique digital business and vertical industry requirements.

Moreover, IDC believes that more organisations – across industries – will shift steadily toward enlightened cloud-first strategies to enable digital business transformation goals and objectives.

Key findings from the IDC report include:

  • IDC predicts that public cloud computing will reach almost $70 billion in 2015 worldwide, with the top 5 verticals (discrete manufacturing, banking, professional services, process manufacturing, and retail) accounting for approximately 45 percent of the total spend for the market.
  • The major opportunities for cloud within verticals come from the development of intelligent industry solutions, which are built on top of a new platform that includes cloud as well as big data and analytics, mobile, and social.
  • Those IT suppliers that showcase the long-term benefits and the true value of the cloud as a platform in a given vertical (e.g., efficiency gains in business processes and improvement in customer acquisition/customer experience) will be most successful.
  • The ease of purchasing cloud-based solutions has helped transfer buying power from IT to functional lines of business like marketing, finance, and operations.
  • Security and regulatory remains the biggest barrier for cloud adoption across industries like government and financial services, while loss of perceived control over IT assets and massive legacy systems are also stumbling blocks for using cloud offerings.

“The technological innovations and enabling capabilities unleashed by cloud computing have fostered new opportunities across the industries,” says Eileen Smith, program manager at IDC.

Besides, IDC asserts that cloud services will remain the essential foundation of the what they call the “3rd Platform” of growth. IDC also predicts there will be more industry-specific cloud service platforms and marketplaces that are hosted by the recognized forward-looking leaders in each vertical industry.

Each of these pioneering organisations will be seeking to establish an Open Community of independent software application developers that will introduce contemporary thinking about new business model possibilities and thereby create valuable digital service innovations.

Smith concludes, “We have already seen such platforms and innovation communities in place in retail, financial services, media, and other industries. This will reshape not only how companies operate their IT but also how they compete in their own industry.”

It’s imperative that CIOs choose to develop strong customer-partner relationships with the authentic open cloud platform vendors, in order to fully seize the nascent market opportunities. The key take-away – beware of the Faux-Open evangelists that insult your intelligence by suggesting that burying a cloud-native application within a proprietary legacy IT platform is good enough.

It’s not acceptable, to the modern CIO or their key internal stakeholders. Informed line of business leaders know that they deserve a real open cloud solution that meets all their requirements. Anything less is an unnecessary compromise that will inhibit the achievement of their strategic business outcome objectives.

[session] Future of Information Storage with ISS SuperCore and Ceph | @CloudExpo #Cloud

The time is ripe for high speed resilient software defined storage solutions with unlimited scalability. ISS has been working with the leading open source projects and developed a commercial high performance solution that is able to grow forever without performance limitations.
In his session at 17th Cloud Expo, Alex Gorbachev, President of Intelligent Systems Services Inc., will share the foundation principles of Ceph architecture as well as the design to deliver this storage to traditional SAN storage consumers.

read more