Google is moving towards the hosted desktop – but they can go one step further

(Image Credit: iStockPhoto/iStockFinland)

Recently I read a fascinating article by Rachel King in the WSJ CIO Journal titled “Google moves its corporate applications to the Internet”. This article was of particular interest to me because I manage a company that offers a hosted desktop solution to SMEs, and what is described as Google’s “new approach” is the approach that our customers have been benefiting from for years.

Here are just a few examples of quotes from the article:

“Google Inc., taking a new approach to enterprise security, is moving its corporate applications to the Internet.”

“That means employee access is treated the same whether the user is at a corporate office, at home or in a coffee shop.”

“Google tracks and manages all employees in a user database and a group database that is tied into the company’s human resources processes. These databases are updated as employees join the company, change responsibilities or leave the company.”

For our customers, all their applications are hosted and backed-up securely in the cloud, as is their data. Employees are treated the same whether the user is at a corporate office, at home or in a coffee shop, and our customers manage user permissions and update these as the employees join the company, change responsibility or leave the company.

Google is a great company, perhaps even the greatest, and they’re taking the right approach to corporate applications. I would go one step further and recommend Google to move to the full hosted desktop. While Google is securing each device, thereby creating a hybrid of local device and cloud, I would recommend that they adopt a full cloud solution whereby all data, applications and computing are in the cloud.

By remaining device dependent they are reducing their own flexibility; for example, what would happen if an employee went on a business trip and forgot their “approved” tablet at home? Would they be able to access all of their applications from any device? For this reason, for most of our customers, the device doesn’t matter; as long as the individual is securely authenticated, the employee can work not only from everywhere but also from every device.

For those customers with extra security requirements, we offer a two form authentication (2FA) process which continues to allow access from any device, but might require the entry of a password sent to the employee’s mobile phone. Becoming device agnostic is not only secure, but it removes the need to manage certain devices and allows a bring your own device (BYOD) policy.

The cloud need not be only for data backup or only part of a wider hybrid solution. Many companies can move 100% to the cloud while enjoying the benefits of flexible work, security, improved cash-flow, and, in many cases, cost reduction. The biggest benefit of the cloud may be that it removes the worry of dealing with IT from the business managers, thereby allowing them to get on with what they do best.

I take pride in the fact that our customers – recruitment companies, financial brokers, accountants and charities, ranging in size from two dozen to a few hundred employees – are enjoying a service not too dissimilar from what is described as new in relation to Google, Coca-Cola, Verizon Communication Inc and Mazda Motors Corp.

Jon Oltsik, senior principal analyst at Enterprise Strategy Group, an IT research firm is quoted in the article as saying – “There’s not a company anywhere that won’t have to develop something like this.”

We couldn’t agree more.

Do you think Google should move to a full hosted desktop? Let us know in the comments?

Cloud Computing: The Open Performance Grid Drives Innovation

The amount of data processed in the world doubles every three years and a global commitment to open source technology is the way to handle this growth.

An open technology approach fosters innovation through massive community involvement and impedes expensive vendor lock-in. This benefits buyers as markets remain more competitive. In doing so, open standards and technologies also allow for market hypergrowth, and this is the key to handling the growth of data.

A doubling every three years means we’ll be grappling with a full Yottabyte of data in the year 2040. That’s one billion petabytes, an amount of data that, similar to pondering geologic time, I can understand in the abstract but not truly grasp.

Meanwhile, the nature of this data—which can truly be called Big Data in today’s age of the Zettabyte—is transforming from a jet plane model to a chewing gum model.

By this I mean Big Data in its original conception 20 years ago referred to a small number of massive files, the type found in meteorology and nuclear-bomb building. Tomorrow’s Big Data will largely be a product of billions of sensors, transmitting less than 10K at a time. Rather than thinking about a few 747s, we’ll be thinking about billions of pieces of chewing gum.

Already There
We’re already in such a Little Big Data era, with stuff like Hadoop and NoSQL databases equipped to handle the onslaught of data volume, variety, and–because of much this data’s real-time nature—velocity.

But we’ve only just begun. Innovation must continue apace, in hardware even more so than software. Today’s technology already requires more almost 3% of the world’s electricity grid to power its data centers—exponential increases in data processing simply will not be met by the global electricity grid in the absence of vast new hardware efficiencies.

The OPG
Thus I’m involved with something called the Open Performance Grid, or OPG. Announced in San Francisco in August 2015, the Open Performance Grid measures openness, performance, and leadership of hardware, software, and designs for modern data centers.

The OPG is a community effort with input from technology users and buyers, analysts and researchers, and vendors who wish to compare their own self-assessments with what the community is saying.
Sample measures of openness, beyond simple open-source availability, include the presence, size, and activity of a community and foundation for a particular technology. Market share, benchmark performance, and what we call the Innovation Curve are also part of the mix.
Software categories include operating systems, virtualization, containers, PaaS, IaaS services and stacks, monitoring/analytics, management consoles, software-defined storage, SDN, SDDC. For hardware, we’re looking at chips, boards, subsystems, and even overall data center designs.
The challenge of meeting the astounding growth in data is enormous. The Open Performance Grid is a way to encourage and enable the technology provider, development, and user communities to meet the challenge. Contact me on Twitter to learn more.

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The Continued Evolution of the Cloud Brokerage By @Stratustician | @CloudExpo #Cloud

It’s no secret that I’m a huge advocate of Cloud Brokerage. These service providers make it easy for organizations to build and manage a customized solution made up of a wide catalogue of cloud services, and take out the headaches of dealing with multiple vendors. The downside for cloud brokers is that as cloud solutions are becoming more widely adopted, making sure they all work together and can be supported as a solution became a large obstacle. As a result, we haven’t seen as many cloud brokers as expected due to the back end legwork required to manage these solutions. Now a Github initiative is looking to help fix that last barriers to cloud brokerage.

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Hootsuite, IBM strike cloud deal

IBM and Hootsuite are teaming up on social media skills development

IBM and Hootsuite are teaming up on social media skills development

Hootsuite will deploy its App Directory service on SoftLayer infrastructure, the companies announced this week. The two companies also intend to team up to create a university programme aimed at fostering social media analysis skills development.

The social media tool provider has previously teamed up with IBM in the past – it integrated IBM’s marketing automation service, Silverpop, with App Directory – but the latest deal will see Hootsuite move its service onto SoftLayer’s IaaS.

“IBM Cloud offers high performance, granular control and flexibility. When you couple that with its globally integrated footprint, we will have the ability to move data between datacentres efficiently which will provide resiliency, flexibility and control,” said Aaron Budge, vice president of operations and IT at Hootsuite.

“We have had a great relationship with IBM for more than two years and are excited about expanding our relationship with new product integrations and the ability to leverage IBM technology,” Budge said.

The two companies are also joining forces to develop a no-charge university program that pairs IBM’s Academic Initiative with Hootsuite’s Higher Education Program, which blends analytics and cloud training with social media skill development. The move will see the two companies offer students and faculty at participating universities access to IBM and Hootsuite technical experts and technology.

“The partnership between IBM and Hootsuite will blend analytics and social technologies to provide students and professionals the skills they need for social marketing,” said Randy Hlavac, a lecturer at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, and a member of IBM’s Academic Initiative.

“Utilizing IBM Cloud and Analytic solutions, students are able to gain deep market knowledge. The Hootsuite tools will utilize this insight and allow students to test messaging immediately and deliver the most engaging content globally,” Hlavac said.

Intel, Wipro join IoT, M2M trade body to boost deployments

Intel and Wipro are joining the IMC

Intel and Wipro are joining the IMC

Intel and Wipro have this week joined the International M2M Council (IMC), a global trade association set up to represent Internet of Things vendors and service providers and boost volume IoT deployments.

The trade body, which does advocates on behalf of IoT vendors and service providers, claims to have over 10,000 members and is on track to grow by another 5,000 by the year’s end. In addition to Intel and Wipro companies on the IMC board of governors include Aeris, AT&T, Deutsche Telekom, Digi International, Inmarsat, Iridium, KORE, Nighthawk Controls, Numerex, ORBCOMM, Synapse Wireless, Telecom Italia, Telit, Verizon, and Wyless.

“The IMC’s focus on business results suits our role as a provider of end-to-end IoT solutions very well,” said Vijay Anand V.R., practice director, IoT Business, Wipro Digital, who has also joined the IMC Board

“This trade group also has a truly global footprint that fits our business model and aspirations.”

Rose Schooler, vice president of the IoT Strategy Office at Intel, who also sits on the IMC board of governors said: “The IMC is an industry-leading professional organisation that is reaching out to adopters of IoT technology on a broad scale. The organisation is gaining an average of 275 new members per week – members that are developing, buying, and deploying IoT solutions. Clearly, there is a demand in the market to learn more.”

Both Intel and Wipro have accelerated their IoT efforts over the past few months. Earlier this year enterprise vendor Software AG and outsourcing giant Wipro teamed up to offer a platform for streaming analytics generated by Internet of Things sensors and devices.

Intel has also ramped up its collaborations in the space, teaming with Fujitsu in May this year to develop Internet of Things solutions for manufacturing, retail and public sector clients.

Intermedia gets behind Cloud Industry Forum

Intermedia has joined the CIF

Intermedia has joined the CIF

Cloud management platform provider Intermedia has joined the Cloud Industry Forum in a bid to boost IT reseller and channel sales.

Intermedia’s cloud management platform is aimed at value-added resellers and managed service providers primarily, and helps them support and build demand for cloud services.

By joining the standards body it hopes to certify its cloud services and benefit from the CIF’s evangelising role and existing channel relationships.

“There are some shining examples of resellers that have fully embraced cloud – and are reaping the rewards as a result – but there are many that have yet to adopt it. Intermedia can support resellers who are uncertain as to how to take their first steps to the cloud, as much as we can support those that are looking to transition their whole business to the cloud,” explained Richard Walters, general manager for Intermedia EMEA.

“There’s a significant opportunity, but moving successfully to the cloud does call for fundamental changes to resellers’ business models and it’s important that cloud providers like us can support their transition. The work of the Cloud Industry Forum is crucial to driving change in the industry. Working alongside its community of members we plan to drive Cloud enablement and identify new ways we can support the channel,’’ he added.

Alex Hilton, chief executive of the Cloud Industry Forum said: “The channel has a critical role to play in the continued adoption of cloud services and is well placed to educate the market on the opportunity that cloud represents and to help manage the transition from on-premise solutions. However, to do that, resellers need to ensure they have a clear understanding of the roles of all parties in the delivery of services and establish effective on-going partnerships with suppliers.”

Google creates Alphabet to address bloat, heterogeneity

Google's holding company is intended to help it more effectively manage a growing and increasingly broad set of businesses

Google’s holding company is intended to help it more effectively manage a growing and increasingly broad set of businesses

Google has taken the decision to form a new holding company, Alphabet, of which its biggest component will be Google with its internet and cloud services. The move is likely to appeal to investors who don’t want expensive experiments and general sprawl bringing down its share price.

The company’s chief executive Larry Page revealed the news in a blog post this week.

“We’ve long believed that over time companies tend to get comfortable doing the same thing, just making incremental changes. But in the technology industry, where revolutionary ideas drive the next big growth areas, you need to be a bit uncomfortable to stay relevant.”

“Our company is operating well today, but we think we can make it cleaner and more accountable. So we are creating a new company, called Alphabet. I am really excited to be running Alphabet as CEO with help from my capable partner, Sergey, as President.”

Alphabet is a holding company that will include Google, the largest of its components, which will retain the internet-centric services it provides (including YouTube, Search, Maps, and its cloud services). But its other projects and divisions including Nest, Google X, Research, Fibre, and it venture capital arms (Ventures and Capital) will be spun out and operate under the broader Alphabet umbrella.

Page will serve as chief executive of Alphabet and Sergey Brin as its president. Sundar Pichai, who has led product development and engineering efforts for its internet businesses, will be bumped up to lead Google as chief executive.

“This newer Google is a bit slimmed down, with the companies that are pretty far afield of our main Internet products contained in Alphabet instead.”

“Fundamentally, we believe this allows us more management scale, as we can run things independently that aren’t very related. Alphabet is about businesses prospering through strong leaders and independence. In general, our model is to have a strong CEO who runs each business, with Sergey and me in service to them as needed. We will rigorously handle capital allocation and work to make sure each business is executing well.”

Introducing Parallels Access 3.0

Say hello to Parallels Access 3.0! What’s new in this update? We’ve got a bevy of awesome new features in this release of Parallels Access— we’ve added large file sharing for both iOS and Android that requires no cloud service and wastes no time uploading files of any size with the ability to manage everything […]

The post Introducing Parallels Access 3.0 appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Now That You Can Work from Anywhere, Where to Go? By @ChrisFleck | @CloudExpo #Cloud

It’s called Cubefree, a free app that helps you find cafes with WiFi, power outlets, parking and even a table to share. CubeFree shows a map view with nearby cafes, along with user ratings and comments, as well as others who have checked in.
This app perfectly complements the other tools the modern workforce uses to work from anywhere: Virtual Desktops hosted in data centers, documents in cloud storage, mobile work apps on tablets. To power these, all that’s needed is a quiet place to sit, WiFi and power.

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Staying Ahead of Cyber Attacks By @MissKatherineLK | @CloudExpo #Cloud

Picking up a newspaper and turning on the TV, one is instantly confronted with news of yet another cyber hack. With cyber attacks headlining the news, millions of people are concerned with whether their personal information has been breached. These attacks are becoming more and more sophisticated and targeted, and are affecting both government and commercial sectors. Commercial companies are seeking technologies to prevent cyber breaches that were once considered only for government use. Escalating vulnerabilities are becoming more apparent within commercial companies; they need protection as much as the government.

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