Parallels at GITEX Technology Week: What to Expect

GITEX Technology Week has become the gold standard for IT exhibitions in the the Middle East. For the past 36 years, GITEX has presented attendees an array of revolutionary technologies and insightful knowledge on how to best apply them. Held at the Dubai World Trade Centre October 16–20, the exhibition promises to live up to […]

The post Parallels at GITEX Technology Week: What to Expect appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Moving Deck Chairs on the Titanic? | @CloudExpo #IoT #DigitalTransformation

Every generation, it seems, sports its own business transformation du jour. From Business Process Reengineering (BPR) to the Quality Movement to eBusiness to name a few, organizations large and small have sought to improve their profits, lower their costs, and keep their customers happy by shaking up the way they do things.

While each of these business transformation fads delivered value in its time, in the wisdom of hindsight they all ran up against the same basic challenge: inflexibility.

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[slides] #IoT for Manufacturing | @ThingsExpo #BigData #IIoT #M2M #Sensors

The IoT has the potential to create a renaissance of manufacturing in the US and elsewhere. In his session at 18th Cloud Expo, Florent Solt, CTO and chief architect of Netvibes, discussed how the expected exponential increase in the amount of data that will be processed, transported, stored, and accessed means there will be a huge demand for smart technologies to deliver it.
Florent Solt is the CTO and chief architect of Netvibes. Prior to joining Netvibes in 2007, he co-founded Rift Technologies, Mandriva SA, and Sopra Group. He is an expert in both Web software and UNIX systems. He holds an engineering degree in computer science from EPITA.

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Competing in #DigitalTransformation | @ThingsExpo #IoT #ML #M2M #BigData

Digital Transformation is the process of transforming a business from one state to another – from a state where businesses operate in Human time, to a state that operates in Digital time and finally to Future time. Businesses today must digitally transform in order to compete in all three of these time continuums simultaneously. Let’s first identify these different time continuums.

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[slides] #IoT Business Landscape | @ThingsExpo #BigData #IoT #M2M #API

With an estimated 50 billion devices connected to the Internet by 2020, several industries will begin to expand their capabilities for retaining end point data at the edge to better utilize the range of data types and sheer volume of M2M data generated by the Internet of Things.
In his session at @ThingsExpo, Don DeLoach, CEO and President of Infobright, discussed the infrastructures businesses will need to implement to handle this explosion of data by providing specific use cases for filtering, cleansing, enriching, storing and analyzing granular data at the edge that will help businesses achieve powerful insights from the many use cases of the Internet of Things.

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Nutanix, a Cloud-Based Company, Breaks Records at the Stock Exchange

Nutanix, a cloud-based business, had the strongest first-day gain for a new technology company this year. On its first day of trading on 30th September, its share price more than doubled, creating a record of sorts in a choppy market environment. In fact, its 131% bounce on the opening day is the biggest for any US listing this year.

This California-based maker of hyper converged infrastructure sold 14.87 million shares, more than its anticipated 14 million. It also priced the shares at $16, above the expected price range of $13 to $15, and through this offering, raised about $238 million. Its shares closed at a value of $37, thereby giving the company a market value of $5.08 billion.

This response from the market shows investor’s appetite for tech companies that have a high growth potential, even if its unprofitable now.  During the last fiscal year that ended in July, revenue jumped by 84% to $449.9 million, and the company says it has more than 3,700 customers. Despite this growth rate, this seven-year old company has been raking losses, mainly due to its aggressive marketing efforts. It’s net loss during the last fiscal year was $168.5 million.

This IPO sure gives hope for other tech companies that are looking to tap into the public market for capital. It can also be seen as a bright light in an otherwise dismal IPO market. According to Dealogic, only 80 companies have listed in the stock exchange in the first nine months, and this is way less than 143 during the same period in 2015. This fall can be attributed to market volatility, appealing lending rates, and a strong private market – factors that can deter a company from going public.

That said, the next few months are crucial for Nutanix, as many companies that started off well, have seen a downslide after the initial euphoria ends. Of the 32 tech companies that went public since 2012, 53 percent are trading below their market price. Shares of popular tech companies like Square, Box, and HortonWorks are trading almost $5 to $8 lower than their private market valuation. Will Nutanix fall in this list? Depends on the performance of the company, as well as a host of external factors like investor confidence and market volatility.

Nutanix Company Profile

Nutanix is a maker of Hyper Converged Infrastructure (HCI), a technology that combines many computing devices such as storage and backup into a single device using advanced software on an inexpensive hardware. Founded by Dheeraj Pandey, Mohit Aron, and Ajeet Singh in 2009, this company is headquartered at San Jose, California, and sells its products to more than 70 countries worldwide.

It became a “unicorn company”- a term used to describe tech companies that have a valuation of more than $1 billion, in 2013. It is backed by some heavyweight venture capitalists such as Khosla Ventures, Lightspeed Venture Partners, and Fidelity Investments.

This company sells software on its own box, and this accounts for most of its revenue. The remaining revenue comes from companies that use Nutanix’s software to offer better features for their respective products. Server makers like Dell and Lenovo Group, and car-maker Toyota Motors, are some of the companies take advantage of Nutanix’s software.

Its stock symbol is “NTNX.”

 

The post Nutanix, a Cloud-Based Company, Breaks Records at the Stock Exchange appeared first on Cloud News Daily.

How the financial services industry is slowly waking up to cloud computing

(c)iStock.com/urbancow

Just five years ago, the idea of using cloud services would have seemed wildly optimistic even to the most radical of businesses operating in the financial services sector. But cloud is no longer the new kid on the block. After becoming the word on everybody’s lips a few years ago, it has already plumbed what the Gartner Hype Cycle terms the ‘trough of disillusionment’; often experienced by new technologies as the doubters queue up to question the impact it can have. Cloud is already well on the way towards the ‘slope of enlightenment’, where even business sectors which are traditionally slow to adopt new technology, such as financial services, are now beginning to realise the benefits.

Challenger banks

The UK’s financial services sector is currently undergoing significant change. In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, regulatory changes designed to stimulate competition in the market have made it easier to set up a new bank. Just two years later, Metro Bank became the first to be awarded a banking licence for 150 years. This new face on the high street is now also joined by a raft of other new names, including Starling and Hampden, which means it is now possible for customers to turn their backs on the traditional big players.

All of these new players on the market are distinct for another reason too – they are all embracing cloud. If you’ve ever glanced in the window of a Metro Bank branch, you will have noticed that there is an element of hot-desking from those who work in its open plan environment. This is possible because the bank is largely paperless, with customer records and bank functions being hosted in the cloud.

Having been born in the 21st century, these newcomers do not carry the burden of legacy systems and can hit the ground running. However, with careful planning and a clear strategy, there is no reason why the financial services industry as a whole can’t more readily embrace cloud.

Public and private cloud

At first glance, using public cloud services from the likes of Amazon and Google might be considered a risky approach due to tight regulation within the industry.

Each different country has its own legislation for the financial services industry, meaning they are free to give the go-ahead for cloud adoption within their own borders. Take the Netherlands, for example, where national bank ING has given use of Amazon Web Services the green light. Although the legal barrier is being removed from the path of some, a private cloud approach is still the more likely option for most financial services organisations. Private cloud offers greater control which is vital for financial services organisations concerned about security and compliance.

Barriers to overcome

Moving to cloud is not the giant leap some financial services firms might think it is; many are already using cloud apps as part of everyday operation without even realising. For instance, it is very common for marketing teams to use content delivery networks, which can be deemed a ‘cloud’ service.

The key is to incentivise the entire business to embrace cloud for both new and existing applications. Therefore it is important that operations, application owners and the business are all on the same page when it comes to establishing which applications should move to the cloud. In today’s competitive financial services environment, this really should be a question of agility rather than cost.

Map it out

Once everybody is on board, the focus of the business must now turn to making the move happen. This means identifying what applications are already in place, what form they take and whether or not they are capable of being migrated to a cloud environment.

Don’t forget that it will not be appropriate for everything to be moved to the cloud. Transaction processing, for example, may be one of the last things to move, if at all – the business case to move these applications from the mainframe would need to be compelling. In reality, within financial services organisations we see a 70/30 split between applications that could realistically move to the cloud and those that cannot. Financial services organisations need to set out a sensible, achievable roadmap for their cloud journey. This involves three key elements: setting up the right platform, migrating applications and integrating legacy assets.

It can typically take three to five years to move all necessary parts of the business across to cloud, so it’s important to have a comprehensive understanding of what to move, when to move and how to do it. Without that, financial services firms will struggle to make good on the promise of cloud.

Read more: Why financial firms are missing out by not embracing the cloud

[slides] #IoT Time Series Data | @ThingsExpo #M2M #ML #BigData #Monitoring

IoT generates lots of temporal data. But how do you unlock its value? You need to discover patterns that are repeatable in vast quantities of data, understand their meaning, and implement scalable monitoring across multiple data streams in order to monetize the discoveries and insights. Motif discovery and deep learning platforms are emerging to visualize sensor data, to search for patterns and to build application that can monitor real time streams efficiently.
In his session at @ThingsExpo, Dave Watson, CTO and Co-Founder of Trendalyze, discussed real world IoT projects from UK environmental monitoring using Mosquitto, Node-RED, Kafka, Spark, MLlib and R.

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[slides] #Wearables and #WebRTC | @ThingsExpo #IoT #M2M #RTC #UCaaS

Big Data, cloud, analytics, contextual information, wearable tech, sensors, mobility, and WebRTC: together, these advances have created a perfect storm of technologies that are disrupting and transforming classic communications models and ecosystems.
In his session at @ThingsExpo, Erik Perotti, Senior Manager of New Ventures on Plantronics’ Innovation team, provided an overview of this technological shift, including associated business and consumer communications impacts, and opportunities it may enable, complement or entirely transform.

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Big data technology market speeding up – with NoSQL and Hadoop at forefront

(c)iStock.com/stokkete

The big data technology landscape is varied and vast – and a new report from Forrester examines the key strands, with non-relational databases taking the bulk of the honours.

The report, claimed to be a first of its kind from the analyst firm titled Big Data Management Solutions Forecast 2016 to 2021, argues NoSQL and Hadoop will see the biggest growth during the five year period, with the markets growing 25.0% and 32.9% per year respectively. The analysts also claim that the big data technology space will grow at three times the rate of the overall technology market.

Forrester defines big data technology in six buckets; enterprise data warehousing, NoSQL, Hdaoop, big data integration, data virtualisation, and in-memory data fabric. The latter, a product which usually offers data, compute and service grids as well as an in-memory database, is predicted to grow at 29.2% annually over the coming five years.

Usage varies by industry, but the report notes that while telecommunications, professional services, finance and government are the largest users of these technologies now, the pharmaceutical, transport and primary production industries will be the quickest growing. Almost 40% of firms polled by Forrester say they are implementing and expanding their big data technology adoption, with another 30% planning to up their usage in the next 12 months.

One industry case study which utilises Hadoop in particular is Trulia, an online residential marketplace. On a given day, Trulia would crunch more than a terabyte of data, and cross reference it with a couple of petabytes of existing data to give their users the most accurate information possible.

With regards to NoSQL, a report from Gartner released in April this year around database management systems (DBMS) argued that for the five leaders – Basho, Couchbase, Datastax, MarkLogic and MongoDB – there was “still not much to write home about” in terms of revenue compared to the relational database behemoths.

The vendors will tell a different story, however. Couchbase, for instance, concluded a $30 million series F funding round back in March, with CEO Bob Wiederhold telling this publication that an IPO was not too far away. Yet the overall theme, according to both Gartner and Forrester, is that change is coming – it is just taking a while to get there.

“The complexity and richness of data is changing, along with exploding data volume and velocity. Unstructured data, such as text, tweets, graphs, and video, is an increasingly important source of information,” wrote Jennifer Adams, Forrester senior forecast analyst in a blog post. “Not surprisingly, we expect non-relational databases to be the fastest growing sector within big data management solutions.”