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Tech News Recap for the Week of 12/22/2014

With the holidays last week, chances are you weren’t able to stay up-to-speed on all of the industry news. Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 12/22/2014.

 

Tech News Recap

Tech News RecapNorth Korea’s internet went down for 9 hours before being restored. Salesforce introduced its file sharing service. Microsoft and Google joined in the opposition against hotels attempting to block wi-fi. Disney world now accepts Apple Pay and Google Wallet. Security breaches continue to impact retail stores in the US.

 

 

Looking for more resources? Download this checklist with tips for datacenter moves or this guide about visibility and control in a virtual infrastructure.

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 12/15/2014

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 12/15/2014. 

Tech News Recap

There were multiple stories this week about Microsoft around Azure and Orleans. There was also a lot of talk around the Sony breach. As always with this time of year, there were a significant amount of articles providing 2014 summaries as well as giving predictions for 2015.

 

 

On-Demand Webinar: How the “Houdini” the Risks of Deferred IT Maintenance

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

GreenPages Bloggers: 2014 Holiday Wish List

With the holiday season upon us, we decided to speak with some of our bloggers here at GreenPages to see what they wanted this year!

 

greenpagesChris Ward, CTO: Full on Nest System to control my house

Dan Allen, Solutions Architect: Drone with a GoPro

John Dixon, Director, Cloud Services: DJI Inspire 1 with 4k video. 4,500 meter maximum altitude. No FAA license required!

Nick Phelps, Practice Manager, Network & Security: DJI Phantom 2 Vision+. Full HD with a Gimbal for under $1,400

David Barter, Practice Manager, Microsoft Technologies: EFI and Holley EFI/EUC Performance Monitoring with iPad interface built into the dash to the 600HP 472 that is my 69 Deville Street Rod

Geoff Smith, Senior Manager, Managed Services Business Development: My wish would be for something that is not actually available yet in the market but might be the single coolest idea I’ve heard in years – wireless electricity. Imagine that you could power your mobile devices, home electronics and even your electric car without having to run physical wiring or dealing with charging cords and stations. Recently, a pioneer in this space, WiTricity, announced that they are working with Intel to bring their patented wireless power transfer technology to the consumer market. You could be charging your laptop or mobile devices the moment you walk in the door without tying yourself to within 5 feet of an electrical outlet!

Irvin Metaj, Level III Managed Services Engineer: A 4 TB hard drive to back up my data (dealing with a cryptowall issue where files are corrupt/encrypted right now.

 

What’s on your holiday wish list?

Tech News Recap for the Week of 12/8/2014

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 12/8/2014.

Tech News Recap

Tech News RecapMicrosoft released Office 365 Video and will unveil the consumer side of Windows 10 on January 21st. Pure Storage has introduced an all-flash approach to converged infrastructure they are calling FlashStack CI. A study has found that there was an increase in 2014 SMB mobility adoption spending. ZDnet released a list of the 10 best smartphones at the close of the year. After a massive data breach, Sony is fighting back. There were also good articles around the Internet of Things, strategic service providers, hybrid cloud solutions, and an interview with a CTO at Citrix, Gunnar Berger.

 

Download this guide: 4 Reasons Why Visibility and Control Are the Key to a Better Virtual Infrastructure

 

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

CTO Focus Interview: Gunnar Berger, Citrix

CTO Focus InterviewIn the third installment of our CTO Focus Interview series, I got to speak with Gunnar Berger, CTO at Citrix (View Part I and Part II of the series). Gunnar is a well respected thought leader who previously worked as an Analyst at Gartner and joined Citrix last June. Gunnar is on a mission to make VDI easier and cheaper to deploy. I’d highly recommend following Gunnar on Twitter to hear more from him.

 

Ben: What are your primary responsibilities at Citrix?

Gunnar: A lot of what I do at Citrix is on the back end and not necessarily public facing. In the public view, it’s more of looking at a long term strategy. Most roadmaps are looking ahead 12-18 months. I can be influential in these plans, but I am really looking at the longer term strategy. Where are we going to be in 3-5 years? How do we actually get to that place? How do you take today’s roadmap and drive it towards that 5 year plan? One of the main reasons I took the job at Citrix is because I want to fix VDI. I think it costs too much and is too complex. I think we truly can change VDI at Citrix.

 

Ben: What are some of the challenges you face as a CTO?

Gunnar: One of the main challenges when looking at long term strategies is that things can happen in the short term that can impact those long term plans. That’s every CTO’s challenge regardless of industry. In this particular industry, things change every single day. Every couple of months there is a major merger or acquisition. You have to be nimble and quick and be ready to make adjustments on the fly. My background at Gartner is very relevant here.  I have to make sure I understand where the customer is now and where they will be 3-5 years from now.

If you look at the history of Citrix, look back 5 years and you see they made an incorrect prediction on VDI. You can create a long term strategy and have it not work out. If you aren’t correct with your long term strategy, it’s important to capture that early on and pivot.

 

Ben: What goals do you have for 2015?

Gunnar: I have three main goals heading into 2015. The first is doubling down on applications. The second is to review the complexity and costs of VDI. The third is to “bridge to the cloud.”

1. Double down on applications

Citrix over rotated on VDI but now the pendulum is moving back. VDI has a place but so does RDS. We are doubling down so that XenApp is not a second class citizen to XenDesktop. Apps are what users want, XenApp is our tried and true solution for pushing these apps out to users on any device.

2. Review complexity and cost of VDI

My overall goal is to make VDI easier to deploy and cheaper to deploy. This plays into a long term strategy. Let’s face it, VDI deployments take a lot of time and money. I can’t remember where it was that I heard this stat, but for every dollar of a VDI sale I need to sell $12 in everything else. For a customer to buy one thing they need to buy $12 of something else…not an ideal situation for the customer.

We need to solve that issue to make it less costly. I’m unapologetically a fan of VDI. I think it’s an extremely powerful technology that has a lot of great benefits, but it is currentlycostly and complex. Luckily, in my position I get to work with a lot of really smart people that can solve this so I’m confident that Citrix will make VDI what I have always wanted it to be.

3. Bridge to the cloud

This is where Citrix Workspace Services comes into play. You will start seeing more and more of this from Citrix over the next several months. Essentially this is the unification of all of our different products (i.e. XenDesktop, XenApp, XenMobile, NetScaler, etc.). We will be “SaaS-ifying” our entire stack, which is a massive undertaking. We really want to improve the admin experience by creating a single administrative interface for users of all different product suites.

The goal is provide the same benefits to an enterprise that an end user receives from products like the ChromeBook – automatically get the latest version so you never have to update manually. We want to get to the point that no matter what, customers are always operating on the most recent versions. This obviously benefits the customer as they are getting the latest things instantly.

Citrix isn’t going to try to become a cloud provider. To do that you need billions of dollars. We’re building a bridge to enable users to move seamlessly from on-prem to off-prem. You want to be on Azure or Amazon? We can do that.

The idea is that this becomes the middle ground between you and those cloud providers. What I like about being the intermediary is being able to dial up and back between clouds seamlessly to allow customers to stand things up and test them in minutes instead of days.

 

Ben: Citrix has made heavy investments in mobility. Where do you see mobility in the next 3-5 years?

Gunnar: Honestly, I want to stop talking about mobility like it’s something special. Everything we are doing these days is mobile. Mobile Device Management? Mobile Application Management? We need to drop the mobile from this story. It’s device management. It’s applications management. As far as where mobility fits in with Citrix – it’s inherent to the big picture much like the necessity to breath. I say this to paint a picture because it’s in our DNA. This is what Citrix has done for the last 25 years. In today’s world with smartphones and tablets, we take apps and make them run elsewhere just like we have always done.

 

Ben: Throughout your career, what concept or technology would you say has had the most drastic impact on IT?

Gunnar: Hands down virtualization. Virtualization is the root of where cloud started. Cloud is the most disruptive technology moving forward, and it all started with the hypervisor.

 

Are you a CIO/CTO interested in participating in our Focus Interview series? Email me at bstephenson@greenpages.com

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

 

Tech News Recap for the Week of 12/1/2014

Tech News RecapWere you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 12/1/2014.

Tech News Recap

Microsoft bough Acompli for $200M. The FBI warned US businesses of destructive malware. HP will provide Microsoft O365 business services and support. Bank of America’s Cathy Bessant won IT Chief of the Year. Bebe Stores confirmed a payment card security breach. Hawaii’s state government is prioritizing a cloud first strategy for any new IT project. Gartner’s Data Center Conference wrapped up, and there was a lot of good information that came out of it around cloud, open-source, and software-defined technologies.

Looking for tips around moving a data center? Check out this new whitepaper from GreenPages’ CTO. By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 11/24/2014

Tech News RecapWith a short week due to Thanksgiving, here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed.

Tech News Recap

New Malware has been used for surveillance in 10 countries including Russia and Mexico. A study has found that Internet of Things in the enterprise is up three-fold since 2012. VMware is currently offering a 25% discount on vSOM. Computerworld provided its 2015 predictions around IT spending. The adoption of cloud computing continues to accelerate in the enterprise space. Ebay pulled it’s app from the App Store and InformationWeek provided a list of 10 Windows Tablets and Laptops that are under $200 to keep in mind as the holidays approach.

 

If you’d like to get more information on the 25% discount VMware is currently offering on vSOM, click here & a GreenPages Rep will reach out to you.

Tech News Recap for the Week of 11/10/2014

Tech News RecapWere you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 11/10/2014.

Tech News Recap 11/10/2014

This week, a massive breach hit Postal Service employees. Google cloud will be storing petabytes of genome data for health researchers while a new Microsoft data center is being powered by fuel cells. Also with Microsoft, Bill Gates sold $925M in stock…but still owns $13.6B worth. There were articles about both the Army’s cloud strategy as well as its virtual desktop strategy. Facebook and Twitter will most likely be speaking with Russian officials about data storage regulations next month. AWS builds the first customized marketplace for the CIA’s private cloud. Samsung is readying Proximity, it’s challenger to Apple iBeacon. There was also an interview with Motus CIO Rick Blaisdell along with good articles around IT spending, project management offices driving business growth, and HP’s BYOD services.

What top tech news did we miss? Leave a comment with links to any quality articles from last week that other readers may enjoy!

Download this new whitepaper to get an 8-point checklist for a successful data center move

How the Project Management Office Can Drive Business Growth with Excellence in Customer Service

PMOProject Managers today don’t just manage projects; they are a key contributor in managing the business. So, is there a way the Project Management Office can gain the business competitive positioning and better business results? I say yes. We can do this through delivering excellence in customer service.

Aristotle said it best when he said, “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then is not an act, but a habit.” Aristotle ~384-322 BCE.  To create a culture of service excellence, the PMO must first define for itself what excellence in customer service is. Involve the members of the Project Management Office in this activity (after all, we know from our experience managing projects that stakeholder involvement facilitates buy-in). Ask each member to provide their best customer service experience. From the cumulative experiences, collaboratively define what service excellence is for your team in your business. This definition should become the mission statement of the PMO.

Next, have the Project Management Office members recommend the values they will guide themselves by to obtain service excellence. Below are a few general principles to build on. I agree that many may seem obvious or cliché, but you will find that they work:

  • Be available
  • Treat your customer the way you would like to be treated
  • Provide a personal and individual level of attention to each client
  • Be an expert in your role, discipline or practice
  • Be empowered to make decisions
  • Ask, listen and learn
  • Analyze risk to identify potential problems and implement corrective and preventive measures
  • Communicate early and often
  • Request feedback and use it to evolve service excellence
  • Be humble, honest, frank and prepared

Once the Project Management Office defines and outlines values, PMO management should create a formal documented Customer Service policy and roll it out to the team. The upkeep of the Customer Service policy should be considered an iterative process; the needs of the customer and feedback from stakeholders are regularly analyzed and constant improvements are made to the program.

Review the policy with the PM team regularly, especially when there are any updates, or new hires added to the team. Perform team building exercises in support of the program, and share lessons learned at regular team meetings to foster continued support of the program. We want to ensure everyone adopts this behavior. After all, service excellence must become the new norm.

Great service can be used as an effective acquisition strategy, as well as a retention strategy for happy customers. Roll out a Customer Service Excellence program in your Project Management Office and you will find that the customer service approach will lead to growth and profitability.

Are you interested in learning how effective project management strategies can help your business excel? Email us at socialmedia@greenpages.com

 

By Erin Marandola, Business Analyst, PMP

CTO Focus Interview: Rick Blaisdell, Motus

In the second installment of our CTO Focus Interview series (view part I with Stuart Appley here), I got the chance to sit down with Rick Blaisdell, CTO at Motus, at a coffee shop in Portsmouth, NH. Rick is an experienced IT pro with more than 20 years experience in the industry. Some of his specialties include SaaS, cloud computing, virtualization, software development and business process improvement.  Rick is a top thought leader in the industry. He has a very successful blog, Rick’s Cloud, and his opinions and insights are very well respected on Twitter. Definitely an interesting guy to talk to – enjoy!

CTO Focus InterviewBen: Fill us in on what you do and your IT experience.

Rick: I’m currently the CTO for Motus, a mobile technology company that builds solutions for mobile employees. I also advise technology companies on becoming more efficient, scalable and moving physical workloads to the cloud and streamlining their development processes. Small technology companies need direction with best practices; most of these companies have not yet invested heavily in physical infrastructure so it is easier for them to move to, and embrace, cloud technologies. Mid-size and larger companies have more complex issues when moving to the cloud as most of their infrastructure is physical with complex workloads that require assessments, partners and advanced planning before moving to the cloud.  I help these organizations with these types of decisions.

 

Ben: What are your main goals when heading into a new company?

Rick: My main objective is to migrate companies from CapExt to OpEx. I spend a lot of time discussing the advantages of moving to the cloud. The ultimate goal is to remove internal employee workloads to SaaS and external customer facing production workloads to IaaS and PaaS. Internally it is critical to get your data out of your closet. An enterprise private of hybrid managed cloud solution with process and controls around the data is often the solution for most companies. Migrating 100% of the workloads to the cloud may not be feasible for all companies, although if you are a small business or new technology startup that should be the goal.

Ben: Do you often get pushback from C-level executives about utilizing the cloud?

Rick: The C-suite understands the high level benefits and business value of utilizing the cloud. One of the unknown barriers of moving to the cloud often comes from within a company’s own internal IT fears.  The IT team has been focused on keeping physical environments running, security, patching and maintenance. Shifting to the cloud removes physical resources into virtual resources and now with managed solutions, shared experts are responsible for making sure your environment has the highest level of SLA’s and security. The internal IT team sees this as a threat and in some cases will find out how to slow cloud adoption.  The C-Suite wants to be efficient and grow by concentrating on what’s core to the business, not spending energy hiring employees to maintain hard drives. The challenge is educating and retraining these employees to be able to take on new tasks that accelerate the core mission of the company.

{Download our latest whitepaper – 8 Point Checklist for a Successful Data Center Move }

Ben: Which area of technology interests you the most?

Rick: The Internet of Things fascinates me, where there are billions of objects like toothbrushes, wearable technology, home appliances and tracking devices collecting data. Most technology companies in the near future will have some sort of IoT device. I recently wrote a blog post highlighting some cool internet of things startups.

Ben: What’s your view on the concept of Anything-as-a-Service?

Rick: Things are shifting to the “as a service” mentality. People like the pay as you go model. Everything is being added to the XaaS stack. Overall, I embrace the financial advantages of this model. All the companies I have worked with end up being more secure and efficient while saving money after migrating to SaaS, PaaS, DaaS, MCaaS services.

Ben: Throughout your career, what concept or technology would you say has had the most drastic impact on IT?

Rick: Virtualization would be my first answer. High density cloud environments cost less, are more efficient, are easier to scale and can be as secure as any physical environment. This has had a major impact on IT.

Ben: Where do you see IT in the next 5-7 years?

Rick: That is a long way out, my guess is that workloads will be fully commoditized, think of Priceline when you search for hotels today, this is where the world is headed, providers with services large and small available at discounts that meet your SLA’s, security, time frame all being managed and seamlessly migrated between each other. If this doesn’t happen, I will buy you dinner ;)

Are you a CIO/CTO interested in participating in our Focus Interview series? Email me at bstephenson@greenpages.com

 

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist