Layershift Offers Free month of Managed Hosting with Plesk Panel 11

 

 

This guest post and promotion comes from Andrew Cranson, Director and founder of Layershift, a Managed Hosting provider and long-term Parallels Platinum Partner based in the United Kingdom with services in the UK, New York and Singapore.

 

We have been working exclusively with Parallels Plesk Panel for over 11 years now; initially providing shared hosting and now focusing on Managed VPS Hosting, Dedicated Servers and Complex Hosting catering to a wide range of customers around the world. Plesk helps our customers to get the best performance and flexibility from our hosting service. We’re seeing a huge sense of anticipation from customers and staff over the launch of Parallels Plesk Panel 11 as this adds further new powerful features to our portfolio which are in strong demand.

 

Each new Plesk release continues to add highly requested functionality directly from our customers – the engineering team do a great job constantly enhancing the product and rapidly fixing bugs with weekly updates to make sure it always delivers the best results for the user.

 

To celebrate the launch of Parallels Plesk Panel 11 we are pleased to announce a special offer across our range of Cloud VPS and Cloud VPS Extreme products! Until July 31st 2012 we are offering two months half price on all plans with 1GB RAM or more.

 

All our Managed Cloud Hosting services come as standard with:

 

  • Parallels Plesk Panel 11, with optional Web Presence Builder 11
  • PHP 5.3 & MySQL 5
  • Nginx turbocharger (for high performance websites with reduced CPU & RAM usage)
  • Layershift Managed Care Packs (end-to-end service guarantees and extra features)
  • 24×7 Fully-Managed Expert Support and Monitoring from Plesk Experts since 2001
  • 14 day Money Back Guarantee

 

To take advantage of this promotion, simply enter the following coupon code in our store while signing up for a new UK, USA or Singapore hosting solution:

 

Coupon code: PP11LAUNCH

 

I invite you to find out more about how Layershift with Plesk 11 compare to other providers and view Layershift reviews and customer testimonials at our website where you can chat with one of our friendly sales engineers.

 

Damien Ransome, Sales Director, Layershift Limited

 


Cloud Spectator Named “Media Sponsor” of Cloud Expo 2012 Silicon Valley

SYS-CON Events announced today that Cloud Spectator has been named “Media Sponsor” of SYS-CON’s 11th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 5–8, 2012, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Cloud Spectator offers cloud computing education to an enterprise audience; constantly analyzing this dynamic industry to keep information up-to-date, as well as providing custom reports to cloud providers.Cloud Expo 2012 Silicon Valley, November 5–8, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA, will feature technical sessions from a rock star conference faculty and the leading Cloud industry players in the world.

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The ‘Curse of Knowledge’: An IT Consultant’s Tips to Avoid Stifling Innovation

Guest Post by Bob Deasy, CIO, Lead I.T. Consulting

Bob Deasy

Bob Deasy is CIO of Lead I.T. Consulting, which provides focused IT solutions and business strategy consulting in the Portland area.

The phrase “curse of knowledge” first appeared a 1989 paper titled “The Curse of Knowledge in Economic Settings: An Experimental Analysis,” which introduced the concept that “better informed agents are unable to ignore private information even when it is in their best interests to do so; more information is not always better.” While most of us assume that experts are the best people to turn to for new ideas, the truth is that experts are often less able to innovate than greenhorns. For instance, if your IT consultant thinks along the exact same lines as you, it’s difficult to find new ways of doing things.

Although this concept is counterintuitive at first, it makes sense upon consideration of the knowledge-building process. Every field has its own lingo and agreed-upon principles. These guidelines help organize and canonize information that would otherwise be difficult to remember. To gain entry into upper academic echelons and posh corner offices, a person must learn how to follow the appropriate industry rules. IT consultants, for instance, often have a set of IT management rules, such as the ITIL guidelines, practically engrained on their brains, so they may not see areas that are best served by alternative approaches.

The more you know, the harder it is to get out of the box of agreed-upon industry rules that you’ve built around yourself. The mind of an expert can easily settle into a certain pattern or rut, simply because “that’s the way we’ve always done it.” When entire technology consulting firms are operating from the same handbook, it’s difficult to achieve true innovation. Intel co-founder Andrew S. Grove put it this way: “When everybody knows that something is so, it means that nobody knows nothin’.” As we get to know a topic better, it is harder for us to see it in creative, new ways. Understanding the “rules” of knowledge limits our ability to bend or break them.

Sophisticated but ultimately useless software is one example of how the curse of knowledge thwarts IT innovation. Engineers, in their insulated community, can’t help but design software for other engineers. Too often, the product of their efforts is packaged well and marketed widely but ultimately impractical or downright useless for the average company.

Brothers Chip and Dan Heath explore how to evade the curse of knowledge in their book Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Stick and Others Come Unstuck. Below, we explore a few of these suggestions through an IT management perspective. IT consultants and mangers can cultivate innovation by following these tips:

1. Build a team with a variety of skills.

Steve Jobs took this approach to heart when he created the Pixar building, which was designed to force accountants, animators and all other niche experts to interact in the building’s sole set of bathrooms. As Jobs said, “Technology alone is not enough – it’s technology married with liberal arts, married with the humanities, that yields us the results that make our hearts sing.” When an IT consultant, CFIO or other IT management guru is forced to work with complete novices, new ways of thinking naturally open up. Total beginners will likely have unique knowledge in other areas that can be applied to IT management in unique, groundbreaking ways.

2. Avoid jargon; seek teaching opportunities.

Explaining the basics can help experts think about their understanding in a new light, fostering innovation. In her book Innovation Killer, Cynthia Barton Rabe tells of a colleague at Eveready who came to the flashlight business with no preconceived notions of what did and did not work. At that time, all Eveready flashlights were red and utilitarian. Drawing from her years of experience in marketing and packaging at Ralston Purina, this flashlight newbie overhauled the Eveready line to include pink, green and baby blue torches – colors that would be more likely to attract female shoppers. Thus, the floundering flashlight business was revived.

Rabe concludes that such “zero gravity thinkers,” as she calls them, fuel innovation by asking very basic questions that force experts to step back into a beginner’s mindset. Because going back to the basics can seem like backtracking to those who are very familiar with specialized knowledge, it’s not unusual for frustration to run high when zero gravity thinkers are on the scene. However, if a team can work through this irritation, innovation soon follows.

3. Hire “Renaissance thinker” consultants.

Ms. Rabe concedes that outside parties, such as IT consultants, can serve as zero gravity thinkers, assuming they have a broad range of knowledge. If your IT consultant’s only employment has been through technology consulting firms, he or she will not be as likely to innovate. In contrast, an IT consultant who came to the field as a second career will be able to see wholly new approaches.


Cloud Expo: Survey – A Snapshot into Cloud Storage Adoption

A recent survey revealed user attitudes and adoption plans for cloud storage.
Nearly three-quarters of cloud storage users estimated they could recover their data within 24 hours
One out of every eight organizations that do not use cloud storage responded that it would take “more than a week” to recover their data
Respondents were attendees at the recent Cloud Expo at the Javits Center in New York June 11-14, an audience expected to offer more sophisticated insight into the use of cloud computing than a general IT audience. Seventy-three percent of respondents have implemented some form of cloud computing already, with more than a quarter (28 percent) having done so for three or more years.

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Virtualization for SMBs, Top to Bottom

Recently, Russ Stockdale wrote a blog post (part 2 of a 4-part series) on a VMware blog. He states that he is continuously looking for opportunities to increase revenue, control costs, and expand services to customers. These are the exact issues that I assist clients with all across the SMB range—from companies with one physical server running everything to customers with multiple sites and 100s of users. Since I get to talk to customers, many of which are SMBs (the same space Mozy serves) and architect solutions to their problems, whatever they may be, I figured I would write a blog along the same lines. The one key technology that we use and recommend is virtualization. Below are some suggestions for products/solutions GreenPages often provides SMBs.

Our smaller clients (less than 5 servers) have the same uptime and business continuity demands that larger companies do, but usually with a single person as their IT department. Virtualization makes their lives easier and provides much more flexibility than physical servers. The VMware VSA (vSphere Storage Appliance) allows the use of local storage to provide the benefit of a SAN including vMotion and High Availability at a much lower cost. Reducing a server to a giant file also allows for easier backup and recovery with snapshots, with both VMware and 3rd party backup software.

For medium sized companies, (less than 20 servers) virtualization fills some key technology gaps.  Specifically, the ability to spin up new servers quickly to meet users’ needs is key to a fast paced environment.  These size companies also get the same benefits as I mentioned above with business continuity, flexibility, and much less downtime with vMotion and High Availability. Backups are also easier in a virtual environment and many of our clients are getting rid of tape and putting these backups into the Cloud or another offsite location. That is much easier than rotating backups and taking tapes or a NAS drive offsite on a regular basis.

Our larger SMB customers (more than 20 servers) are usually heavy users of virtualization already.  We help them take the next steps in managing their environment and their risks by helping them implement three key VMware technologies. First, most of these clients already have more than one location. We help them get automated failover and disaster recovery by implementing Site Recovery Manager (SRM).  This is a fantastic way of getting multisite failover, migration, and recovery by leveraging their existing virtual environment and hardware. SRM also provides proof to auditors and management that they have a disaster plan in place that is tested on a regular basis.

The second way we help these customers is by using vCenter Operations Suite to help them manage the hardware and resources they have better. VMware vCenter Operations Enterprise (vCOPs) will point out trouble spots in their environment and assist them in identifying any issues and resolutions. Additionally the software will show them where they have over- or under-allocated resources to specific virtual machines or datastores so they can use those resources elsewhere and put off additional hardware purchases. vCOPs also has some forecasting capabilities so you can plan your next hardware purchases and not have to acquire new hardware unexpectedly.

An additional step that a few of our clients are taking is setting up self-provisioning capabilities with vCloud Director.  This allows them to spin up virtual machines for test or development or for other reasons without any interaction from the IT staff.  This makes it much quicker and easier to create virtual machines.  It also makes for a much cleaner environment since there are limits on who can create VMs and what virtual machines are created. vCloud Director will also clean up the old or expired VMs so you do not end up with VMware sprawl.

All companies no matter how large or small are better off leveraging virtualization to provide more flexibility, easier management, and better uptime and business continuity.  VMware has industry leading technology and features that every SMB can and should take advantage of. If you’re looking for more information on virtualization and SMB IT Solutions check out some other blogs I have written on JourneyToTheCloud.

How to explain the value of PSN to public sector stakeholders

It’s fair to say that the Public Services Network (PSN) has been a long time coming. It hasn’t received the air time that G-Cloud has, for example, but it has nonetheless moved on significantly in the last six months.
 
As research we have conducted recently reveals, we’ve moved beyond simply talking about PSN – reaching a point where general understanding of the benefits it promises are such that it is now seen as central to public sector IT strategies.
 
My firm, for instance, recently organised a roundtable discussion in conjunction with Alun Michael MP at the House of Commons, to discuss how we could bring relatively technical, but nonetheless important, issues around PSN into mainstream parliamentary debate.
 
We were joined by representatives from local, central and devolved government, including Kent County Council, the Welsh Assembly and the Cabinet Office, all of whom have been deeply involved in the …

Cloud Security Alliance “Association Sponsor” of Cloud Expo Silicon Valley

SYS-CON Events announced today that Cloud Security Alliance has been named “Association Sponsor” of SYS-CON’s 11th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 5–8, 2012, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) is a not-for-profit organization with a mission to promote the use of best practices for providing security assurance within Cloud Computing, and to provide education on the uses of Cloud Computing to help secure all other forms of computing. The Cloud Security Alliance is led by a broad coalition of industry practitioners, corporations, associations and other key stakeholders.

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Next Stop in Cloud Computing: How Can It Be Implemented?

First there was “what.” Then there was “why.” Now there is “how.”
Cloud computing is being embraced by most enterprise IT shops – at least according to attendees and vendors at the 10th Cloud Expo in New York, writes Roger Strukhoff of Cloud Computing Journal. Many organizations now want to know how to harness the strengths of cloud computing.
The word of the day at Cloud Expo was “multi-cloud,” Strukhoff explained:
“It turns out that enterprise IT is complex, and that cloud is not going to eliminate that complexity, at least with larger shops. However, it will continue the push in recent years to eliminate silos, decouple and loosely recouple services, get a grip on measuring things, and provide the vaunted ‘single pane of glass’ through which IT management can view and manage what’s going on,” he writes.

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E-signature and Cloud Service Myths

E-signature services offer an innovative and convenient way for businesses of any size to help cut costs, improve efficiency and offer convenience to customers or clients. Delivery of documents and forms through the Internet or cloud-based services takes just seconds. This means less waiting, more working and quicker processing. The technology has matured and grown […]

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Red Hat’s Buying FuseSource Off Progress Software

Red Hat said Wednesday that it’s arranged to buy FuseSource from Progress
Software. Terms were not disclosed but they’re not material.

FuseSource evidently has some open source integration and messaging
widgetry that Red Hat thinks is valuable. Red Hat’s plans are fixated on
applications. FuseSource is supposed to let it “accelerate the delivery of
application integration products and services to enterprise customers.”

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