Wretched Violence Clouds All Issues

Wretched violence has once again intruded in a big way into all the world’s efforts to improve economies and the lives of people. It’s horrible, disgusting, and will ultimately achieve the direct opposite of what it’s backers seek. Instead of resolving difficult situations, or “teaching lessons,” it only makes existing quagmires deeper and teaches only that violence is wrong.

I’m disturbed as I see the US on an apparently inevitable march to war in Syria, the latest of my country’s efforts to resolve problems in the Middle East. Over the past few days I’ve heard that moderates form the bulk of Syrian opposition, that President Obama did not set a red line, and most ludicrously, from Secretary of State John Kerry, that a cruise-missile attack will not be an act of war.

My concerns don’t address the issue of innocent civilians being gassed. But I know that slamming a bunch of places with 1,000-pound warheads will bring no one back from the dead and will only increase the existing misery on the ground.

And as I said, the US’s contemplated action utterly disrupts the efforts of anyone and everyone to do their part to improve the state of the world and the people on it. We’ve been working to integrate new measures in the algorithms we create at the Tau Institute, in order to bring about more nuanced and effective ratings, and we’ve been analyzing specific regions in addition to specific nations in our research.

We’ve aimed since our inception to create a unique way to look at the role of technology and economic development in the nations of the world. We integrate a number of technology and social factors, then adjust things for local cost-of-living, to ascertain the true relative commitment of a nation to information technology and its benefits. The higher the relative use — and growth — of information technology, the more vibrant a country will become, in our view. We’ve also found that the idea of disruptive change is valid, as many of the recently turbulent Middle Eastern countries have scored well in our rankings.

With our small team based in Northern Illinois and Manila, Philippines we’ve consulted with companies and organizations on every inhabited continent now. We’ve been endorsed by economists, business leaders, and government officials. We are in the midst of seeking new alliances and resources so that we can expand our work.

I’ve been writing about technology since God was a boy and Bill Gates was a non-billionaire, and continue to be fascinated by the real change it brings. Real and significant increases in productivity have led to improved economies and lives in places ranging from wealthy Finland to bright-burning South Korea to emerging success stories in Eastern Europe, Eastern Africa, and Southeast Asia.

The past few years have been full of talk about cloud computing and related topics. It’s fun to have discussions at some points, and hold armchair seats at other points, as different stacks are debated, the virtualization era continues to develop, and co-opetition ebbs and flows. The end of all this will be, as it always has been, real progress.

But all that we do is obliterated when violence rears its ugly head. Bad enough that casual violence takes 15,000 lives per year in the US, and at rates far higher than that in many parts of the world. Worse when state actors get involved to repress and kill their people. Worse yet, in my opinion, when massive technologies of violence can be brought to bear so easily and antiseptically by a very small number of people in Washington, DC.

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Cloud Expo: Big Data Analytics Using Hybrid Cloud Implementations

Getting the most out of Big Data means unprecedented amounts of processing power and storage, a wide variety of tools and technologies, and plenty of sandbox space for data scientists to play in. Choosing whether to execute on a Big Data strategy in the cloud or on-premise is not cut-and-dry. For many companies, a thoughtful analysis often leads to a hybrid strategy.
In his session at the 13th International Cloud Expo®, Paul Zolfaghari, President of MicroStrategy, will discuss how “hybrid BI” began as a strategy for complete transition into the cloud and has become a viable long-term strategy to reduce risk and deliver Big Data analytics effectively, efficiently and economically.

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Myth Busting: Top Five Hosted Exchange Myths Busted

Maintaining email servers is a full-time job including server maintenance, filtering spam, blocking viruses, and creating backups. A hosted Exchange service frees up IT time by putting all of these tasks in the hands of the email host. Even still, the myths surrounding hosted Exchange persist. Let’s knock them out one at a time to see why Exchange might make sense for you.
Myth #1: Hosted Exchange is Only for Large Businesses
Because of the time it takes to manage an Exchange server, small businesses can take the most advantage of a third-party email system. While large businesses can also use Exchange, small business IT departments have more tasks to keep the company running. Allowing the host to manage the email servers takes much of the busy work away from IT personnel, so they can focus on more internal issues instead of maintaining servers.

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Top 12 sites for free Cloud & enterprise software research

One of the most common questions I get from students is where they can find free cloud computing and enterprise software research.

Few if any of my students work for companies who have subscriptions with top analyst firms however.

A small group of students are working on a start-up on the side and want to absorb as much market data as they can.

Many of my former students are also in IT management roles, and when they become interested in a specific cloud computing or enterprise topic over time, they write me and ask if I have any data on their subject of interest.  I keep the following list updated from them too.   To serve all these students I’ve been adding to the list shown below for a number of years. None of these companies are current or past clients and I hold no equity positions in any of …

Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: Advanced Analytics for All

Today when it comes to analytics it’s a choice between simplicity and power:
Experts can use automated techniques like machine learning
Analysts can manually do statistical analysis
Business users can use rudimentary visual analysis
The future is Advanced Analytics for All (AA4A) combining the power of machine learning with the simplicity of visual analysis. Cloud computing cuts the cost of such computationally expensive analysis, and makes it available to everyone over any device.
In his session at the 13th International Cloud Expo®, Arijit Sengupta, CEO of BeyondCore, will discuss through real case studies how AA4A methodology is already saving lives, money and delivering invaluable insights automatically.

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Cloud Expo: Converging OpenStack Compute with NexentaStor Storage

Reliable, scalable storage is a key component of cloud deployments. Those deploying an infrastructure cloud frequently opt for network-attached storage (NAS) over local storage, to make it simpler to implement enterprise-grade features.
By combining OpenStack Compute, today’s industry-standard open source cloud platform, with NexentaStor, the most popular open storage solution, companies can build clouds that are feature rich, avoid vendor lock-in, offer complete control of the stack, and reduce costs by unlocking the ability to use less expensive commodity hardware.
In his session at the 13th International Cloud Expo®, Boris Renski, Co-Founder & Executive Vice President of Mirantis, will discuss how Mirantis, a leader in engineering services for OpenStack Cloud, and Nexenta, which provides enterprise-class storage solutions, integrated NexentaStor with OpenStack Compute.

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Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: Would You SaaS Your Security Management?

In his session at the 13th International Cloud Expo®, Dave Asprey, VP of Cloud Security at Trend Micro, will discuss why security management belongs in the cloud even if your company’s other systems have not yet been moved to the cloud. Understand how to shift your focus and rethink security management itself.
Cloud Expo delegates will:
Learn the pros and cons of hosting your own security management solution
Understand how threats are evolving and how security management systems respond
Gain new ideas about how to manage security across mixed environments with cloud and virtualized private data centers

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Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: Business APIs in the Cloud

Business Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) are becoming the predominant mode of driving applications from multiple touch-points (mobile, web, tablets, game consoles, ebook readers, phablets, automobiles, etc) and these APIs are being liberated from sitting behind corporate firewalls and migrating to the cloud.
In his session at the 13th International Cloud Expo®, Sal Visca, CTO at Elastic Path Software, will describe the approach Elastic Path has taken to develop an intelligent (Level 3) REST API that can be used on-premise, in the cloud or set up in a hybrid environment and how these APIs can provide a mediation layer that can provide tremendous application deployment flexibility.

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Gamification Webinar: Build an Enterprise Strategy That Lasts

Join Badgeville and guests Doug Palmer, Deloitte Consulting Principal and Brace Rennels, Director of Community Strategy at EMC for this upcoming webinar, where you will learn:
Key trends driving gamification strategies
Practical tips for designing gamification by audience type
Best practices for building long-term gamification solutions
Doug will share best practices learned from introducing gamification into some of the largest organizations around the world, including key challenges and barriers to overcome.
Brace will share his experiences on how a global technology company like EMC is currently leveraging gamification to drive sustainable engagement across its community, and what key techniques have contributed to its success.

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