Web application security. Everyone knows how important it is (and if they don’t, they should) and yet the complexity of managing services that provide it often result in, shall we say, less than holistic coverage of applications. At least that seems to be the case given some rather disturbing statistics around the rise of bots and malware, which can often be deposited thanks to some overlooked or obscure web application vulnerability. Some in the application itself, others in the platform (remember Apache Killer?), and still others in the protocols used by just about every web application in existence (HT to Heartbleed).
Monthly Archives: April 2015
DevOps Institute ‘Association Sponsor’ of @DevOpsSummit | @DevOpsInst
SYS-CON Events announced today that the DevOps Institute has been named “Association Sponsor” of SYS-CON’s DevOps Summit, which will take place on June 9–11, 2015, at the Javits Center in New York City, NY.
The DevOps Institute provides enterprise level training and certification. Working with thought leaders from the DevOps community, the IT Service Management field and the IT training market, the DevOps Institute is setting the standard in quality for DevOps education and training.
Printing in Parallels Desktop
Guest blog by Ramya Subramanian, Parallels Support Team Wondering if setting up a printer in Parallels Desktop is too difficult? Trust me, it isn’t! There are several ways to set up a printer depending on your needs and preferences: Share a printer from Mac®. Connect a USB printer directly to Windows®. Connect to a local […]
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CenturyLink acquires Orchestrate to strengthen DBaaS offering
CenturyLink has acquired Orchestrate, a database-as-a-service provider specialising in delivering fully managed, high performance, fault tolerant NoSQL database technologies.
CenturyLink said that Orchestrate, which partners with AWS on public cloud hosting for its clients’ datasets, will help bolster its cloud-based database and managed services propositions.
“CenturyLink’s customers, like most enterprises, are expressing interest in solutions that help them meet the performance, scalability and agile development needs of large-scale big data analytics,” said Glen Post, chief executive officer and president of CenturyLink.
“The Orchestrate database service’s ease of use and ability to support multiple database technologies have emerged as key differentiators that we are eager to offer our customers through the CenturyLink Cloud platform,” Post said.
As for drivers of the acquisition, the company said growing use cases around the Internet of Things is creating more demand for fully-managed NoSQL technologies. Orchestrate offers a managed service that basically abstracts many of the underlying hardware and database-specific coding away and delivers an API that enables developers to store and query JSON data easily.
The acquisition will see the Orchestrate services team join CenturyLink’s product development and technology organisation, with Orchestrate co-founders Antony Falco and Ian Plosker as well as vice president of engineering Dave Smith joining the company.
“CenturyLink Cloud features one of the most sophisticated service infrastructures in the market, with a great interface and lots of options for managing complex workflow and third-party applications in the cloud,” Falco said. “Orchestrate’s database service takes the same approach to delivering cost efficiency and ease of use. Enterprise customers are increasingly expecting one global platform to provide these services.”
Cloud democratises retail investor services
Cloud services are opening up possibilities for the retail investor to create individual customised funds in a way that was previously the preserve of the super-wealthy. Coupled with UK regulation such as the Retail Distribution Review, the effect has been to make new business models possible, according to Michael Newell, chief executive at InvestYourWay.
“Nobody is really talking about how the cloud is fundamental to what they do, but it is,” said Newell. “Where previously it might have taken days or even weeks to get the information to set up a fund, and to change your portfolio and positions completely, and to activate your account, it now takes just a few seconds thanks to Amazon Cloud.”
Newell previously worked at BATS, where he was involved alongside Mark Hemsley in setting up the exchange’s ETF services. For some time, he had been increasingly aware of the kind of services that high net worth investors were getting and began to form an idea that someone could bring that to the common retail investor. The idea was to create a system where each individual person has their own fund. However, Newell soon realised that to make that possible, it would be necessary to service customers investing smaller amounts at significantly lower cost – something that had never really been viable up to that point.
“You’d never get that kind of individual attention unless you were high net worth,” he said. “If you’ve only got £2,000 to invest, it’s not going to be worth a fund manager spending the time with you and charging just a few pounds for their time, which is what they’d need to do to make it viable. It just didn’t work.”
Cloud services changed both the economics of the situation and the practicality of his original idea. Newell found that by obtaining computing power as a service, calculations that would have taken 48 hours on a laptop could now be completed in 30 seconds. A manual Google search process carried out by an individual to work out how best to invest might take days at the least, or more realistically weeks and even months – but on InvestYourWay, it can be done in seconds because the process is automated.
Part of the impetus for the new business was also provided by regulatory change, which began to make it easier to compete in the UK with the established fund managers. Specifically, the Retail Distribution Review which came into effect in January 2013 had the effect of forcing fund managers to unbundle their services, providing transparency into previously opaque business charges. Customers could now see exactly what they were being charged for, and that has had the effect of forcing down prices and changing consumer behaviour.
“It’s amazing that it took so long to bring that to the retail investor,” said Newell. “If you think about it, all of this has been happening in the capital markets for years. The focus on greater transparency and unbundling. The clarity on costs and fees.”
However, the idea still needed visibility and a user-base. This was provided when the platform agreed a deal with broker IG, under which InvestYourWay became a service available as an option on the drop-down menu for IG customers. The platform launched in October 2014, offering investment based on indexes rather than single stocks. This was done in part to keep costs down, and partly for ideological reasons. Newell explains that alternative instruments such as ETFs are popular, but would have involved gradually increasing slippage over time due to the costs of middle men. Focusing on indexes removes that problem.
The platform also claims to be the first to offer non-leveraged contract for difference trading. While around 40% of trading in London is estimated to be accounted for by CFDs, normally these are leveraged such that an investor who puts in £1,000 stands to gain £10,000 (but may also lose on the same scale). But IYW’s contracts are not leveraged.
The interface of the platform has quite a bit in common with the latest personal financial management interfaces. The first page consists of a time slider, a risk slider, and the amount the user wants to invest, as well as preferred geographical focus – Europe, America or Asia. After that, users get a pie chart breaking down how the service has allocated their investment based on the sliders. For example, into categories such as North American fintech startups, Asian banks, European corporates, etc. Users also get bar charts showing the historical performance of the fund they are designing, as they go along. They can also see an Amazon-style recommendation suggesting “People who invested in X, also bought Y…”
After that, the user is presented with optional add-ons such as investment in gold, banks, metals, pharmaceuticals, and other areas that may be of special interest. Hovering the mouse over one of these options allows the user to see what percentage of other funds have used that add-on. Choosing one of the add-ons recalibrates the fund that the user is creating to match, for example adding a bit more Switzerland if the user selected banks.
In a demonstration seen by Banking Technology, it was possible to adjust a fund by getting out of Europe and moving the user’s investment to Asia in a few clicks. According to Newell, it would take weeks to do that the traditional way. The process might involve moving money from one fund manager to another or starting an entirely new fund. It was also possible to see how much the cost of that move was – in a demonstration seen byBanking Technology, on a £10,000 investment the cost was £13. Prices are matched to the most recent available end of day data.
IBM reports flat revenues but cloud revenue is up 75%
For Q1 2015 IBM reported flat revenues year on year and operating income slightly up on last year, due in part to currency impacts and some of the recent restructuring efforts at the firm, respectively. But the company also reported strong performance in its ‘as-a-service’ segment.
The company reported strong growth in its Power and mainframe businesses, with quarterly mainframe revenue more than doubling (with particularly strong growth in China). The company said Power showed strong performance in the scale-out systems market as well, in part due to the expansion of Power architecture in SoftLayer datacentres.
But at $19.6bn in the first quarter of 2015 revenue at dropped for the 12th consecutive quarter at IBM if a stronger dollar and the impact of divested businesses are taken into consideration.
The company’s chief financial officer Martin Schroeter aimed to reassure the market that bold moves to invest in new areas like Internet of Things and restructure its business were having a positive impact.
IBM is spending billions to shift its focus on lower-margin strategic initiatives like cloud, big data, mobile, security and IoT, and is continuing to “rebalance” its workforce at the same time.
“As we continue the transformation of our business, I’d expect a similar level of workforce rebalancing next quarter, which will impact our year-to-year profit performance,” Schroeter said.
“At our investor briefing at the end of February, we spent a lot of time on how we are transforming our business to where we see long-term value in enterprise IT. We have a core portfolio that’s high value to our clients and high value to us. Quite frankly, it’s essential.”
“While the market for these capabilities isn’t necessarily growing, we continue to reinvent and innovate to deliver that value,” he added.
But performance in areas of strategic importance for IBM looks promising. Schroeter said the annual “as-a-service” run rate stands at $3.8bn, up $1.5bn in the last year. Cloud revenue was up over 75 per cent from last year; on a trailing 12-month basis, the company reported cloud revenue of $7.7bn, with analytics up more than 20 per cent and social more than 40 per cent.
VMware open sources IAM, cloud OS tools
VMware has open sourced two sets of tools the company said would accelerate cloud adoption in the enterprise and improve their security posture.
The company announced Project Lightwave, which the company is pitching as the industry’s first container identity and access management tool for cloud-native applications, and Project Photon, a lightweight Linux operating system optimised for running these kinds of apps in vSphere and vCloud Air.
The move follows Pivotal’s recent launch of Lattic, a container cluster scheduler for Cloud Foundry that the software firm is pitching as a more modular way of building apps exposing CF components as standalone microservices (thus making apps built with Lattice easier to scale).
“Through these projects VMware will deliver on its promise of support for any application in the enterprise – including cloud-native applications – by extending our unified platform with Project Lightwave and Project Photon,” said Kit Colbert, vice president and chief technology officer for Cloud-Native Applications, VMware.
“Used together, these new open source projects will provide enterprises with the best of both worlds. Developers benefit from the portability and speed of containerized applications, while IT operations teams can maintain the security and performance required in today’s business environment,” Colbert said.
Earlier this year VMware went on the container offensive, announcing an updated vSphere platform that would enable users to run Linux containers side by side with traditional VMs as well as its own distribution of OpenStack.
The latest announcement – particularly Lattice – is part of a broader industry trend that sees big virtualisation incumbents embrace a more modular, cloud-friendly architecture (which many view as synonymous with containers) in their offerings. This week one of VMware’s chief rivals in this area, Microsoft, announced its own container-like architecture for Azure following a series of moves to improve support for Docker on its on-premise and cloud platforms.
Amazon and Microsoft Bring Public Cloud Storage to a New Level
Microsoft announced last week that Azure Premium Storage would soon become widely available. The week before this announcement, Amazon launched their Elastic File System, a new public storage cloud, at the AWS Summit. Both of these have helped the adoption of using the cloud.
Public storage is usually available in one of three types. Object storage is exposed via standard REST APIs to store and retrieve data. Block storage files are attached to a VM and then become available as local disks. Lastly, archival storage is an alternative to tape-based backing systems. This type of storage is used to store data that is not accessed very often. These three storage types address specific situations, but the network file share equal on the public cloud is missing from the equation.
Amazon’s Elastic File System (EFS) provides multiple E2 instances with low-latency, shared access to file systems. EFS provides flexible capacity that adjusts as files are added or removed and is accessible from both Microsoft Windows and Linus operating systems. Because it is available as a multi-user, shared service, it is being backed up with SSD-based storage. The data is copied over multiple zones for redundancy and availability. EFS integrates with Amazon’s security model based on Identity and Access Management (IAM) and VPC security groups. Managers can use standard file and directory permissions to control who can access the systems.
Before this service, customers had to set up dedicated file servers, and this extra step resulted in higher operating and maintenance costs. With EFS, customers get a managed file sharing service backed by SLA, and they only pay for what they use each month. Amazon is charging $0.30 per GB per month, which is 10 times more expensive than Amazon S3 which costs $0.03 per GB per month (excluding access charges and bandwidth). However, while the data stored in S3 can be accessed from any application, the data stored on EFS is available only to those applications running in Amazon EC2. EFS is also primarily meant for administration and management.
Amazon is not the first to offer a shared file system like this. Microsoft’s Azure announced a file service last year. Customers look for performance matching when they decide to shift their workloads to the cloud. In recent years, public cloud providers tried to address this by moving to Solid State Drives (SSDs). This type of storage is expensive, but customers still prefer to run their workload sets on them. Microsoft’s Azure Premium Storage claims to offer the best public cloud storage for this type of work. The Premium Storage is aimed for Azure VM workloads that require constant IO performance and low latency. It needs to be attached to Azure DS Series VMs in the form of a Page Blob or Data Disk. Multiple disks can be attached to a VM in order to get up to 32 TB of storage per VM. With the right configuration, VMs can reach what is considered the best performance on the public cloud: 50,000 IOPS.
The new storage can be used by both Windows and Linux VMs. The fee structure is as follows: 128GB for $17.92, 512GB for $66.56 and 1TB for $122.88.
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HIMSS15: Healthcare Needs a Cloud Wellness Plan By @BlueBox | @CloudExpo
The healthcare world is often overwhelming, and as a first time HIMSS exhibitor we were amazed at the scale and complexity of the event, not to mention the number of “cloud” providers who didn’t actually offer cloud services.
The frenzy of activity at HIMSS15 was a fitting reflection of the overwhelming nature of the healthcare system. Fortunately, we got better and better at navigating the show as the conference progressed, made great connections and left with significant promise for building new relationships in the industry.
The mammoth size and scope of the show serves as a fitting metaphor for how infrastructure…
DevOps for Legacy Apps From @BluePhoenixMod | @DevOpsSummit [#DevOps]
Modern Systems announced completion of a successful project with its new Rapid Program Modernization (eavRPMa”c) software. The eavRPMa”c technology architecturally transforms legacy applications, enabling faster feature development and reducing time-to-market for critical software updates.
Working with Modern Systems, the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB) leveraged eavRPMa”c to transform its Student Information System from Software AG’s Natural syntax to a modern application leveraging C# and SQL Server. The newly modernized system enabled UCSB to leverage agile development methods and more extensive application integration.