Automate Workloads in the Hybrid Cloud By @Automic | @CloudExpo [#Cloud]

Incorporating the Cloud as part of an IT operations environment can help organizations control costs and gain competitive advantage. However, there are significant challenges when integrating and automating business application workload that spans on-premises and Cloud environments. Implementing an IT automation solution that aligns well with these challenges is one of the most important IT Operations decisions a company can make.

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Microservices: New SOA Architecture or Buzzword? | @CloudExpo [#Microservices]

The terms Micro Services and Micro Services Architecture are often used. It is an architecture based on independent relatively small components named Micro Services.
Some people may think that Micro Services Architecture is a new and improved Service Oriented Architecture (SOA). It is not.
Martin Fowler is the first name mentioned in articles about Micro Services. Fowler is a British Software Engineer specialized in Software development.
I read the article: Microservices in Fowler’s Web site. I am more confused about Micro Services characteristics after reading the article.

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Majority of firms say they aren’t confident in responding to cloud-based data threats

(c)iStock.com/Imilian

If data stored in the cloud is under threat, what would you do: fight the fire or hide under the bed and hope everything goes away? The majority of respondents in a recent survey admitted they would do the latter.

The research, commissioned by Informatica and conducted by the Ponemon Institute, found 60% of global respondents were “not confident” they had the ability to proactively respond to cloud-based data threats. 80% said not knowing if sensitive or confidential information could be exposed represents a significant security risk.

Some of the statistics were particularly eye-opening:

  • 65% of respondents said not knowing the location of sensitive or confidential data “kept them up at night”, and was more of a fear than hackers (25%) and employee mistakes (18%)
  • Only 19% of organisations polled have a common process for implementing new controls and preventative measures in the presence of a new threat
  • Just over one in five (21%) respondents said they would be able to detect a breach all the time

One aspect of the research the majority of respondents agree on is the use of automated solutions for discovering where sensitive data has proliferated – three quarters (73%) believe automated solutions would make their company’s data security activities more effective.

Recent surveys on the state of cloud security are still providing negative, nerve-jangling results. A CipherCloud assessment on cloud data protection found compliance and auditing privacy was the biggest security challenge associated with cloud computing. Compliance (64%) was the primary concern, followed by unprotected data for documents (32%).

Similarly, 90% of users polled in the LinkedIn Information Security group said they were either “very” or “moderately” concerned about public cloud security.

It’s worth noting as well that Informatica isn’t releasing the survey information out of the goodness of their heart either. The company is also launching Informatica Secure@Source, a solution which enables enterprises to take a data-centric approach to information security. You can find out more about that here, and more on the Ponemon Institute report here.

Traditional banks vs. disruptive competitors: Why agile infrastructure matters

(c)iStock.com/urbancow

By Martin Cooper, Technical Director of SolidFire

There are few industries which can match the financial services sector for the sheer volume of rules and regulations governing personal information and data. This complex set of requirements and regulation creates unique tension within well-established financial services companies. They have to operate and update existing infrastructure, but also need to develop and expose new services to a customer base that expects to do everything online.

Fast growing newcomers are using a ‘digital-first’ approach to fundamentally change the way consumers manage their money. In doing so, they are significantly disrupting the status quo within the industry and established institutions know they must evolve quickly to beat the newcomers at their own game or risk becoming obsolete.

Accenture’s 2014 UK Financial Services Customer Survey found that usage of internet banking has stabilised at around 80% amongst UK consumers over the last three years, but the real growth area at present is in mobile banking. Fuelled by the ubiquity of mobile devices, low-cost data and the widening availability of mobile apps, 27% of UK consumers now use mobile banking at least once a month (compared to just 10% in 2011), with the trend showing no signs of slowing down.

The key strength of new disruptive challengers, such as Apple Pay and PayPal, is their willingness to embrace cloud infrastructure

The same report also found that consumers are becoming less fussy about who they bank with. One in five consumers would hypothetically consider banking with brands such PayPal and The Post Office, and one in eight with Tesco or John Lewis if they delivered a more seamless digital banking experience than the traditional high street banks.

The key strength of new disruptive challengers such as Apple Pay and indeed, PayPal, is their willingness to embrace agile technologies such as cloud infrastructure in order to offer consumers the services they want, when they want them. Until recently, lingering doubts over the safety and security of cloud solutions meant many traditional financial services organisations didn’t consider them as viable. However in the face of dangerous new competition, a growing body of evidence supporting the security and performance of cloud-based platforms, and the expanding range of options available, the opportunity cloud presents is simply too big to ignore any longer.

Not only can cloud solutions offer greater flexibility and collaboration opportunities, but their scalable nature means they can be used as DevOps environments for the rapid prototyping of potential new digital products and services, with banks able to easily discard the ones that don’t work and quickly move forward with the ones that do. So as security fears are allayed and cloud adoption begins to gather pace, much of the debate has shifted to the technological aspects of adoption.

For many, the risk of integrating new applications and technology with legacy systems is now the biggest concern. They are right to be worried. Across the cloud industry a perfect technology storm is forming. Virtualisation, automation and software-defined networking are all reaching maturity but the storage layer upon which everything else is built is still largely dominated by ageing technology and outdated thinking. It is the technological equivalent of building a new house on sand, an approach doomed to fail from the start. However, recent advances in technology – made possible by falling prices of solid-state (or flash) storage – are bringing some big changes.

Foremost among these is the ability to narrowly define the performance characteristics of each and every application.  It’s now possible for organisations to dial-up or dial-down the performance of each app, so ‘supply’ of performance can be closely matched to end-user ‘demand’.

Traditional high street banks know they must evolve or die in the face of disruptive new competition

These new storage foundations can also speed new apps’ progress from the sandbox to the production environment.  As the volumes of data each new app handles grow, technical personnel can very easily add new storage devices – increasing capacity and hiking performance at the same time.

Capabilities like these are critical for a 24/7 industry which simply can’t afford disruptions. This is because scale-out flash storage has no single points of failure: that compared to other storage options, it is far less vulnerable to unexpected downtime.

Traditional high street banks know they must evolve or die in the face of disruptive new competition. After a slow start, many are now starting to capitalise on the latest digital technology to take on the competition at their own game, but this cannot be done half-heartedly. Banks cannot afford to shut up shop completely while they rebuild their IT infrastructure from scratch – instead, they must innovate over the top of existing systems, which may be decades old.

A scale-out flash storage platform that can guarantee both performance and uptime is undoubtedly one of the essential building blocks, helping financial institutions launch innovative new services – and giving their new competitors a dose of their own medicine in the process.

Embracing Software Defined By @StorPool | @CloudExpo [#Cloud]

As Marc Andreessen says software is eating the world. Everything is rapidly moving toward being software-defined – from our phones and cars through our washing machines to the datacenter. However, there are larger challenges when implementing software defined on a larger scale – when building software defined infrastructure.
In his session at 16th Cloud Expo, Boyan Ivanov, CEO of StorPool, will provide some practical insights on what, how and why when implementing “software-defined” in the datacenter.

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The Solution for ITS and Legacy Messaging: Syndeo | @CloudExpo [#Cloud]

Messaging is a critical function for any organization. This is especially true for the Military and Intelligence communities, where it is imperative that vital messages reach intended recipients as quickly as possible.
The first messaging system was hand-written notes. While functional, these did not provide a timely way to get a message to a recipient quickly over a long distance, and could be intercepted. With the advent of the telegraph system, message transferal became much faster, but no more secure.

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Hyrbid cloud management vendor CliQr scores $20m from Polaris Partners, Google

CliQr has raised $20m in its third round of funding, which the vendor said will be used to bolster its international expansion

CliQr has raised $20m in its third round of funding, which the vendor said will be used to bolster its international expansion

CliQr, a provider of hybrid cloud management services, has secured $20m in series C funding in an investment round led by Polaris Partners with participation from Foundation Capital, Google Ventures and TransLink Capital.

It can be tricky managing workloads that sit on diverse public and private cloud platforms, within one pane of glass, and even more difficult making sure those workloads port over to different cloud platforms that are distributed to varying degrees.

That’s the space CliQr fills with its flagship software offering, Cloud Centre; the company says its offering is based on proprietary “app-centric” technologies that enable hybrid cloud workload lifecycle management without having to do any scripting or tweaking under the hood of the migrated apps.

The latest funding round, which brings the total amount secured by the company since its founding to $38m, will be used to bolster CliQr’s expansion globally.

“CliQr built its technology and reputation by listening to customers about their requirements for the cloud,” said Gaurav Manglik, chief executive officer and co-founder of CliQr.

“To meet our customers’ needs, we are delivering on our vision for unshackling applications from the complexity of ever-changing hybrid cloud environments. Our approach is validated by a strong product platform, enterprise customers, worldwide partners and top-tier investors. We’re ready to put this new investment to work by helping us expand globally to meet skyrocketing demand for our platform,” Manglik said.

Webinar | Cloud Backup: What Customers Really Want

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Cloud Backup: What customers really want

If you’re looking to grow your cloud services business, backup is a great way to do it. The cloud provides a convenient place to store backups offsite – and even recover in the event of a disaster – for all those organizations without their own second site. But what does it take to succeed in the evolving cloud backup market?

In this webinar brought to you by Business Cloud News and Veeam, we’ll discuss six “must-haves” that today’s savvy backup buyers are looking for.

You’ll learn new ways to market and enhance your cloud backup offering to more effectively:

  • Engage prospects
  • Demonstrate your expertise
  • Differentiate yourself from the competition

There’s money to be made and marketshare to be captured in the cloud – and the winners will be those providers that align to customer needs. Join the availability, virtualization and cloud experts from Veeam to learn how – register for the webinar today!

 

SPEAKERS:

Luca Dell’Oca, Product evangelist and service provider specialist for Veeam

Luca Dell’Oca (vExpert, VCAP-DCD, CISSP) is a product evangelist and service provider specialist for Veeam. Luca is a popular blogger and an active member of the virtualization community. Luca’s career started in information security before focusing on virtualization. His main areas of expertise are VMware and storage design, with a special emphasis on large enterprises, hosting, cloud (CSPs) and managed service providers (MSPs). Follow Luca on Twitter @dellock6 or @veeam.

Jonathan Brandon, Editor, Business Cloud news

Jonathan Brandon is editor of Business Cloud News where he covers anything and everything cloud. Follow him on Twitter at @jonathanbrandon

IBM, NASA team on cloud, open data app code-a-thon

NASA is teaming up with IBM to host a code-a-thon for developers interested in supporting space exploration through apps

NASA is teaming up with IBM to host a code-a-thon for developers interested in supporting space exploration through apps

IBM and NASA are partnering on the space agency’s Space App Challenge, which will see participating developers build applications that help solve space exploration challenges.

The goal is to get developers building applications that can be used to solve space exploration-related challenges using cloud-based services and publicly available data sets. Some initial applications include a system that uses data aggregators and analytics to help NASA tracks asteroids, and an app that uses senor data streams to guide movement for robots.

As part of the deal IBM will be offering up its Bluemix platform-as-a-service and Watson analytics for developers participating with the three-day code-a-thon, which is being coordinated by the space agency online; more than 10,000 developers are expected to participate across 136 cities.

The company also plans to allocate IBM staff to offer best-practice development tutorials for handling some of its cloud and big data technologies.

NASA is making available datasets from over 200 data sources including services and tools supplied through real-life NASA missions and technology.

“The NASA International Space Apps Challenge is at the forefront of innovation, providing real-world examples of how technology can be used to by the best and brightest developers in the world to solve some of the most daunting challenges facing our civilization,” said Sandy Carter, general manager, cloud ecosystem and developers, IBM.

“Using the IBM Cloud, IBM is making it easier for developers to solve NASA challenges by helping them leverage and make sense of data in ways that wouldn’t have been possible even just a few years ago,” Carter said.

The space agency has previously partnered with other cloud provider on similar initiatives. Last year NASA partnered with Amazon Web Service to host terabytes worth of climate and earth sciences satellite data to promote community-driven research and innovation using its data.

Playing with Parallels Access and the Samsung S Pen

Guest blog by Abdul Rahman, Parallels Support Team As Parallels Access grows, the Parallels team is constantly introducing new enhancements and features to the product. I have a Samsung Galaxy device for personal use, so I’m going to talk about a feature of Parallels Access that is relevant to this kind of smartphone. Drumroll, please… […]

The post Playing with Parallels Access and the Samsung S Pen appeared first on Parallels Blog.