Iron-Clad Cloud Networks By @JamesCarlini | @CloudExpo #IoT #Cloud

Today, most enterprises have some type of cloud-based solutions or are looking at cloud-based infrastructure for some of their enterprise applications. What is lacking in many organizations is the strategic design focus and sophisticated implementation for very secure infrastructure which not susceptible to cyberattacks.
Hardening data centers as well as enterprise networks (and clouds) is a critical step to ensure an organization’s business continuity. Forget “disaster recovery” as it is a dated term and dated concept. Disaster recovery refers to the organized shutdown of systems and then when the disaster (event) is over, a systematic restart of the total application is initiated.

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Apple opens sources Swift programming language

Apple SwiftApple has made its Swift programming language open source in a bid to invite more contributions from developers.

According to Apple community website 9to5Mac, developers have been reluctant to commit to a relatively new language whose code base may disappear at the whim of its monopolist owner. Though it was only introduced in 2014, Swift is the fastest growing programming language in history. According to analyst Redmonk’s Programming Language Rankings, June 2015 report, Swift has “the performance and efficiency of compiled languages and the simplicity and interactivity of popular scripting languages”.

As an open source language, Apple said, a broad community of developers from education institutions to enterprises could contribute new Swift features and help bring it to new computing platforms.

The Swift open source code is available via GitHub and includes support for Apple’s iOS, OS X, watchOS and tvOS software platforms as well as Linux. Components available include the Swift compiler, debugger, standard library, foundation libraries, package manager and REPL. Swift is licensed under the Apache 2.0 open source license with a runtime library exception, meaning users can incorporate Swift into their own software and port the language to new platforms.

In support Apple has published a web site, Swift.org, which explains Swift open source with technical documents, community resources and links to download the Swift source code.

“Swift’s power and ease of use will inspire a new generation to get into coding and take their ideas anywhere, from mobile devices to the cloud,” said Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior VP of Software Engineering, “By making Swift open source the entire developer community can bring it to even more platforms.”

Apple’s Swift team has now posted source code for the Swift compiler and standard library functions and objects.

Google signs five deals for green powering its cloud services

Cloud service giant Google has announced five new deals to buy 781MW of renewable energy from suppliers in the US, Sweden and Chile, according to a report on Bloomberg.

The deals add up to the biggest-ever purchase of renewable energy ever by a company that is not a utility, according to Michael Terrell, Google’s principal of energy and global infrastructure.

Google will buy 200 megawatts of power from Oklahoma-based Renewable Energy Systems Americas’s Bluestem wind project. From the same US state another 200 megawatts will be contributed by Great Western wind project run by Electricite de France. In addition, Google will also power its cloud services with 225 megawatts of wind power from independent power producer Invenergy.

Google’s data centres and cloud services in South America could become carbon free when the 80 megawatts of solar power that it has ordered from Acciona Energia’s El Romero farm in Chile comes online.

In Scandinavia the cloud service provider has agreed to buy 76 megawatts of wind power from Eolus Vind’s Jenasen wind project to be built in Vasternorrland County, Sweden.

In July, Google committed to tripling its purchases of renewable energy by 2025. At the time, it had contracts to buy 1.1 GW of sustainably sourced power.

Google’s first ever green power deal was in 2010 when it agreed to buy power from a wind farm in Iowa. Last week, it announced plans to purchase buy 61 megawatts from a solar farm in North Carolina.

Is your cloud wasting money? How to rein things in

(c)iStock.com/ohmygouche

Cloud costs are notoriously difficult to contain. With 50+ AWS services, complex usage pricing, and bills that list “EC2 costs” as a single line item, it is often hard to know who spent what — and then tie those numbers to project budgets and ROIs.

It is no wonder that cost monitoring tools have proliferated in the last two years. And while these tools help, they are only half the battle.

Recently, our team helped perform an audit of a large media organisation’s three year old AWS environment. While they employed cloud engineers on staff, those engineers were busy supporting code releases and putting out fires. This left them little time to update their environment with new AWS features or best practice configurations.

This is a challenge for every IT department. How does a single engineering team balance fire fighting, supporting major code push events, and still have time to do real maintenance on their cloud infrastructure?

This is what happens when a “DevOps” engineering team is tasked with doing everything quickly — but not given the tools to reduce manual maintenance and deployment work. This is what happens when you try to create a DevOps team without automating the infrastructure to support continuous integration and continuous delivery.

It should come as no surprise that our audit on this team’s AWS environment revealed that about 20% of their compute resources were being wasted. Another 15% of the instances could not be linked back to an active project. They had over-engineered VPCs and were still manually launching and updating instances, which meant each instance had different configurations based on which engineer launched the instance.

Automation solves this team’s problems in a number of ways. First, and most importantly, it reduces the amount of time that the team spends configuring instances and deploying new code. When you create a custom template for your environment, bootstrap it, and then set up an integration between auto scaling and your automated deployment process, you have an environment that can spin up new instances in minutes and deploy them with the latest version of code with little or no human intervention.

Not coincidentally, the system described above is also far less prone to deployment errors or the failure of a server instance. According to a survey of 20,000 engineers by Puppet, deployment automation and integrated tested reduce deployment failures by 60%. Teams that use deployment automation deploy 200 times faster. And among Logicworks clients, downtime in production environments is zero — compared to an industry average of 10.6 downtime incidents per year among clients not on AWS, according to the IDC.

Automation also has the potential to save your team money in a more subtle way: by reducing custom configurations and therefore the time it takes to fix something. When you need to make a small change to your environment and your engineers manually boot and configure instances, they have to make this change in the console or in the CLI, then create a new AMI. What happens if this new AMI causes a failure? Your engineers will probably comb through BASH logs. And then they will go through the console. And then they might just try to rebuild the AMI.  

If your engineers want to make a small change to your environment and instead modify AWS CloudFormation templates or a configuration management module, it might actually take longer. But the value to your organisation is enormous. You will have a single, living source of documentation for every change you make, versioned and timestamped. This will not only save them a ton of time in troubleshooting, but over time it will reduce the technical complexity of your environment and encourage modular template design, which further reduces the scope of potential errors.

This emphasis on documentation and templatization over manual CLI work will also save you when your cloud engineers leave — as they inevitably will, someday. (The average engineer tenure these days is about three years.)

To truly cut maintenance costs — and not just monitor them — automation is the key. The initial investment an engineering team makes in building and maintaining templates and automation scripts creates fewer errors, less fire fighting, and reduces risk — and makes your engineers happier, too.  

The post Is Your Cloud Wasting Money? first appeared on Gathering Clouds.

[video] Security and Compliance in the Cloud with @JDSherry | @CloudExpo @Cavirin #Cloud #DevOps

“We enable organizations to solve the key challenges around the security and compliance of hybrid clouds. We like to also capitalize on this new phenomenon called DevSecOps, which is making sure that security is built in as you release these platforms into the cloud,” explained JD Sherry, CEO of Cavirin, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at 17th Cloud Expo, held November 3-5, 2015, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.

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Tech News Recap for the Week of 11/30/2015

Were you busy this week? Here’s a quick Tech News Recap of articles you may have missed!

Tech News Recap

Microsoft and HP offer up more info about their recent partnership. Microsoft beefs up security products. Chinese hackers use Dropbox to attack Hong Kong media outlets. There were also good articles around digital transformation, the Internet of Things, the auto manufacturing industry utilizing cloud technologies, and more!

Interested in maximizing productivity and providing the support your line-of-business users need? Register for GreenPages’ upcoming webinar, “IT Help Desk for the Holidays: The Strategic Gift That Keeps on Giving.”

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

How to Become a Popular @CloudExpo Speaker | @ThingsExpo #IoT #DevOps #BigData

With 10 simultaneous tracks, keynotes, general sessions and targeted breakout classes, Cloud Expo and @ThingsExpo are two of the most important technology events of the year. Since its launch over eight years ago, Cloud Expo and @ThingsExpo have presented a rock star faculty as well as showcased hundreds of sponsors and exhibitors!
In this blog post, I provide 7 tips on how, as part of our world-class faculty, you can deliver one of the most popular sessions at our events. But before reading these essential tips, please take a moment and watch this brief video from Sandy Carter.

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Cisco boosts SDN range with ACI update

Cisco corporateCisco claims that customers can take a further step towards network automation as it launched a new release of Application Centric Infrastructure (ACI) software to its software defined networking range.

Despite massive demand there are only 5% of networks being automated, according to Cisco’s own customer feedback. In response it has moved to simplify the task by making it easier to address all the various autonomous segments of any complicated network infrastructure.

The new software revision of ACI makes it capable of microsegmentation of both physical (i.e. bare metal) applications and virtualized applications, which are separated from the hardware by virtual operating systems such as VMware VDS and Microsoft Hyper-V. By extending ACI across multi-site environments it will enable cloud operators and network managers to devise policy-driven automation of multiple data centres.

In addition, Cisco claimed it has paved the way for integration with Docker containers through its contributions to open source. This, it said, means customers can get a consistent policy model and have more options to choose from when using the Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller (APIC).

ACI now supports automated service insertion for any third party service running between layers four and seven on the network stack, it said. More support will be put behind cloud automation tools like VMware vRealize Automation and OpenStack, including open standards-based Opflex support with Open vSwitch (OVS).

The ACI ecosystem now makes the automation of entire application suites possible, including Platform as a Service (PAAS) and Software as a Service (SAAS) and there are now over 5000 Nexus 9000 ACI-ready customers using Cisco’s open platform it said.

“Customers tell me that only five to ten percent of their networks are automated today,” said Soni Jiandani, SVP at Cisco. Though they are eager to adopt comprehensive automation for their networks and network services through a single pane of management, they haven’t managed it yet. However, since several ACI customers have achieved full this could be the next step, said Jiandani.

HPE to give customer access to IaaS from NTT Communications

HPE customers can now get instant infrastructure as a service (IaaS) from NTT Communications portfolio following an agreement with the Japanese telco’s NTT America division.

The enterprise level service offers public, private and hybrid cloud options, plus NTT America’s professional services including cloud migration, data centre consolidation, managed infrastructure services and disaster recovery-as-a-service (DRaaS).

Demand for IaaS is rising, according to analyst Transparency Market Research which says the $15.6 billion online infrastructure market of 2014 will grow to become a $73.9 billion IaaS trade by 2022.

NTT American will be one of a few global IaaS partners to HPE, said its executive VP of Global Enterprise Services Jeffrey Bannister. Only integration of best of breed technologies within NTT’s own infrastructure can help customers stay ahead of their competition, said Bannister.

NTT Com’s secure network coverage (VPN) reaches 196 countries through a Tier 1 IP network and it has 140 data centres across the world with an enterprise-grade cloud footprint in 14 global markets and a planned expansion to 15.

In August BCN reported how NTT Com launched a multi-cloud connect service with direct private links to Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and other top tier cloud service providers.

What was once a disruptive innovation is the new norm as businesses shift to off-premise systems, said Chuck Adams, HPE’s Partner Ready Service Provider Programme director. “IaaS is IT infrastructure without the overhead,” said Adams.