AWS targets games developers with Lumberyard and Gamelift services

computer game developmentAmazon Web Services (AWS) has launched new services, Lumberyard and Gamelift, to help developers create games and build communities of fans. By simplifying the infrastructure work it could help keep games developers loyal to its cloud services.

Amazon Lumberyard is a free, 3D game engine which developers can use to create games on any IT platform while using the computing and storage resources of the AWS Cloud. According to Amazon, Lumberyard’s visual scripting tool can open up the games development market because it allows non-technical game developers to add cloud-connected features to a game. It claims that features such as community news feeds, daily gifts or server-side combat resolution can be added in minutes through a drag-and-drop graphical user interface.

The other new AWS service, GameLift, aims to simplify the launch and operational management of session-based multiplayer games. Used in combination the two new services will make it easier for games developers to ramp up capacity to order as demand for high-performance game servers fluctuates. The services makes it easier for games developers to cater for fluctuating demand without the expense of additional engineering effort or upfront costs, says AWS.

Amazon Lumberyard is free and available today in beta for developers building PC and console games. A version for mobile and virtual reality (VR) platforms is ‘coming soon’ it says. GameLift is charged on a per-player basis, with fees currently $1.50 per 1,000 daily active users on top of the standard AWS services fees.

Developers typically need to bring 20 technology components to build the highest-quality games, according to Mike Frazzini, Amazon Games’s VP. The expense of resources such as real-time graphics rendering, animation systems and physics simulation make this a prohibitive and risky market to be in.

“Game developers asked for a game engine with the power of commercial engines but significantly less expensive and deeply integrated with AWS for the back,” said Frazzini. AWS now provides that with Lumberyard and GameLift, he said.

Developing and maintaining a back-end infrastructure for multiplayer games requires time, money and expertise that are beyond the reach of most developers, according to Chris Jones, Obsidian Entertainment’s CTO. “GameLift removes much of that burden from the developer, allowing them to focus their energy on bringing their game ideas to life,” said Jones.

VMware broadens its Horizon 7 and Horizon Air

VMWare campus logoCloud infrastructure vendor VMware has announced that VMware Horizon 7 and VMware Horizon will be simpler to set up, faster, easier to maintain and more flexible.

Version 7 of Horizon promises new features that VMware describes under the headings of just in Time Delivery, Blast Extreme, application life cycle management, smart policies and Integration with VMware Workspace ONE.

The new Just in Time Delivery option, a product of Instant Clone Technology (formerly Project Fargo) means managers can provision 2,000 desktops in under 20 minutes. Blast Extreme offers options for GPU off-load to increase scale and mobile network support. The new Application Lifecycle efficiencies promise to cut storage and operational costs by up to 70% and slash the time needed for managing images by up to 95%. Smart Policies and integration with VMware Workspace ONE will both improve management of internal resources.

Meanwhile VMware’s Horizon Air has a hybrid-mode that will pave the way for a simple out of the box set-up, the vendor says. Having achieved that, users can create and scale desktops faster, with new Instant Clone technology integrated with VMware’s App Volumes and User Environment Management technologies.

Another major advantage, according to VMware, is greater hybrid cloud flexibility. In practical terms this will mean that applications and desktop workloads can be moved back and forth from on-premises data centres to the cloud more effectively. The process will be managed from a consistent Cloud Control Plane and will support the use of the cloud as a primary system for everyday work, or as a secondary use case for desktop bursting or disaster recovery.

VMware Horizon 7 and VMware Horizon Air with Hybrid-mode are expected to be generally available before March 2016. VMware Horizon 7 pricing starts at $250 per user for on-premises perpetual licenses. VMware Horizon Air Hybrid-mode cloud subscription pricing starts at $16 per user per month for named users and $26 per user per month for concurrent connections.

“VMware Horizon Air will provide our team with the opportunity to scale desktops on an as needed basis with access to VMware’s public cloud in both Europe and the United States,” said user Jason Bullock, executive director of IT global infrastructure and support at BDP International.

Wind River launches vCPE NFV platform

Network Function VirtualisationIntel subsidiary Wind River has added to its NFV portfolio with the announcement of a new product which focuses on the virtualization of customer premises equipment (vCPE). The vendor claims it has strengthened its VNF offering to bring initiatives like vCPE management closer to reality.

Wind River’s new Titanium Server CPE software adds to the vendor’s existing NFV portfolio. vCPE is one of the primary NFV use cases mooted by the telecoms industry; the improvements to Wind River’s software could mean all functions traditionally configured on each piece of hardware at the customer’s premises can now be handled centrally and instantly replicated across the cloud.

According to Wind River, the improvements to the Titanium Server portfolio (Titanium Server and Titanium Server CPE) will create faster network performance, allow networks to ramp up in size instantly and simplify the commissioning of new additions to any network. The vendor also claims the Titanium Server portfolio’s new software stands up to the carrier grade needed for telecom networks.

The cost of administering moves and changes, which is often time consuming and labour intensive, is one of the areas that telcos view as ripe for efficiency improvements. However, the virtualization of CPE functions has proved a challenging ambition to fulfil. The replacement of a system which individually configures each physical appliance (such as a switch or handset) with a centrally managed one could slash operating expenditure (OPEX). The savings would come by substituting the work of multiple physical configurations, requiring a site visit, with a single software change that can be published to all devices on all points of the telecoms cloud, using the new Titanium Server CPE platform, according to Wind River.

Among the new features added to Titanium Server are dynamic CPU scaling, greater system scalability, a virtual switch packet trace tool and the capacity for bulk provisioning and automated deployment. The new release also now supports QinQ tunnelling, IPv6 support for all interfaces and has updated support for all the latest high-performance network interface cards (NICs). It also supports VNF access to hardware acceleration devices, such as the Intel Communications Chipset 8925 to 8955 Series.

The new incarnation of Titanium Server CPE launch follows collaboration with NFV software partners Brocade, Check Point, InfoVista and Riverbed.

Titanium Server and Titanium Server CPE will be showcased at Mobile World Congress 2016.

Battles with Micro-Second Synchronicity By @JamesCarlini | @CloudExpo #Cloud

In the middle of World War II, very basic and primitive computers were designed to improve accuracy for naval gunfire. The first computers ran complex mathematical applications to calculate trajectories and gunfire from large battleships. The size of the computer was huge and was made up of vacuum-tube technology. You could literally walk into the computer. (And needed to, when a tube went bad and you had to replace it.)

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Wearables in the Workplace | @ThingsExpo #IoT #M2M #BigData #Wearables

With the Apple Watch making its way onto wrists all over the world, it’s only a matter of time before it becomes a staple in the workplace. In fact, Forrester reported that 68 percent of technology and business decision-makers characterize wearables as a top priority for 2015. Recognizing their business value early on, FinancialForce.com was the first to bring ERP to wearables, helping streamline communication across front and back office functions.
In his session at @ThingsExpo, Kevin Roberts, GM of Platform at FinancialForce.com, discussed the value of business applications on wearable devices, use cases and predictions for the evolution of wearables in the workplace.

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Why 2016 needs to be the year of granularity for cloud

(c)iStock.com/alengo

A recent business conversation led to the establishment of the fact that the data centre business is becoming more cutthroat than ever. Price wars, advanced offerings, upsells and what not are the usual tactics that have been used, but now competing forces are pressuring data centre providers to go beyond the usual and utilise something new.

Data centre businesses are now relying more and more on leveraging strategic footprints, global presence and larger capabilities to educate and work with customers at a local level – in the United States alone, there are an estimated 3 million data centres. With data centre services more abundant than grocery stores, how will the model sustain itself and what will determine the winners from the losers? My answer: granularity.

Granularity needed by MSPs

Managed service providers (MSPs) work day in and day out with end users. The core of their business revolves around providing cloud services and solutions to their customers. This may include computing power, database, hoisting, storage and many other services that are cloud based. MSPs, however, are facing a challenging time as well. For example, their relationship with data centres, where the need for granularity is evermore necessary.

Consider this: IOTA Services, a medium-scale MSP, has over 800 customers. All 800 customers are hosted on a third-party data centre owned by TrueNorth Data Centre. At the end of every month, TrueNorth Data Centre provides an invoice to IOTA Services for all their utilisation of the infrastructure within the data centre. IOTA Services then looks at what aspect of the infrastructure is used by each customer and then splits the invoice based on a homemade logic consisting of multiple Excel worksheets.

This is one of the biggest challenges faced by MSPs overall; the granularity of consumption. Data centres today can really propel into the success domain by helping MSPs deal with their challenges. Providing data and infrastructure services today is not enough and having more control over your information, infrastructure and the consumption of it is key. If data centres reply on MSPs to drive their business, it makes more sense to empower SPs with what they need to drive the business forward.

Ultimate value for end users

MSPs, on the contrary, are now able to completely view the usage of infrastructure and services at the data centre level and can easily make sense of all the services used by each of their customers. This plays a key role at the end-user level where say a small consulting company that uses IOTA Services to host some of their data and exchange server can now see exactly how much it costs from an IT aspect, assuming, of course, there are adequate margins and other business due diligence in place. End users may have proprietary software or nice software solutions they have deployed. Knowing how much in very precise terms becomes invaluable.

More reasons for granularity to be key

As software solutions have evolved, we are now at a time where the consumption of IT is a key aspect in every business. I have spoken about the need for chargeback and empowering IT to charge back the services and solutions they offer in an enterprise environment for this very reason. Unless you have such a unique offering that nobody else offers in the universe, you will face the same economic terms as everyone else.

Be it the economy, the need to lower expenses, the need to improve margins and the absolute need to scale; everyone has the same set of problems. Knowing where you spend, stopping the bleed and optimising the business are just essentials you should be doing anyway. As a business end user, I absolutely do not want to pay for anything that I do not use. This trend of consumption is growing – be it in our personal lives or the workplace. Enabling this value proposition forms the bedrock of business profitability.

Where to go from here?

We are all going to use a lot of data and IT services going forward. Data centres are amazing with the offerings they have, and so are MSPs who are providing much-needed solutions and services to millions of businesses and essentially helping organisations enable and embrace the cloud. Unless we have an element of granularity built into the billing of cloud solutions and services at every level, we are going to face the challenge of not being happy for what we pay. This is purely because human beings love granularity and businesses especially need granularity to make sense of what they are spending. Global economies are not helping either. Whether it is Canada, the United States or China, daily changing market conditions and economic conditions makes conducting business more difficult.

Let’s make 2016 the year of granularity and help bring more knowledge to what we consume. Let’s also engage in a meaningful conversation with our customers, clients, service providers and peers to know more about the consumption model, cloud, chargebacks, and of course granularity. Do you have ideas about cloud granularity? For the sake of value, let’s start a granular conversation.

Why Aren’t You Managing Your Macs? Part 2

Like any other new concept, accepting the fact that your organization has Macs in your network might take some time. (If you’re not sure what stage you’re in, read our blog post, “The 5 Stages of Acceptance for Managing Macs in Business” and find out. We’ll be waiting for you.) Griffith University didn’t waste any […]

The post Why Aren’t You Managing Your Macs? Part 2 appeared first on Parallels Blog.

How to Configure a Smart Card Authentication

We’ve just launched the new version of Parallels Remote Application Server v15, with amazing new features. To ensure a smooth transition when upgrading to this version, please review the upgrade procedure (based on best practices) available in this KB article. This article describes one of the new features of Parallels Remote Application Server: Smart Card […]

The post How to Configure a Smart Card Authentication appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Google offers extra 2GB storage, while StreamNation and CudaDrive head into the sunset

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Contrasting fortunes in cloud storage this week: Google has tempted its user base with an extra 2 gigabytes of cloud storage if they have their security settings correctly configured, while the StreamNation and CudaDrive services are to shut down in the coming months.

StreamNation was launched in November 2013 with the aim of being the “first personal library in the cloud”, but the company says it hit a roadblock, and is now moving towards Project Noah, originally a side project launched in 2015 which aims to take the pain out of uploading to the cloud.

“While uploading documents is pretty fast through a normal internet connection, uploading heavy files takes a lot of time,” wrote Jonathan Benassaya, CEO and founder of StreamNation, in a blog post entitled ‘Toward a new chapter’.

“We tested different solutions to try and overcome this,” he added. “For a while, we would ship some of our users a hard drive, but we found hard disk drives were unable to sustain more than two deliveries. We also tried to have different data centres across the globe, but while we’ve experienced improved performances, it was not enough.”

For CudaDrive and Copy, a service provided by Barracuda Networks, the “difficult” decision came about after a shift in business focus.

“While this is a big change, the path forward is an exciting one as the CudaDrive engineering team will be joining forces with that Barracude backup team to accelerate the key initiatives for that product,” wrote Barracuda VP and GM storage business Rod Mathews in a company blog, adding: “There is a huge amount of opportunity in backup, data protection and business continuity features in the cloud, and adding the talented people from the CudaDrive team will allow us to more quickly and efficiently deploy new features and satisfy market and customer demands.”

On the other side of the coin, Google is dangling a 2GB carrot to users who check their security settings in line with Safer Internet Day. The move echoes the comments Brian Taptich, CEO of Bitcasa, when he told this publication back in November that competing with the likes of Microsoft, Amazon and Google on their own terms is akin to a “suicide mission” after the former shuttered its unlimited OneDrive service.

StreamNation will be discontinued on March 8, while CudaDrive will shut down on May 1.

Cutting the cord: Why the cloud is the future of app delivery

(c)iStock.com/Stephan Zabel

IT is challenged by the line of business to deliver a competitive edge to compete in a global market. Securely delivering apps and data to any device is a core IT workflow to enable productivity. 

However, if you are like most companies, your IT budget is not growing at the same pace as demand for IT services. To be more agile, the current paradigm around app delivery needs to be turned upside down. IT needs to cut the cord.

IT’s evolution: From plow horse to racehorse

IT and the work world have come a long way. Remember the days when the IT department issued you a standard black PC and employees worked at desks? Back then, IT was focused on analysing available IT solutions and then executing multiyear plans. It was common for IT to be working on multi-year programs for SharePoint, ERP, and CRM systems.

Those days are gone. Today, businesses are competing in a much faster paced environment, which requires them to be agile and responsive to market changes. They must also be in tune with their customers’ needs and empower them to make critical business decisions in real-time.

Top executives at the biggest corporations are now handling most of their business via their mobile device because they need to be able to make decisions where customers, suppliers, and employees are at exactly the moment it matters. CEO of Coca-Cola Germany, Ulrik Nehammer, says about his need to be mobile that “the most dangerous place to make a decision is in the office.”

Today, IT is really the X factor that drives business success. Speed is the new IT currency. IT departments must rollout highly flexible plans that can deliver tangible results within a single quarter rather than in 1-2 years. 

A changing workplace: Mobility requires agility

Increasingly, productivity occurs outside the office.  More than 50% of employees work in a remote office outside of headquarters. That means IT needs to provide them with real-time access to productivity apps and data. For many IT departments, these new demands must still be met using a constrained budget. It’s typical for IT to be expected to do more with less.

In response to new user requirements,IT often deploys app delivery technology, such as virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI). This solution quickly delivers desktop, applications, and data to any user on any device.  

Building infrastructure slows IT down

The problem with VDI is that many companies still believe it requires building significant infrastructure. Unfortunately, this approach doesn’t result in more agile IT. While building IT infrastructure does give the IT department ultimate control, the downside is that it can take several quarters to build it and then move it into production. Typically, it takes at least six to nine months to deploy VDI, and even then it often doesn’t perform well for users. By then, business demands have changed. 

One of the biggest drawbacks of buying and building infrastructure is that it locks IT into a generation of technology and a set of vendors for three to five years.  It also makes it more difficult to adopt best of breed technology and meet changing business demands.

The cloud: Speed, flexibility, and agility

In today’s environment, IT must respond to business needs as fast as possible. Ideally, the technologies it adopts should be nimble and capable enough of deploying and scaling quickly with rollout completed within a single quarter, and be neutral or platform agnostic, not locking a company into a specific technology or vendor.

The cloud meets these two most important criteria. When companies can figure out how to cut the cord and move to a cloud service, IT gains the agility it requires. Cloud services are platform agnostic, as well as highly flexible, deploying and scaling instantly.

App delivery via the cloud

The most efficient method of providing secure access to desktops, applications, and data to any employee’s device is VDI – deployed via the cloud. As a cloud service, VDI does not require IT to build any infrastructure because its infrastructure lives in the cloud.  Keep in mind that not all VDI cloud services are the same. Typically, they fall into two categories; traditional architecture hosted on the cloud and offered as a service, or a 100% cloud-based service.

Both provide the benefits of speed. However, the 100% cloud option features these additional benefits:

  • Reduced operational complexity results in lower total cost of ownership
  • Companies are not locked into long-term proprietary platforms or technologies
  • Technology agnostic, which ensures seamless support for new technologies

Summary

In the current economic climate, businesses must be highly responsive to customer needs, and employees must be empowered to make critical decisions on the spot. Because the market is constantly in flux, IT must transition to a more agile model that is cost optimised, highly flexible, and doesn’t lock the companies into any long-term solutions. Cloud services are the ideal response to these needs, and a 100% cloud-based VDI solution is the best available.