Racemi Sets Record Year in Revenues, Sales Bookings | @CloudExpo #Cloud

The maker of automated server migration software reports sales bookings increased 460 percent year-over-year and last week IDC forecast spending on public cloud services will grow to more than $141 billion in 2019. Seems (at last) we are at the tipping point where enterprises are adopting cloud in a big way opening opportunities for those who can help with the transition.

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Introducing Windows Azure Resource Manager (ARM) By @DaveBerm | @CloudExpo #Cloud

Over the past year, Microsoft has been introducing Azure Resource Manager (ARM) as the preferred way to provision and manage resources in its Azure cloud. ARM is the successor to the original Service Management model, also known as “Classic.”[1] While Classic will continue to be supported for the foreseeable future, ARM is the preferred deployment model and all new Azure features are being released on ARM only. Here is an overview ARM and the new features it provides.

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Box, IBM and Black Duck announce security offerings amid open source vulnerabilities

Security concept with padlock icon on digital screenTwo more services have been launched with the aim of shoring up the security of the cloud, as its popularity sees it becoming increasingly targeted for attack.

File sharing company Box has launched a customer-managed encryption service, KeySafe, in a bid to give clients more control over their encryption keys without sacrificing the ease of use and collaboration features of Box. Meanwhile UK-based open source security vendor Black Duck has been recognised under IBM PartnerWorld’s ‘Ready for IBM Security Intelligence’ designation.

Box’s KeySafe aims to centralise sensitive content in the cloud, and promises new levels of productivity and faster business processes. Box Enterprise Key Management (EKM) uses Amazon Web Services (AWS) and a dedicated hardware storage module (HSM) to protect keys used to encrypt sensitive data. Box also has a service that integrates with AWS Key Management Service so customers can control their encryption keys. The service is intended to be simple and uses a software-based technology that doesn’t need dedicated HSMs.

Box says it can never access a customer’s encryption keys, which the customer owns. The main selling points of KeySafe, in addition to this independent key control, are unchangeable usage policies and audit logs and a ‘frictionless end user experience’ with simple data. Pricing is to be based on size.

In another security announcement, Black Duck’s new offering through IBM follows a research finding that 95% of mission critical apps now contain open source components, with 98% of companies using open source software they don’t know about. With 4,000 new open source vulnerabilities reported every year, Black Duck claims that cloud computing is creating greater vulnerabilities.

IBM has announced that Black Duck Hub has been validated to integrate with IBM Security AppScan in order to identify and manage application security risks in custom-developed and open source code. The hub now provides a clarified view within IBM Security AppScan which will help spot problems quicker. Black Duck Hub identifies and logs the open source in applications and containers and maps any known security vulnerabilities by comparing the inventory against data from the National Vulnerability Database (NVD) and VulnDB.

“It’s not uncommon for open source software to make up 50 per cent of a large organisation’s code base. By integrating Black Duck Hub with AppScan, IBM customers will gain visibility into and control of the open source they’re using,” said Black Duck CEO Louis Shipley.

Skyhigh, Check Point claim cloud security simplification

Cloud securityCloud access security broker Skyhigh Networks and security vendor Check Point claim they’ve jointly made security, compliance and governance policies for cloud services a lot easier to manage.

The initial launch of their combined service is aimed at regulating software, platform and infrastructure (SaaS, PaaS and IaaS) as a service offerings.

The integration of their security offerings means that mutual customers can use Skyhigh’s cloud access security broker (CASB) and Check Point’s firewall more effectively while taking less time to set up and enforce internal policies. The idea is to alleviate the work of enterprise security managers as they try to comply with external regulations and protect corporate data.

Meanwhile Skyhigh is offering a free cloud audit as it claims that an all time high adoption of cloud has not been matched by cloud security standards. According to the Q4 2015 Skyhigh Cloud Adoption and Risk Report, the average company uses 1,154 cloud services and uploads over 5.6 TB to file sharing services each month. However, this vast migration of data to the cloud is creating a security gulf, it claims, because the rush to cut costs has seen companies lose visibility and control over their IT estate.

The combined Skyhigh Check Point service promises to shed more light on the state of the network, enforce data loss prevention (DLP) policies, protect company data, consolidate usage of cloud services, identify any risky data uploads or downloads from questionable service providers and protect against data exfiltration attempts. By applying threat intelligence to analyse cloud traffic patterns, detecting anomalous behaviour and remediating against users or cloud services the two partners claim they can restore the levels of security enterprises need, by making it easier to implement.

“Companies want to embrace cloud services, but they can’t leave behind security controls as corporate data moves off-premises,” said Chris Cesio, business development VP at Skyhigh Networks.

MapR gets converged data platform patented

dataCalifornia-based open source big data specialist MapR Technologies has been granted patent protection for its technique for converging open source, enterprise storage, NoSQL and other event streams.

The United States Patent and Trademark Office recognised the detail differentiation of the Hadoop specialist’s work within the free, Java-based programming framework of Hadoop. Though the technology is derived from technology created by the open source oriented Apache Software Foundation, the patent office has judged that MapR’s performance, data protection, disaster recovery and multi-tenancy features merit a recognisable level of differentiation.

The key components of the patent claims include a design based on containers, self-contained autonomous units with their own operating system and app software. Containers can ring fence data against loss, optimise replication techniques and create a system that can cater for multiple node failures in a cluster.

Other vital components of the system are transactional read-write-update semantics with cluster-wide consistency, recovery techniques and update techniques. The recovery features can reconcile the divergence of replicated data after node failure, even while transactional updates are continuously being added. The update techniques allow for extreme variations of performance and scale while supporting familiar application programming interfaces (APIs).

MapR claims its Converged Data Platform allows clients to innovate with open source, provides a foundation for analytics (by converging all the data), creates enterprise grade reliability in one open source platform and makes instant, continuous data processing possible.

It’s the differentiation of the core with standard APIs that makes it stand out from other Apache projects, MapR claims. Meanwhile the system’s ability to use a single cluster, that can handle converged workloads, makes it easier to manage and secure, it claims.

“The patent details how our platform gives us an advantage in the big data market. Some of the most demanding enterprises in the world are solving their business challenges using MapR,” said Anil Gadre, MapR Technologies’ senior VP of product management.

Tech News Recap for the Week of 2/1/2016

Were you busy last week? Here’s a tech news recap of articles you may have missed for the week of 2/1/2016!

Tech News Recap

Data was leaked as the United States’ largest police union servers were hacked. Microsoft thinks its Project Natick submarine datacenters could be the answer to cleaner cloud services in the future. Cisco spends $1.4 billion on Jasper’s Internet of Things platform. Barracuda has released its New Essentials for Microsoft Office 365 offering. The company SugarCreek is using both VMware NSX and Cisco ACI in its datacenter (we held a webinar on this topic a few months back).

[On-demand Webinar] VMware NSX vs. Cisco ACI: When to Use Each, When to Use Both.

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

 

 

Why company culture is key to cloud success

(c)iStock.com/konradlew

If you ask any successful company for the key to their success, or ask any employee why they are happy in a position, the answer is almost always “the people”. But what makes happy, productive people is usually fueled by a thriving company culture.

Company culture is not built with free lunches, ping pong tables, and bring-your-pet-to-work days. Only companies that develop more meaningful values soar ahead of the rest.

Technology companies and particularly those in the cloud space have a unique challenge in fostering a healthy culture. The market is evolving at a dizzying pace and the competition to source qualified employees is fierce. The threat of continual staff turnover can disrupt team harmony, delay DevOps transformation efforts, and reduce client satisfaction. How do companies maintain DevOps projects by finding the right staff and vendors that build and align with company culture?

Here are a few things to watch out for when building company culture or sourcing your next partner:

Share innovation

The connection between a company’s willingness to experiment with new ideas and employee satisfaction is well known. Company cultures that encourage experimentation, have early access to new feature or product releases, carve out time for their teams to understand, test, and tinker with them allow engineers to be innovative, elevate the team around them, and service clients more effectively.

However, how the company communicates these experiments and centralises learnings across teams it is often undervalued. “Innovation sharing” is especially critical in cloud migration projects, where different lines of business are using the cloud in different ways; it is essential that one team’s core learning becomes another team’s playbook.

Companies that document innovation learn smarter. To implement this in your own team, start small by creating a central Wiki that is controlled and regularly audited by the senior-most engineers. Schedule monthly show-and-tells for technical teams; at Logicworks, we schedule ours on Fridays and make them BYOB. For sophisticated cloud teams, create a central GitHub that houses assets like cloud templates and reusable scripts, which can be checked out and modified by individual teams. As senior engineers review suggested modifications, they are able to standardise best practices and build key learnings into templates that everyone can reuse.

Everyone wins when everyone wins

Good organisations recognise the accomplishments of individual contributors. Great organisations celebrate in the shared responsibilities of the collective team’s achievements. Every company has superstars, but few are successful without those superstars rolling up their sleeves to collaborate and provide mentorship. This practice helps companies disprove the old adage “you are only as weak as your weakest link” by creating an environment where everyone is empowered to build on the strengths of others.

Migrating and maintaining cloud resources is new and challenging for every team. Even the most advanced engineers are learning new skills and making mistakes. In a cloud environment where mistakes are usually less costly and errors can be fixed rapidly, it is more important that the team grow stronger than that everything run perfectly. This “blameless” culture is what fosters experimentation and ultimately yields to higher trust between development and systems teams, improving time-to-market and product quality.

Transparency yields better vision

Companies that have established transparency as a foundational element of their culture inspire a more honest workplace, allowing its employees the benefit of understanding career paths and company direction. Transparency stimulates a shared sense of ownership in the company’s success. But what does transparency actually look like, and how do executives maintain a level of discretion while involving all team members?

Simplicity works best here. Hold staff meetings that highlight the performance of teams and discuss project updates, goals, and metrics. Talk about who you are planning to hire and why. The CEO or CFO should discuss the financials of the company. This is a hard one for many companies, but an absolute game-changer in getting the entire staff aligned on revenue strategy.

If you are looking for a partner, this is equally true. There are many players that appear to look good on paper, but when you dive deeper are financially unstable, misrepresent services or experience, or lack vision. Companies that are forthcoming in showcasing their financial health, proven experience, and vision demonstrate a stronger commitment to current services as well as future growth.

Customers are partners, not numbers on a sales report

Companies that respect their clients or customers cultivate more positive company cultures. This is not about building a better customer service department, but about the tone set by all managers towards customers and clients — especially if this is an IT project and customers are internal. How do engineers talk about its customers internally? Is it acceptable to ridicule “silly” customer or employee questions around the watercooler? A company that sees its clients as annoyances, mocks them, or sees them as a number fosters negativity and an overall unhappy workplace.

Cloud projects stretch IT departments and IT vendors thin. There is a lot to be done, and often not a lot of time to do it. But if IT thinks of itself up as beleaguered and overwhelmed, it begins to turn away meaningful interactions and criticise customers. Once this tone sets in, it can be difficult to leave behind.

Again, this starts with managers. What metrics are managers measuring? Is it as important to hit retention numbers as to hit sales numbers? How are positive client interactions or positive cross-departmental stories highlighted? Are customer-facing employees empowered to take extra time on a client? How many clients does each account manager or IT person support? Are deadlines determined without the involvement of IT, which causes bad feelings all around?

While this is difficult to measure in prospective vendors, it is crucial to get references, certifications, and first-hand meetings with non-sales staff up front. To handle the complexity of your projects, you want an IT partner you can trust and that has developed a positive internal culture that values your business.

Keeping employees and clients successful, engaged, and innovative is about investing in cultivating a culture that empowers staff, values innovation sharing, and continually challenges itself to evolve as a company. Although the principles outlined above may seem like common sense, surprisingly few companies actually embed them into their culture. The companies that do will reach and exceed their cloud goals.

The post Company Culture is Key to Cloud Success appeared first on Gathering Clouds.

How to Configure a Terminal Server, Publish Applications and Enroll New Users

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) here. This article describes one of the new and cool features of Parallels Remote Application Server: Quick Start Configuration Wizards. […]

The post How to Configure a Terminal Server, Publish Applications and Enroll New Users appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Introducing Private APIs for SwaggerHub By @fehguy | @CloudExpo #API #Cloud

Since launching SwaggerHub in 2015, we’ve received a ton of great feedback from users about how we can improve the platform to help teams collaborate on and coordinate more effectively across the workflow of the API cycle.
To kick off 2016, we are excited to announce a few significant upgrades to SwaggerHub:
Our most requested feature, Private APIs, is now publicly available.
With Private APIs, you can now create API definitions, collaborate, and share your designs privately within SwaggerHub. You have full control over the release of API definitions to the public on a per-version basis.

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With or Without Net Neutrality, Business Can Deliver Fast Internet | @CloudExpo #Cloud

The Net Neutrality fight has been all over the news this year with the latest installment on Net Neutrality coming in from T-Mobile. Private and public companies alike are tuned into to this continual saga to see how the eventual outcome will affect business and ultimately their online lives. But whether the FCC’s recent ruling on Net Neutrality stands the test of time or not, there is a new technology that will provide customers fast, reliable Internet services at much lower costs than private business lines.

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