Alibaba Cloud announces launch of data centres in India and Indonesia

Alibaba Cloud has announced plans to expand to data centres in India and Indonesia, as well as a connectivity partnership with Tata Communications.

The move to Mumbai and Jakarta goes alongside the recent expansion to Malaysia, with the company saying in press materials it ‘will significantly increase its computing resources in Asia’. The Indonesian data centre will be the first such development from an international cloud company, according to Alibaba, while the expansion will take the Chinese firm’s total number of data centre locations to 17, including China, Australia, Germany, Japan, Hong Jong, Singapore, the UAE, and US.

“I believe Alibaba Cloud, as the only global cloud services provider originating from Asia, is uniquely positioned with cultural and contextual advantages to provide innovative data intelligence and computing capabilities to customers in this region,” said Simon Hu, Alibaba senior vice president and president of Alibaba Cloud in a statement.

“Establishing data centres in India and Indonesia will further strengthen our position in the region and across the globe.”

Elsewhere, Alibaba Cloud and Tata Communications announced a partnership to afford customers from more than 150 countries – citing India in particular – greater connectivity through the companies’ ExpressConnect and IZO Private Connect products respectively.

“We are confident that the partnership between Alibaba Cloud and Tata Communications will assist both of us to become true digital transformation partners for our customers, empowering them to expand to new geographies, boost productivity, safeguard their business against threats, and take customer experience to the next level,” said Genius Wong, Tata president global network cloud and data centre services. “We look forward to offering more global organisations connectivity to Alibaba Cloud and to strengthening our presence in the Chinese market.”

According to the most recent analysis from the Asia Cloud Computing Association (ACCA) in April last year, Indonesia and India ranked #11 and #12 out of 14 nations respectively, with both countries scoring particularly low on international connectivity (1.8 and 1.7 respectively) and data centre risk (2.7 and 1.9). The report noted India’s ‘clear challenge’ in securing reliable access to cloud services and building the infrastructure for a huge population, while citing the need for Indonesia to implement a ‘coordinated plan to tackle the needs of the digital economy’ for cloud readiness.

Tech News Recap for the Week of 06/04/17

If you had a busy week last week and need to catch up, here’s a tech news recap of articles you may have missed for the week of 06/04/2017!

Everything new with VMware vRealize. HPE announces new storage offerings. Best practices to manage your hybrid cloud. A deep dive into DevOps. Top 5 promises we hear when evaluating hyper-converged infrastructure and more tops news this week you may have missed!

Remember, to stay up-to-date on the latest tech news throughout the week, follow @GreenPagesIT on Twitter.

Tech News Recap

Featured

Microsoft

  • Microsoft leak reveals new version of  Windows 10 aimed at monster PCs and workstations
  • Microsoft CVP Brad Anderson shares his insights on everything Office 365

HPE

VMware

Cloud

IT Operations

Security

Register for our upcoming webinar and find out how cloud is killing traditional help desk, and learn about what end users need now to stay productive and happy (June 27th)

By Jake Cryan, Digital Marketing Specialist

Microsoft is Poised to Meet the Growing Demands from India

India is one of the fastest growing economies in the world today. With more than a billion people, this country presents excellent opportunities for any company that is looking to expand and meet the demands of this burgeoning market. And cloud is not any different.

India represents almost a billion opportunities for the cloud market. This market is valued at about $1 billion currently and is growing at a rate of about 30 percent per year. There are many reasons for this astounding growth.

Firstly, India has a relatively young population that is making the most of technology. They are truly living through a digital revolution and this means, there’s abundance opportunity for the tech industry as a whole, and cloud industry in specific because cloud is the current and future of technology.

Secondly, IT leaders in India are looking to build an agile infrastructure, which again is going to be cloud-based. Thirdly, the government is taking extensive measures to make it easy for its people to interact with different departments, and they are also increasingly relying on cloud to implement this transition.

Fourth and probably the biggest reason is the presence of millions of businesses in the small and medium enterprise (SME) category that can benefit hugely from this move to the cloud. It is estimated that there are more than 30 million SMEs spread across the country and a vast majority are yet to embrace the cloud.

With such factors in place, cloud companies are expanding their presence in India to make the most of these opportunities. Among all the major players, Microsoft is well-poised to tap into this endless opportunity. According to Rajeev Sodhi, the country head of Microsoft India, the company spends more than $12 billion in research each year to create customized solutions and to help every business to leverage the power of cloud.

Keeping in tune with the local culture, Microsoft has adopted a people-centric approach to increase their clientele and this has worked well for the company so far.

To get a pulse of what Indians think of technology, Microsoft commissioned a study called “Asia Digital Transformation Study.” The results bring out some important trends. The survey clearly showed that Indians believe that artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things is essential for a digital transformation. Both these technologies have cloud as its underlying infrastructure.

To top it, 88 percent of surveyed individuals think that cloud computing and the widespread use of mobile devices will make it easier and more affordable to access data and information.

Microsoft has started making a few tweaks to its products based on the response received through this survey. In April, it announced new Azure tools and resources to help Indian companies adopt a hybrid environment for data storage and computing.

It even allows organizations to use Azure hybrid option directly from their Azure management portal itself, thereby simplifying a ton of tasks and process.

With such measures, Microsoft is looking to establish itself as a leader in this booming cloud market.

 

The post Microsoft is Poised to Meet the Growing Demands from India appeared first on Cloud News Daily.

Amazon shuts down unlimited cloud storage plan

Amazon has told customers it will no longer offer an unlimited cloud storage plan – although Prime members will continue to benefit from the service.

In an updated FAQ page, the company confirmed new customers will have the choice of 100 GB for $11.99 and 1 TB for $59.99, with those wishing for more able to go up to 30 TB at an additional $59.99 per terabyte. Any customer who signs up for storage with Amazon will automatically get 5 GB for free.

“Current customers will keep their existing unlimited storage plan through its expiration date,” Amazon explains. “At the end of their existing subscription, customers with auto-renew turned on and 1 TB or less of data stored will be renewed into the 1 TB plan for $59.99 per year.”

This is not the first time a vendor has cut ties on its all you can eat plans. In 2015 Microsoft turned off its unlimited OneDrive option for Office 365 customers, arguing some users took advantage to store ‘entire movie collections and DVR recordings’ with a 75 TB haul in the most extreme cases. “Instead of focusing on extreme backup scenarios, we want to remain focused on delivering high value productivity and collaboration experiences that benefit the majority of OneDrive users,” the company wrote at the time.

No information of such miscreants on Amazon’s side here, but the move to keep unlimited photo storage – the video production and photography industry was particularly critical of Microsoft’s shutdown in 2015 – is an interesting one. As a TechCrunch report points out, pictures have data which can potentially be extracted through machine learning technologies, making them valuable points for Amazon.

Amazon has been particularly busy of late; the company announced Greengrass, which aims to combine the power of their cloud and on-premise devices, earlier this week, as well as launching the AWS IoT Button, a Wi-Fi device which enables developers to get started with a variety of services without device-specific code, in Europe.

Containerized #Microservices App | @DevOpsSummit #DX #Serverless #DevOps

Containers, microservices and DevOps are all the rage lately. You can read about how great they are and how they’ll change your life and the industry everywhere. So naturally when we started a new company and were deciding how to architect our app, we went with microservices, containers and DevOps. About now you’re expecting a story of how everything went so smoothly, we’re now pushing out code ten times a day, but the reality is quite different.

read more

The challenge with unified comms and finding a way through the conferencing chaos

‘Unified communications’. A simple phrase to describe an aspirational outcome. But for most businesses today, the idea of a single solution for communications throughout the organisation is exactly that: an aspiration.

That’s not to criticise, of course, but it’s an understandable result of the way that different communications technologies have evolved and been introduced to organisations: from strategically planned solutions aligned to a company’s overall IT infrastructure, to the personal preference of an individual end user (and everything in between).

The use of video in communications is a case in point. High-end video conferencing suites have been around for many years, while video calling applications have familiarised consumers with the benefits of visual contact during remote conversations. As the intuitive user interfaces of consumer mobile and desktop applications is added to the quality of higher-end systems – and as the benefits of the cloud are brought to both – video communication in business has truly come of age. But, right now, most organisations are having to deal with multiple solutions, and the inefficiencies and management headaches it brings.

A state of ‘conferencing chaos’

A recent survey from Lifesize of companies across North America and Europe highlighted the issue of how most businesses have arrived at a state of ‘conferencing chaos’. Two-thirds of those companies surveyed have multiple conferencing and collaboration solutions within their walls. The primary reasons cited were the need to have solutions compatible with external suppliers, and the inevitable preferences of individual end users.

As you would imagine, most of the respondents were unsatisfied with the situation – from a management, quality and cost perspective – and would prefer to move towards fewer providers, if not a single one. And perhaps contrary to expectations, it was only respondents in North America who were most concerned about cost; European respondents identified ease of use and reliability as their primary drivers towards a simplified conferencing infrastructure.

The main frustration with using multiple solutions, however, was simply one of time. Unsurprisingly, it turns out that while employing many solutions may offer more options, it also takes more time for the IT team to train end users on all of those options. It also increases the amount of time needed to troubleshoot problems and manage multiple solutions. IT pros also mentioned compatibility issues, pointing to the time required to make sure that each of those solutions not only works individually, but also in various combinations and on all the conference room and mobile devices that employees – and their suppliers and clients – use to connect.

However, as we all know, achieving simplicity is far from simple. And, of course, in aiming for a simpler solution, it’s critical to avoid the pitfall of reducing functionality and not meeting users’ requirements. After all, user adoption is central to the success of any investment in technology.

Employees increasingly expect to be able to make connections within and outside the organisation quickly and easily on their own devices and without having to juggle multiple dial-in numbers or sit in a conference room waiting for IT to make it all happen. Hence the gravitation towards familiar, consumer applications, which aren’t always ‘enterprise class’, raising issues with security and compliance.

The IT dilemma

Meeting user expectations leaves IT professionals with a dilemma: Should they cobble together a custom solution from multiple vendors or take yet another chance on the promise of an all-in-one solution? Pulling together different solutions from multiple vendors can be flexible and less expensive (even free) but the complexity can leave both IT pros and employees confused and frustrated. On the other hand, an all-in-one solution may not always meet everyone’s needs and can lock businesses into expensive or ill-fitting bundle packages. And both approaches leave IT pros facing perhaps the most critical question of all – how do they choose a solution that employees will actually use?

In an ideal world, our survey respondents gravitated towards the benefit of using a comprehensive solution from a single supplier: 44% of IT pros reported being interested, very interested, or extremely interested in an all-in-one collaboration solution with audio, web, and video conferencing, and group chat from a single, trusted provider, with an additional 38% being ‘somewhat interested’.

The principal benefit of a solution from a single supplier was in simplified management for the IT pro, but the ease for end users was a close second, along with a raft of other associated advantages.

Bottom line, as organisations and the teams within them become increasingly dispersed, with productivity benefits of more flexible workstyles realised, and as collaboration within and between companies expands and improves, having intuitive, reliable, secure, and interoperable communications is clearly critical. 

It’s the End of Unlimited Cloud Storage at Amazon

The cloud market is maturing and prices are becoming more stable and sustainable than before. A clear signal of this trend is the latest move taken by Amazon to end its unlimited cloud storage plan. According to a statement released by the company, members of its Prime subscription plan alone will be eligible for unlimited cloud storage and that too only for photos.

Anyone signing for an Amazon Drive from today on will not be able to select the unlimited storage option Their only choices will be the 100 GB plan that costs $11.99 per year, 1 TB plan that costs $59.99 per year or the 30 TB plan that’s available for $59.99 for every additional TB. This is a big change from the earlier plans that cost customers $11.99 for unlimited storage of photos and $59.99 per year for unlimited storage of everything else. Of course, the first 5 GB is still free for all users.

This is a surprise move considering that Amazon introduced the unlimited storage option only in March 2015. In fact, this move triggered the price wars among cloud companies. As soon as Amazon announced it, other jumped on this aggressive pricing to increase their customer base. Google, for example, announced its own unlimited photo storage option just two months after Amazon’s announcement.

Though these price cuts brought much cheer to customers, industry analysts were skeptic simply because it’s not a sustainable model. They even predicted that the pricing wars would end, but never would they have thought it would end so soon. Exactly two years after Amazon started the whole process, it’s now tightening the screws and this could become a familiar story among other service providers too. At this point though, none of its rivals such as Microsoft or Google has announced any changes in their pricing. But, we can expect it soon given that Amazon is the leader in the cloud storage market and any change is likely to be emulated by others as well.

This brings up the question of what happens with existing customers? They will get to keep this unlimited storage plan until their expiry date. After that, customers who had opted for the auto-renew program will be charged $60 as they’ll go into the 1 TB plan if the data they’ve stored is less than 1 TB. Otherwise, they will be charged according to their storage size.

If you don’t have the auto-renew option setup, you can go to your dashboard and choose one of the limited storage plans that work best for you.

In case, you don’t make any selection, then your storage will fall into the “over quota status” which means, you can’t add any more files. But, you’ll still be able to view and delete content. In such a case, Amazon will give 180 days for users to decide what they want to do with their data. If no action is taken, then Amazon retains the right to delete your data until it reaches the quota limit, with the latest ones getting the axe first.

Well, that’s a lot of changes.

The post It’s the End of Unlimited Cloud Storage at Amazon appeared first on Cloud News Daily.

AWS makes Greengrass generally available to combine local data processing with the cloud

Amazon Web Services (AWS) has announced the general availability of Greengrass, which enables users to perform tasks on premise while leveraging the processing, analytics and storage of AWS’ cloud.

The company added that a variety of customers, including Konecranes, Nokia, and Stanley Black & Decker, are using the product for their Industrial IoT efforts.

As the company puts it, Greengrass extends AWS to devices which can act locally on the data they generate. This explains the Industrial IoT angle; for many industries, such as manufacturing and healthcare, not everything can go into the cloud, nor can new projects be built on brownfield developments.

AWS argues there are three ‘laws’ as to why local data processing is important; the laws of physics – it takes time for data to go to the cloud and networks do not have 100% availability – the laws of economics, sending only high-value data to the cloud, and the law of the land, which takes into account data sovereignty restrictions.

In a blog post Werner Vogels, CTO of Amazon.com, outlined the importance of the release. “Before AWS Greengrass, device builders often had to choose between the low latency of local execution, and the flexibility, scale, and ease of the cloud,” he wrote. “AWS Greengrass removes that trade-off – manufacturers and OEMS can now build solutions that use the cloud for management, analytics, and durable storage, while keeping critical functionality on-device or nearby.”

“We see AWS Greengrass as the enabler for a new set of digital services, allowing us to program and deliver software to equipment in a secure manner and without risking operational safety,” said Juha Pankakoski, executive vice president of technologies at Konecranes in a statement. “This supports well our aim to build the next generation of lifting as the leading technology company in our industry.”

Elsewhere, at the inaugural GeekWire Cloud Tech Summit, in Bellevue, Washington, software as a service (SaaS) technology business management provider Apptio said that more than three quarters (76%) of its customers were using AWS compared with 52% on Microsoft, with a rise in Azure usage noted. At the same event, as reported by GeekWire, Scott Guthrie, executive vice president of Microsoft’s Cloud and Enterprise Group, said that it was “pretty much Amazon and us in every single engagement” competing for business, although adding the Google, predominantly third in the analyst rankings for cloud infrastructure, was not to be underestimated.

Running the High Sierra Developer Beta in a Parallels Desktop virtual machine

Apple® announced the next version of the macOS®, High Sierra, on the first day of the Worldwide Developers Conference 2017. They made a beta version available later that day to developers. While beta releases of operating systems are not officially supported by Parallels Desktop® 12 for Mac, they will often more or less work. I […]

The post Running the High Sierra Developer Beta in a Parallels Desktop virtual machine appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Apple’s WWDC Recap: Siri-ous Upgrades!

Apple’s commitment to the developer community has exponentially grown. Every year, Apple® hosts the Worldwide Developers Conference to bring together 16 million developers to change the world. Of course, not all 16 million developers can physically attend the event in San Jose; only about 5,300 can. But Apple works hard to make the videos available […]

The post Apple’s WWDC Recap: Siri-ous Upgrades! appeared first on Parallels Blog.