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Tech News Recap for the Week of 8/17/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 8/17/2015.

Tech News RecapHackers posted Ashley Madison data. 3,000 residents in Colorado were impacted by a data breach. A hacking group believed to be operating from China hacked Indian targets. Microsoft showed off containers in a preview of Windows Server. Google now requires fewer of its own apps on Android devices. IBM will invest $3 billion for a new IoT unit.

 

Tech News Recap

Whitepaper: 10 Things to Know About Docker

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 8/10/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 8/10/2015.

Google announced a corporate restructuring, forming an umbrella company called Alphabet and naming a new CEO to the core business of Google. Symantec has agreed to sell its data storage unit, Veritas, for $8 billion. Microsoft dropped a new Windows 10 Mobile build for ‘fast ring’ subscribers of its Insider program. Global SMB IT spending is heading towards the $600 billion mark.

Tech News Recap

Download this whitepaper to learn how Docker can help you save time, money & avoid production bugs.

 

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 8/3/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 8/3/2015.

Tech News RecapPentagon computers were hacked and NBC has cited sources saying that Russia was behind the attack. There was also an attack on Sabre reportedly conducted by Anthem. Microsoft opened Windows Bridge for iOS to developers. Apple’s App Store broke customer records last month and a list of the top 25 innovators of 2015 in the IT industry was released.

Tech News Recap

 

Download our latest whitepaper: 10 Things to Know About Docker

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 7/20/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 7/20/2015.

Tech News RecapAnother big week of news on the security front.  We could see a spike in divorces after the Ashley Madison hack, and it also came to light that hundreds of thousands of vehicles are vulnerable and at risk of being hacked. In other news, Microsoft buys the cloud security firm, Adallom, and Google buys UI design firm Pixate.

 

Tech News Recap

Container management tools are a hot topic. Here are 10 things you need to know about Docker.

 

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 7/13/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 7/13/2015.

Tech News RecapSpending in the cloud IT infrastructure market is estimated to reach $33.4 billion this year. Gartner released its Magic Quadrant for x86 server virtualization. VMware and Microsoft are the leaders. Rackspace is pushing support for Azure.

Tech News Recap

Container management tools are a hot topic. Download our latest whitepaper, “10 Things to Know About Docker

 

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

10 Things to Know About Docker

DockerIt’s possible that containers and container management tools like Docker will be the single most important thing to happen to the data center since the mainstream adoption of hardware virtualization in the 90s. In the past 12 months, the technology has matured beyond powering large-scale startups like Twitter and Yelp and found its way into the data centers of major banks, retailers and even NASA. When I first heard about Docker a couple years ago, I started off as a skeptic. I blew it off as skillful marketing hype around an old concept of Linux containers. But after incorporating it successfully into several projects at Spantree I am now a convert. It’s saved my team an enormous amount of time, money and headaches and has become the underpinning of our technical stack.

If you’re anything like me, you’re often time crunched and may not have a chance to check out every shiny new toy that blows up on Github overnight. So this article is an attempt to quickly impart 10 nuggets of wisdom that will help you understand what Docker is and why it’s useful.

Docker is a container management tool.

Docker is an engine designed to help you build, ship and execute applications stacks and services as lightweight, portable and isolated containers. The Docker engine sits directly on top of the host operating system. Its containers share the kernel and hardware of the host machine with roughly the same overhead as processes launched directly on the host machine.

But Docker itself isn’t a container system, it merely piggybacks off the existing container facilities baked into the OS, such as LXC on Linux. These container facilities have been baked into operating systems for many years, but Docker provides a much friendlier image management and deployment system for working with these features.

 

Docker is not a hardware virtualization engine.

When Docker was first released, many people compared it to virtual machine hypervisors like VMWare, KVM and Virtualbox. While Docker solves a lot of the same problems and shares many of the same advantages as hypervisors, Docker takes a very different approach. Virtual machines emulate hardware. In other words, when you launch a VM and run a program that hits disk, its generally talking to a “virtual” disk. When you run a CPU-intensive task, those CPU commands need to be translated to something the host CPU understands. All these abstractions come at a cost: two disk layers, two network layers, two processor schedulers, even two whole operating systems that need to be loaded into memory. These limitations typically mean you can only run a few virtual machines on a given piece of hardware before you start to see an unpleasant amount of overhead and churn. On the other hand, you can theoretically run hundreds of Docker containers on the same host machine without issue.

All that being said, containers aren’t a wholesale replacement for virtual machines. Virtual machines provide a tremendous amount of flexibility in areas where containers generally can’t. For example, if you want to run a Linux guest operating system on top of a Windows host, that’s where virtual machines shine.

 

Download the whitepaper to read the rest of the list of 10 Things You Need to Know About Docker

 

 

 

 

Whitepaper by Cedric Hurst, Principal at Spantree

Tech News Recap for the Week of 7/6/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 7/6/2015.

Tech News RecapThe Obama administration revealed on Thursday that 21.5 million people were swept up in a massive breach of government computer systems. On Wednesday the New York Stock Exchange was halter for more than 3 and a half hours due to a technical issue. Netflix will be raising prices to customers in Chicago due to last week’s introduction of a cloud tax. Microsoft released Office 2016 for Mac.

Tech News Recap

Download our latest white paper: 10 Things to Know About Docker

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

The Second Wave of Wireless: MU-MIMO, More Data & Bigger Pipes

There have been some big changes around Wave 2 Wireless Technologies. Most of these were discussed out at Cisco Live, which I was lucky enough to attend. A new technology called MU-MIMO has been introduced. It means multiple user, multiple input, multiple output. MU-MIMO allows us to dynamically allocate space allowing multiple users to do multiple transitions and getting more data and more sessions moving at the same time. We’re also soon going to have 2.3 gigabit/second threshold. We will be moving tons more data through the wireless space! This is going to require bigger pipes to backhaul all of this information. Check out my short video below where I discuss these topics in more detail!

 

 

Are you interested in learning more about the next wave of wireless technologies? Email us at socialmedia@greenpages.com

 

 

By Dan Allen, Architect

Tech News Recap for the Week of 6/29/2015

Were you busy last week with the long 4th of July weekend? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 6/22/2015.

Tech News RecapAccording to a recent study, the healthcare cloud computing market could be worth $9.48 billion by 2020. The FBI is investigating a string of attacks on the West Coast targeting internet fiber optic cables. Microsoft has debuted its Skype Phone and meeting services for large companies. MasterCard users may soon be able to pay for online purchases with their face or fingers. Also, get a look at a health wristband Google is testing as well as Energous Corporation’s wireless charger for electronic devices that uses radio waves.

Tech News Recap

 

[eBook] The corporate IT department has evolved. Has yours kept pace?

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Emerging Drivers in the Unified Communications Market

I wanted to give a quick update on the current state of the unified communications industry, some of the drivers that are influencing the market and some new advancements that have taken place. Presence and mobility, the basic concept of anyone connecting at anytime, anywhere on any device, continue to be really big drivers in the industry. Two other things that have jumped out as driving features are contact center and disaster recovery.

 

Emerging Drivers in the Unified Communications Market

 

 

Interested in learning more about the latest trends in unified communications and how it can help your business? Email us at socialmedia@greenpages.com

 

By Ralph Kindred, Practice Director, Unified Communications