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Tech News Recap for the Week of 2/2/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 2/2/2015. As a reminder, your chance to win a GoPro ends this Thursday – all you have to do is subscribe to this blog!

Tech News RecapThe biggest story this week was hands-down the data breach that happened at Anthem. Hackers stole social security numbers and other personal data from brands that included Blue Cross, Blue Cross and Blue Shield, Amerigroup and more. In addition, there was other hacking news involving both Russia and China. Tablet sales dipped for the first time ever. There were numerous articles from last week’s VMware’s Partner Exchange Conference. We’ll be posting a blog from our CTO Chris Ward later in the week breaking down all the top news that came out of the conference, so stay tuned for that.

 

 

Tech News Recap

If you’re looking for more information around Windows 2003 End of Life, register for our upcoming webinar. Remember, that July, 14th date is rapidly approaching!

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

CIO Focus Interview: David Chou

CIO focus interviewThis is the fourth installment of our CIO Focus Interview series. This time, I spoke with David Chou, the CIO of a large academic medical center. A recognized thought leader, David is on the Huffington Post’s 2015 list of the top 100 most social CIOs on Twitter, and I would definitely recommend following him. Enjoy!

 

Ben: Could you give us some background on your IT experience?

David: I was fortunate to be put on the IT fast track. I was your typical college student getting a BA in Computer Science, and somehow I landed an analyst job at a small community hospital in LA. This allowed me to get the opportunity to really understand the health care industry from an operational standpoint. From there, I focused on understanding operations and then finding the right technologies to fit in. I took the opposite approach than most IT professionals do. I dug deep into the operations model and then figured out which technologies worked well and matched them. That approach led to me getting exposure up the food chain that opened some doors for me. One thing I realized when talking to my counterparts who are successful is that you have to grasp opportunities, even if it means disrupting other aspects of your life.

 

Ben: What is your job like now?

David: Currently, I work at a large academic medical center. In bigger medical centers, there are typically CIOs across all three verticals – healthcare, research, and higher education. Oftentimes, this causes tension and barriers in terms of adoption. In my position, I have control over all three, which is a pretty unique model to have. In addition, we are a public center which also makes us unique in how we operate.

 

Ben: What are your main responsibilities?

David: Today, I manage day to day operations and an $82 million budget. Early in my career the CIO operated transactional data entry, maintaining mainframes, etc. Now it’s a lot more strategic. Technology should be at the core of every organization. The CIO has to be involved strategically. This means being a part of the executive team and having a seat at the table.

{Follow David on Twitter @dchou1107}

Ben: What areas of IT do you think are having the biggest impact on the industry?

David: Right now the focus is on the “4 pillars” of cloud, mobile, social and big data. Any executive that doesn’t have that vision is not going to be well off in the future. These are extremely important and strategic to me. I am trying to get the organization to adopt the cloud. Organizational culture plays a big role in this. Cloud can be an uncomfortable topic so that’s a barrier. I’m challenging that traditional mindset.

Mobile is also very big for us. Consumers in healthcare want to have personalized medicine. They want to shop for healthcare the same way they shop on Amazon. That’s where I believe healthcare is moving towards – a retail model. Whoever successfully pulls that off first is going to cause a huge disruption. We’re all trying to figure out how to utilize it. We want to be able to predict outcomes and provide the best customer experience possible.

I really believe in the importance of social media and the value of capturing consumer engagement and behavior. In my vertical, it has not been widely adopted yet. The big focus has been on cloud, mobile and big data.

 

Ben: How are you incorporating those technologies in your organization?

David: We’re in the process of incorporating a hybrid cloud model in our environment. From a budgetary and contractual perspective we’re all ready to go, we’re just getting the organization’s terms and conditions aligned with the cloud  providers. It’s a challenge for us to get public cloud providers to agree to our terms and conditions.

Our Electronic Medical Record system went live a year ago. Four years ago we had disparate systems that took a lot of manual upkeep. The first step to remedying this was moving from manual to digital. Now that we have that new format, we can take a controlled approach. We’ll look into some consumer friendly products that allow users to have access to data and have self-serving and provisioning capabilities. After this is implemented for a year, my goal is to take another look. We’ll have what we need to solve 80% of problems, so the question will be whether or not that extra 20% is worth a full blown BI platform for analytics?

 

Ben: What advice do you have for other CIOs starting out in the healthcare industry?

David: Take the time to build that relationship with the business. Learn the terms and lingo. Talking tech won’t work with most business executives so you need to adapt. Ultimately, you need to focus on understanding the needs of the customer and solving those needs.

 

Are you interested in winning a GoPro? Subscribe to our blog by 2/12/2015 for your chance to win!

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 1/19/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 1/19/2015.

Tech News RecapChines companies now sell 40% of all smartphones, Microsoft and the US Government are fighting over data control in the cloud and the governor of New York is calling for statewide 100 Mbps internet by 2019. In other news, iPhone sales continue to increase, big data skills are on the ride overseas, and Switch is building a new data center outside of Reno.

 

Tech News Recap

[eBook – How has the corporate IT department evolved?]

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

 

Tech News Recap for the Week of 1/12/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 1/12/2015.

Tech News Recap

Tech News RecapVerizon’s cloud came back 40 hours after a scheduled outage. The number of attacks against the travel industry continues to grow; this time it was United Airlines MileagePlus accounts. CENTCOM’s twitter account was also hacked. 80% of online adults are now on a smartphone, however less than 10% use wearables. There were also some good articles around cloud spending, big data, business continuity and some predictions for what’s in store around end user computing, security and cloud as we head into 2015.

{8-Point Checklist to a Successful Data Center Move from CTO Chris Ward}

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

 

2015 Predictions: End User Computing and Security

Earlier in the week, we posted some 2015 predictions from Chris Ward and John Dixon. These predictions covered cloud, the internet of things and software defined technologies. Here are a few quick predictions around end user computing and security from Francis Czekalski and Dan Allen.

 

Francis Czekalski, Practice Manager, End User Computing

Short and sweet – here are four things to keep an eye on in 2015 around end user computing:

  • More integration with mobile devices
  • Wrappers for Legacy Applications to be delivered to IOS devices
  • Less and less dependency for traditional desktops and more focus of delivery on demand
  • Heightened focus on data security

 

end user computing and security

 

Francis presenting at GreenPages’ annual Summit event

Dan Allen, Solutions Architect

Hacktimonium! Remember when only big companies got spam? Then small companies? Then individuals? The same is happening with hacking and digital intrusion. This trend will continue into 2015. Having a Firewall isn’t going to be enough; you need to have some sort of implemented Intrusion Prevention Services like an ASA with sourcefire, Radware appliance, or even some of the smaller brands have a Unified Threat Management piece.

A Year in review: Who got hacked last year?

The Big Ones

  • Apple’s iCloud – Individual accounts hacked.
  • JP Morgan Chase – Enterprise network hacked
  • Sony – Individual and then enterprise hack
  • UPS
  • Target

A list of others you might know.

  • AOL
  • Ebay
  • Living Social
  • Nintendo
  • Evernote
  • USPS
  • Blizzard
  • SnapChat
  • NeimanMarcus
  • Home Depot
  • Washington State Justice Computer Network
  • Yahoo-Japan
  • Dominos-France

The final word here? You Won’t Know You’ve Been Hacked Until It’s Already Gone.

What do you think 2015 has in store around end user computing and security?

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 1/5/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 1/5/2015.

Tech News Recap

tech news recapLike last week, there were a good number of articles containing 2015 predictions. These spanned from cloud to software-defined technologies, to networking, to cybersecurity and more. A new study found that that Google Cloud has lost some of its following among CIOs. Verizon announced it would have a 2 day extended maintenance outage. Hackers took down German government sites. Also, more talk around the Sony hacking and its potential ties to North Korea.

Download this guide: 4 Reasons Why Visibility and Control Are the Key to a Better Virtual Infrastructure

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

2015 Predictions: Cloud and Software-Defined Technologies

As we kick off the new year, it’s time for us to get our 2015 predictions in. Today, I’ll post predictions from John Dixon around the future of cloud computing as well as from our CTO Chris Ward about software-defined technologies. Later this week, we’ll get some more predictions around security, wireless, end-user computing& more from some of our other experts.

John Dixon, Director, Cloud Services
On the Internet of Things (IoT) and Experimentation…
In 2015, I expect to see more connected devices and discussion on IoT strategy. I think this is where cloud computing gets really interesting. The accessibility of compute and storage resources on the pay-as-you-go model supports experimentation with a variety of applications and devices. Will consumers want a connected toaster? In years past, companies might form focus groups, do some market research, etc. to pitch the idea to management, get funding, build a team, acquire equipment, then figure out the details of how to do this. Now, it’s entirely possible to assign one individual to experiment and prototype the connected toaster and associated cloud applications. Here’s the thing; the connected toaster probably has about zero interest in the market for consumer appliances. However, the experiment might have produced a pattern of a cloud-based application that authenticates and consumes data from a device with little or no compute power. And this pattern is perhaps useful for other products that DO have real applications. In fact, I put together a similar experiment last week with a $50 Raspberry Pi and about $10 of compute from AWS — the application reports on the temperature of my home-brew fermentation containers, and activates a heating source when needed. And, I did indeed discover that the pattern is really, really scalable and useful in general. Give me a call if you want to hear about the details!

On the declining interest in “raw” IaaS and the “cloud as a destination” perspective…

I’ve changed my opinion on this over the past year or so. I had thought that the declining price of commodity compute, network, and storage in the cloud meant that organizations would eventually prefer to “forklift move” their infrastructure to a cloud provider. To prepare for this, organizations should design their infrastructure with portability in mind, and NOT make use of proprietary features of certain cloud providers (like AWS). As of the end of 2014, I’m thinking differently on this — DO consider the tradeoff between portability and optimization, but… go with optimization. Optimization is more important than infrastructure portability. By optimization in AWS terms, I mean taking advantage of things like autoscaling, cloudwatch, S3, SQS, SNS, cloudfront, etc. Pivotal and CloudFoundry offer similar optimizations. Siding with optimization enables reliability, performance, fault tolerance, scalability, etc., that are not possible in a customer-owned datacenter. I think we’ll see more of this “how do I optimize for the cloud?” discussion in 2015.

2015 predictions

Chris & John presenting a breakout session at our 2014 Summit Event

Chris Ward, CTO

On SDN…

We’ll see much greater adoption of SDN solutions in 2015.   We are already seeing good adoption of VMware’s NSX solution in the 2nd half of 2014 around the micro segmentation use case.  I see that expanding in 2015 plus broader use cases with both NSX and Cisco’s ACI.  The expansion of SDN will drag with it an expansion of automation/orchestration adoption as these technologies are required to fully realize the benefits of broader SDN use cases.

On SDS…

Software defined storage solutions will become more mainstream by the end of 2015.  We’re already seeing a ton of new and interesting SDS solutions in the market and I see 2015 being a year of maturity.  We’ll see several of these solutions drop off the radar while others gain traction and I have no doubt it will be a very active M&A year in the storage space in general.

 

What do you think about Chris and John’s predictions?

If you would like to hear more from these guys, you can download Chris’ whitepaper on data center migrations and John’s eBook around the evolution of cloud.

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 12/29/2014

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 12/29/2014.

 

Tech News Recap

tech news recapAs we kick off the new year, there was a surplus of 2014 recap posts as well as 2015 predictions (tune in for ours later in the week!). Chick-Fil-A admitted a possible credit card breach. Chevron is working to integrate Apple Pay at its gas pumps early this year. There were also some good articles around shadow IT, the cloud in healthcare and where responsibility lies for cybersecurity.

 

 

Whitepaper: 4 Reasons Why Visibility & Control are the Key to a Better Virtual Infrastructure

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

Our Top 10 Blog Posts of 2014

With the year officially coming to an end, I decided to pick our top 10 blog posts of 2014 (in no particular order)…

 

  1. The Big Shift: From Cloud Skeptics & Magic Pulls to ITaaS Nirvana – In this post GreenPages’ CEO Ron Dupler covers the shift in industry that has disrupted old paradigms and driven uses to embrace hybrid cloud architectures.
  2. How Software Defined Networking is Enabling the Hybrid Cloud – Networking expert Nick Phelps discusses how software defined networking is enabling the hybrid cloud & creating the networks of tomorrow.
  3. Have You Met My Friend, Cloud Sprawl? – John Dixon explains cloud sprawl and provides advice for IT departments on how to deal with it.
  4. A Guide to Successful Big Data Adoption – In this video, storage expert Randy Weis talks about the impact big data is having on organizations and provides an outline for the correct approach companies should be taking in regards to big data analytics.
  5. Key Announcements from Citrix Synergy 2014 Part 1 and Part 2 – In this 2 part blog series, Randy Becker summarizes the key announcements from the Citrix Synergy event in Anaheim and the impact these changes will have on the industry.
  6. Don’t Be a Michael Scott – Embrace Change in IT – Limitless paper in a paperless world
  7. Managing Resources in the Cloud: How to Control Shadow IT & Enable Business Agility – In this video, our CTO Chris Ward discusses the importance of gaining visibility into Shadow IT and how IT Departments need to offer the same agility to its users that public cloud offerings like Amazon provide.
  8. CIO/CTO Interview Series: Stuart Appley, Rick Blaisdell, Gunnar Berger – This year, we started a CIO/CTO interview series on the blog to get the opinions and insights of some of the top thought leaders out there. Above are the first three of the series.
  9. VDI: You Don’t Need to Take an All-or-Nothing Approach – In this video, Francis Czekalski discusses the benefits of not taking an all-or-nothing approach with VDI.
  10. Network Virtualization: A Key Enabler of the SDDC – This is actually a guest video with VMware’s SVP of Networking and Security Business Unit.

 

Were there any posts you think should have been included on the list that weren’t?

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist

 

Guest Post: How to Regain Control Over the “Shadow IT” in Your Environment

Do you need to regain control of shadow IT in your environment? The use of cloud services is growing, and according to a recent Cisco/Intel Study, “The Impact of Cloud on IT Consumption Models,” the cloud occupies 23% of IT spend with respondents estimating that number will grow to 27% by 2016. Recent analyst reports also suggest that of the total cloud spend, Software-as-a-Service (Saas) alone could capture greater than half within the next few years.

shadow ITThese numbers are not surprising, considering growing demand from workers for the latest and greatest technologies and applications, that will enable them to do their jobs with greater ease, efficiency and flexibility than is possible using traditional computing tools and applications. Yet, as anyone working in IT can attest to, not everyone goes through the proper channels when it comes to procuring cloud services. This trend, often referred to as “shadow IT” is creating problems for IT organizations of all sizes as it makes it difficult to gain visibility into their entire infrastructure operations.

 

The fact is, the most tech-savvy employees figured out years ago how to get their hands on the applications they want and need – without IT’s blessing. With quick and easy access to public clouds, analytics, development, and collaboration tools via the Internet, it’s no wonder workers are purchasing and provisioning virtual machines (VMs) on public clouds, downloading apps, or even building their own apps using cloud-based tools, and deploying them on the cloud, with a simple click of a button.

As a result, many IT organizations are still in the dark about how many cloud apps they have running on their system. And, according NetSkope’s 2014 Cloud Report those numbers are on the rise with the average number of cloud apps per enterprise going from 397 in January 2014 to a whopping 579 in October 2014.

 

If You’ve Lost Control, You Are Not Alone

The effects of shadow IT are well-documented in the enterprise with recent research reports and industry surveys estimating that IT has effectively lost control of between 35% and 50% of the enterprise IT spend, with marketing, sales, accounting, HR and other departments regularly purchasing cloud services directly from cloud services providers – and completely bypassing the IT department during the purchasing process.

Yet, when major outages happen, or when these systems go down or troubleshooting is required, you know as an IT professional that your department will be called on to respond and mitigate for any system failures.

So what’s the fix? The first step is to find a way to regain control, not just over the spending, but how clouds and applications are provisioned and managed. This way, lines of accountability are made very clear.

One of the ways to do this is through by automating IT operations via a centralized dashboard. By having a single pane of glass view into your organizations entire IT operations, your team will be aware of where cloud VMs are being spun up, where applications are being used, who is using them, how much is being used, and how they are performing. This, in turn, will put IT back in the drivers seat and help eliminate the threat that your users’ “shadow IT” purchases are having on the business.

 

To learn more about how GreenPages can help you with automating your IT operations, watch this short video on our Cloud Management as a Service Infrastructure Operations offering

 

By Chris Joseph, VP, Product Management & Marketing, NetEnrich, Inc.