Oracle takes the wraps off world’s first autonomous operating system


Maggie Holland

17 Sep, 2019

Oracle has trumped its Autonomous Database concept by unveiling the world’s first fully autonomous operating system, taking heavy aim at rivals Amazon and IBM in the process. 

Dubbed Oracle Autonomous Linux, the new OS is available immediately and follows on the self-management and self-securing path as the database that the tech giant launched back in 2017 to great fanfare. 

“Our version of Linux, which we have been working on for almost 20 years, is now autonomous. It is the first and the only autonomous OS in the world. And it’s live,” Ellison told delegates during his opening keynote at Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco today.

It’s a highly available system designed for the cloud. It patches itself while it’s running. You discover a vulnerability we fix it. There’s no downtime, no delay. We fix it while it’s running. 

“It drives itself. There’s nothing to do because it drives itself. It does all of this stuff automatically. You can concentrate on building systems that are related to your biz rather than worrying about the underlying plumbing. When you use Oracle autonomous OS in the cloud, the price is just right. It’s free. So, if you’re paying IBM, you can stop!”

The idea behind both the autonomous database and OS is to eliminate the room for human error and, in doing so, make organisations’ large-scale cloud environments far more secure. 

“Autonomous systems eliminate human labour. And, when you eliminate human error, you eliminator pilot error. If you eliminate pilot error on a database, you eliminate data theft. And that – as far as I know – is the only way you can ever eliminate data theft,” Ellison added. 

Citing the Capital One data breach, Ellison alluded to the fact it wouldn’t have been possible using its technologies, saying: “With Oracle Autonomous Database, it’s not possible for customers to configure – there are no pilots to make errors.”  

He added: “In AWS’ cloud if you make an error and it leaves a catastrophic data loss that’s on you… With Oracle Autonomous Database, the system is responsible for preventing data loss, not you.

”Put your data in an autonomous system. There’s no human labour, no human error, no data loss. That’s a big difference between us and AWS.”

Oracle’s latest move will resonate with organisations looking to solve their OpEx challenges, according to Al Gilles, group vice president of software development and open source at analyst firm IDC. 

“This capability effectively turns Oracle Linux into a service, freeing customers to focus their IT resources on application and user experience, where they can deliver true competitive differentiation,” he said. 

Pure Storage beefs up cloud support


Adam Shepherd

17 Sep, 2019

Pure Storage has today announced the general availability of new data management tools for Azure and AWS as part of its annual Accelerate conference in Austin, Texas, improving its public cloud support and further strengthening its position in the multi-cloud space.

Starting with AWS, the company has announced that its Cloud Block Store for AWS product, first revealed last year, is now generally available for all customers. The product is a wholly software-based offering, allowing customers to use the company’s Purity management software to manage their AWS storage.

The initial beta version of Cloud Block Store used EC2 compute instances with EBS as a storage layer, but the configuration has since changed. As Pure Storage vice president of strategy Matt Kixmoeller explained, the conclusion was that EBS was not reliable enough for the product’s requirements.

“As we worked closely with Amazon, what we found was that EBS didn’t have the reliability characteristics that a Tier 1 storage array needs,” he said. “In particular, there are challenges around coordinated failures, where multiple volumes can fail at once. And so we completely re-architected the backend layer to run natively on S3. S3 is Amazon’s most durable, most reliable storage tier by far – 11 nines of durability.”

“And so we use EBS as a cache to deliver high performance, but persist data on S3. And if you look at most customers, they really treat S3 as their cloud storage. So this solution becomes a way for us to bring a Tier 1 block experience to use in the Amazon cloud storage S3, that customers are most familiar with, and most trust.”

Part of the goal with the new service is to enable workloads to move seamlessly in both directions; from the cloud to the data centre, as well as from the data centre to the cloud. It uses the same management tools and APIs as Pure’s on-prem management software, as well as featuring the ability to run across two availability zones in active/active configuration.

Cloud Block Store for AWS will be available via the AWS Marketplace on either a month-to-month or a one-year contract. Customers who want something more long term can get contracts ranging from one to three years by purchasing through ‘Pure-as-a-Service’, which is a rebranded version of the company’s Evergreen Storage Service, now effectively acting as a subscription-based consumption program.

The other major cloud announcement was the availability of CloudSnap for Azure, a built-in backup mechanism for FlashArray products which lets the Purity management software seamlessly and transparently move snapshots to the public cloud. CloudSnap was initially launched last year with AWS support, but has now been expanded to Azure as well. This, Kixmoeller said, was an excellent example of Pure’s intentions to extend its tools to a multitude of different cloud providers.

“Our strategy at Pure is to absolutely deliver these services as multi-cloud,” he said. “So Cloud Block Store, we started with Amazon – that’s the natural place to start. But as we see more and more adoption, and that gets more mature, and we will of course proliferate to other clouds.”

“It’s not an easy thing for us to snap our fingers and have it available on all three clouds, because we’re doing the hard work of integrating it deeply. And so this is our first example of bringing something to a second cloud.”

As part of the show, the company also announced a capacity-driven flash-based secondary storage appliance with quad-layer cell memory, as well as a new plug-in DirectMemory module for FlashArray//X appliances offering an instant performance boost.

Four ways to migrate to the cloud without missing a beat: A guide

It wasn’t too long ago that the enterprise IT industry considered the cloud an outlier. Companies knew the cloud was a readily available option, but they chose to use it sparingly. Now, however, cloud technology is the first and only option many companies consider.

Time has shown that the cloud's advantages aren’t overstated. It offers the flexibility and scalability necessary to keep customer-facing applications updated. It also extends access to the most innovative enterprise technologies on the market — options that aren’t available outside the cloud.

Still, the cloud's biggest draw continues to be its cost savings. Users only pay for the services they use rather than investing in the hardware needed to run the numerous expensive upfront licences and on-premise software solutions.

These benefits (and others) make cloud migration more of a when than an if for most companies. That said, interested parties need to understand that cloud adoption is not quick or simple, and that an unsuccessful integration could compromise their entire IT infrastructure. No one should hesitate to move to the cloud — but everyone should approach it rationally and deliberately.

Overlooked obstacles to cloud migration

Cloud providers position their solutions as an alternative to on-premise options, which is true but slightly misleading. Cloud technology can replace on-site servers, but it also offers a fundamentally different enterprise IT approach that allows the technology to grow with the company.

Understanding this distinction is important to any migration because a cloud transition requires more than shifting servers and data to a different location. Instead, migrations should be seen as a process of holistic improvement. A cloud transition's true value comes when it is treated as an opportunity to reassess and improve existing processes; the right measures can liberate resources, cut costs, and boost business agility. In that regard, cloud migrations are about doing things better rather than differently.

A move to the cloud is commonly referred to as a "digital transformation," a term that has more to it than what's on the surface. The cloud is more than just a house for information and processes; it's a new operational mindset that affects every facet of the workplace, whether we realise it or not.

That's why holistic migration should be a priority for everyone — especially the executives who oversee projects, control funds, and establish timelines. If they are not on board and pushing for a cheaper, faster, or simpler migration, it compromises the whole effort.

The best way to get executive buy-in is by speaking in terms of real-world money. Moving from CAPEX to OPEX can lead to sticker shock when the numbers aren't contextualised. The total cost of the cloud is significant, but it’s still less than the total cost of on-premise IT when licences, utilities, maintenance, and disaster recovery are factored in.

Companies should be aware of these obstacles but not deterred by them. Approaching a migration the right way ensures it proceeds smoothly and maximises ROI.

Cloud migration done the right way

Enough companies have migrated to the cloud at this point to reveal what works and what doesn’t. Use these strategies to make the transition correctly and comprehensively:

Guide #1: Take inventory of all assets: Cloud migrations can involve tens or hundreds of different assets. If any of them is overlooked or excluded from the migration, the transition and the IT infrastructure are compromised.

That is why it’s important to create a comprehensive IT inventory. Identify everything needed to make the move, building a migration plan that accommodates those diverse assets.

Don't start with a grip-and-rip approach. Begin with a few workloads, ease into things, and then rinse and repeat.

Guide #2: Take a holistic approach: Every part of the migration should be an opportunity for improvement. For example, it may be possible to reduce the number of server roles by leveraging cloud capabilities, particularly for the purpose of business continuity and disaster recovery. Don't just look to transition specific server functions or roles to cloud-equivalent servers — analyse everything.

Guide #3: Take all options into account: There are several migration and cloud options to choose from, so resist the urge to see the shift as a one-size-fits-all effort. Look for every opportunity to embrace new features, adopt new processes, and follow best practices throughout your migration effort.

Do some research to explore just how many different options and approaches are possible, but don't just focus on cutting costs. The cloud also offers intangible benefits such as improved business agility and faster cadence and R&D. Acknowledging these benefits allows companies to prioritise them during the migration.

Guide #4: Take it as a project management opportunity: Cloud migration creates a lot of unknowns, so it’s important to plan, test, and revise every decision beforehand. One way to execute this is to deploy project management principles.

Appoint a manager to spearhead the project and make it his or her responsibility to optimise each detail of the migration. Every resource put into planning pays dividends during and after migrating.

As the future of business continues to digitise, every company will become a technology company. The cloud is becoming ubiquitous because it’s the only option that provides the speed, security, scale, and savings that tomorrow’s companies need from IT.

Cloud migrations can be exciting opportunities, but they shouldn’t lead to hasty decisions or rushed timelines. Companies that execute their cloud migrations carefully and conscientiously will reap the biggest long-term rewards.

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Public cloud revenue will reach $500 billion in 2023: The key factors driving it

The pace of cloud computing adoption will accelerate as more organizations explore hybrid IT strategies. CIOs and CTOs will fine-tune the mix of on-premises and managed cloud services for their user's varied applications and workloads.

Worldwide spending on public cloud services and infrastructure will more than double over the 2019-2023 forecast period, according to the latest market study by International Data Corporation (IDC).

With a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22.3 percent, public cloud spending is forecast to grow from $229 billion in 2019 to reach nearly $500 billion in 2023.

Public cloud service market development

"Adoption of public (shared) cloud services continues to grow rapidly as enterprises, especially in professional services, telecommunications, and retail, continue to shift from traditional application software to software as a service (SaaS) and from traditional infrastructure to infrastructure as a service (IaaS) to empower customer experience and operational-led digital transformation initiatives," said Eileen Smith, program director at IDC.

SaaS will remain the largest category of cloud computing, capturing more than half of all public cloud spending in throughout the forecast period. SaaS spending, which is comprised of applications and system infrastructure software (SIS), will be dominated by applications purchases.

The leading SaaS applications will be customer relationship management (CRM) and enterprise resource management (ERM). SIS spending will be led by purchases of security software and system and service management software.

Infrastructure as a service (IaaS) will be the second largest category of public cloud spending. IaaS spending, comprised of servers and storage devices, will also be the fastest growing category of cloud spending with a five-year CAGR of 32 percent.

Platform as a service (PaaS) spending will grow nearly as fast (29.9 percent CAGR) led by purchases of data management software, application platforms, and integration and orchestration middleware.

Three industries – professional services, discrete manufacturing, and banking – will account for more than one-third of all public cloud services spending throughout the forecast period. While SaaS will be the leading category of investment for all industries, IaaS will see its share of spending increase significantly for industries that are building data and compute-intensive services.

For example, IaaS spending will represent more than 40 percent of public cloud services spending by the professional services industry in 2023 compared to less than 30 percent for most other industries. Professional services will also see the fastest growth in public cloud spending with a five-year CAGR of 25.6 percent.

On a geographic basis, the United States will remain the largest public cloud services market, accounting for more than half the worldwide total through 2023. Western Europe will be the second largest market with nearly 20 percent of the worldwide total.

China will experience the fastest growth in public cloud services spending over the five-year forecast period with a 49.1 percent CAGR. Latin America will also deliver strong public cloud spending growth with a 38.3 percent CAGR.

Outlook for cloud service applications growth

Very large businesses will account for more than half of all public cloud spending throughout the forecast period, while medium-sized businesses will deliver around 16 percent of the worldwide total.

Small businesses will trail large businesses by a few percentage points while the spending share from small offices will be in the low single digits.

Moreover, all the company size categories – except for very large businesses – will experience spending growth greater than the overall market.

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The 2019 Forbes Cloud 100 analysed: Stripe top again amid big data boom and strong exits

Forbes has put out its latest Cloud 100, and while payments provider Stripe remains top of the shop the big five has a refreshing feel to it.

Stripe remains at #1 for the third successive year in the media firm’s list of private cloud companies – as in cloud companies which are privately held – while behind it the top five consists of data warehouse Snowflake, robotic process automation (RPA) provider UiPath, infrastructure automation firm HashiCorp, and data analytics company Datadog.

Part of this turnover is down to a strong year of exits. No fewer than five of last year’s top 10 went public over the past 12 months; Slack, Zoom Video Communications, CrowdStrike, Elastic and Eventbrite. In addition, Qualtrics, which placed at #7 last time out, was acquired by SAP for $8 billion (£6.2bn) in November. Looker, which ranked just outside the top third (#34) in 2018, was acquired by Google for $2.6bn while Cylance, ranked #18, was bought by BlackBerry.

UiPath is a particularly interesting case. Last year’s list saw the company debut at #14, with Forbes admitting its rise ‘absolutely came out of left field.’ In a statement acknowledging its bronze medal, CEO Daniel Dines said the company ‘could not have achieved this kind of growth and success without teams around the world, investors who are true partners, and customers and partners who have bet on [their] automation technology to transform their businesses.’

As before, the Cloud 100 is put together alongside Bessemer Venture Partners and Salesforce Ventures. The investors do have skin in the game in certain cases; cloud CRM software builder Vlocity, ranked at #24, received a $60 million series C funding round in March to which Bessemer and Salesforce both contributed. The hopefuls were whittled down based on growth, sales, valuation and culture, as well as consultation from 40 CEOs at publicly-held cloud companies.

The list was praised by Forbes as being the ‘strongest and most diverse’ group of companies assembled yet. “Though infrastructure and development companies lead the way on the 2019 Cloud 100 list, design tools are making a move and no-office, fully remote setups are gaining traction,” the company wrote.

In terms of what the companies do, this holds a strong case. Plenty of big data and backend-facing companies now infiltrate the top end of the rankings, which could be seen as affirmation of the money getting behind it. Snowflake secured a mammoth $450 million funding round back in October, while Apache Kafka software provider Confluent, which made the top 10, was valued at $2.5 billion following a $125m series D round in January. Rubrik, Cloudflare and Databricks – which nabbed $250m in series E funding in February – also made the top 20.

While it means fewer fluffy SaaS and B2C cloud apps are taking the honours, the diversity charge struggles when it comes to who runs the Cloud 100. Only four CEOs in the 100 are female, with two – Nicole Eagan and Poppy Gustafsson at Darktrace – at the same company. Melanie Perkins, CEO of Canva, and Rachel Carlson, chief executive of Guild Education, complete the set.

This appears to be a recurring challenge for Forbes; the company’s list of 100 most innovative leaders earlier this month featured a grand total of one woman. Barbara Rentler, CEO of Ross Stores, placed #75 and was not even afforded the luxury of a photo. Forbes has since taken its medicine; editor Randall Lane noted the disparity of women chief executives as a contributor to the ‘flawed’ methodology behind the list.

The top 10, in descending order, are Stripe, Snowflake, UiPath, HashiCorp, Datadog, Procore, Tanium, InVision, Rubrik and Confluent. You can see the full list here.

Postscript: The 2019 Cloud 100 already has its first graduate; Cloudflare has gone for IPO, with the NYSE doing the honours earlier today.

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How is Kubernetes leading the game in enabling NFV for cloud-native?

The impact of cloud-native readiness on applications, which are mostly orchestrated using Kubernetes, can be seen on VMware’s announcements at the recent VMworld 2019. This made it clear to the IT world that focus of IT infrastructure has shifted to containerisation from virtualisation. Going cloud-native and shifting workloads on top of Kubernetes clusters is a key trend being followed by the industry.

CNCF (Cloud Native Computing Foundation) has shown the aggression to push their projects to enterprise IT infrastructure and telecom service providers to build the core of data centres using new containerised and microservices methods.

NFV and telecom use cases have also started shifting to a cloud-native landscape in the last two years. NFV techniques have help CXOs move to the software-defined and centric data centre with virtual network functions (VNFs) as core elements, being orchestrated using VNF managers (VNFM). The VNF's orchestration can be done using commercial VNFM platforms offered by Nokia, Cisco, Ericsson, Huawei, and NEC; and an open-source platform like OpenStack Tacker. Now with the cloud-native movement in the IT domain, VNFs are becoming cloud-native network functions (CNFs).

Cloud-native development of network functions:

  • Makes applications or code portable and reusable – in other words can be repetitively used independent of the underlying infrastructure
  • Allows the application to scale up and down where there is demand
  • Can be deployed with microservices way but not mandatorily
  • Is suitable for elastic and distributed computing environments

Cloud-native development also enables NFV to embrace DevOps, agile techniques, and more importantly allows container orchestration engines like Kubernetes to handle workloads – which also means that more dynamism comes into the picture at the core stack of NFV.

Earlier, CNFs were in evaluation phase to check for readiness by several vendors and service providers to be used in NFV use cases. In 2018, I wrote about the benefits of deploying network functions in containers and being architected using microservices. Also, I wrote on why cloud-native VNFs are important in NFV success.

The below image shows how VNFs were managed in the past, how it is currently managed along with CNFs, and showing how Kubernetes can be a de facto framework to handle network functions and applications pushed into CNFs and VNFs.

Kubernetes in the picture

We can now see how Kubernetes has evolved so much in the data centre of every size for handling every workload type. Kubernetes is also becoming a choice to orchestrate workloads at edges as well. We have seen several collaborations for new solutions for 5G that specifically focused on handling containers using Kubernetes and legacy virtual machines using OpenStack.

There are several ways Kubernetes can be useful for NFV use cases for handling network functions and applications. Kubernetes can be useful in hosting all cloud-native software stack into the clusters.

If you are a software or solution provider, Kubernetes can help you orchestrate all workload types like VNFs, CNFs, VMs, containers, and functions. With Kubernetes, it has become possible for all workloads to co-exist in one architecture. ONAP is leading service orchestrator and NFV MANO platform to handle services deployed in NFV. A Kubernetes plugin specifically developed for ONAP makes it possible to orchestrate different services and workloads cater through multiple sites.

ONAP has challenges in terms of installation and maintenance, while concerns have also been noted related to heavy consumption of resources like storage and memory. To work along with Kubernetes, ONAP release a lightweight version, which will fit with many NFV architectures. It is called ONAP4K8S. Requirements and package contents are published on its profile page.

There can be cases where it is not possible to completely get away from virtual machines. Some of the existing functions need to reside with virtual machines and cannot be containerised. For such cases, Kubernetes community KubeVirt and Mirantis’s Virlet frameworks can be integrated to dynamically manage virtual machines along with containers. Kubernetes also becomes a choice for enabling orchestration at the edge of the network. Kubernetes based control plane uses less number of resources that makes it suitable for edge nodes even with one server.

Cloud-native NFV stack

The Akraino edge stack is hosting a blueprint, Integrated Cloud Native (ICN) NFV Stack, under which all developments of making NFV core cloud-native are in progress. The current progress of integrating open-source cloud-native projects for NFV stack is shown below:

Srinivasa Rao Addepalli (senior principal engineer and chief architect at Intel) and Ravi Chunduru (Associate Fellow, Verizon) will be presenting a session at the upcoming Open Networking Summit Europe 2019 on how Kubernetes can be used at core of NFV and how Linux Foundation communities (ONAP, OPNFV, CNCF, LFE) are doing efforts to make NFV core a cloud-native.

Editor's note: Download Calsoft’s eBook – A Deep-Dive On Kubernetes For Edge – which focuses on current scenarios of adoption of Kubernetes for edge use cases, latest Kubernetes and edge case studies, deployment approaches, commercial solutions and efforts by open communities.

Image sources: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/ONS2019_Cloud_Native_NFV.pdf

The post How is Kubernetes Leading the Game in Enabling NFV for Cloud Native? appeared first on Calsoft Inc. Blog.

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Lacework secures $42 million in funding round to forge ahead with ‘Snowflake for security’ plan

Lacework, a provider of end-to-end cloud security automation across the biggest public clouds, has raised $42 million (£34m) in a financing round aimed at building momentum and educating security teams.

The funding, which was put together by Sutter Hill Ventures and Liberty Ventures, will be aimed at ‘supporting product innovation and go-to-market activities to help educate security, compliance and DevOps teams that want a way to embed security continuously through build-time to run-time operations’, as the company puts it.

Lacework’s platform covers both public and private cloud, aiming to automate overall cloud security and compliance while providing comprehensive risk assessment across cloud workloads and containers. The company promises ‘unprecedented visibility, automating intrusion detection, delivering one-click investigation, and simplifying cloud compliance.’

The company appears to be in solid hands when it comes to its funders, with Sutter Hill Ventures having already bet this year on Vlocity – leading a $60 million series C round in March – as well as participating in a series D round for network monitoring and intelligence firm ThousandEyes. Yet Lacework may be the horse to bet on from this stable. Sutter Hull managing director Stefan Dyckerhoff was previously CEO of Lacework, and combined the leading roles at both companies before passing on the chief exec’s role in June.

The new CEO is Dan Hubbard, previously chief product officer, while Andy Byron, previously of Cybereason and Fuze, is joining as president to lead Lacework sales and marketing teams.

“Our new funding, new perspectives on the board of directors, and with Andy joining, are all going to be critical for how we build on our solid foundation as a cloud and container security leader,” said Hubbard. “Lacework and our growing list of customers agree that there is a need for a new generation of security companies that are purpose-fit to secure today’s modern infrastructure.”

Lacework has gained two other board members, with Mike Speiser, partner at Sutter Hill, and John McMahon, currently on the board of data warehouser Snowflake, joining. Speiser argued that the goal was for Lacework to become ‘the Snowflake for security'. “It’s clear that DevOps and security teams want a single platform for their security and compliance needs, and only Lacework provides that,” said Speiser.

It's worth noting that Snowflake trousered a whopping $450 million in its last funding round, back in November – so perhaps there is a little while to go before Lacework gets to that point.

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Microsoft confirms a Teams client for Linux is on its way


Keumars Afifi-Sabet

10 Sep, 2019

Microsoft is developing an iteration of its collaboration tool, Teams, for Linux systems after high demand from users, but hasn’t provided a release date.

The company confirmed on a user feedback forum last week that it’s actively working on a Teams client, and that more information would be divulged soon. Users have previously been forced to use an in-browser version of Teams on Linux systems, which suffers from limitations in functionality and user experience (UX).

The popular collaboration tool is currently available on Windows, macOS, iOS and Android, as well as within a web browser, with Linux the only missing piece of the puzzle.

The biggest issues with the web iteration of Teams include the inability to video conference or share desktops and applications effectively, as well as difficulty organising presentations.

Linux users have been demanding a client for Teams for years, with the original post that Microsoft replied to on UserVoice, for example, dating back to November 2016.

Notably, Teams’ biggest rival in the collaboration space is Slack, which does have a functional Linux client that launched last year. The Ubuntu Snap tool has been used to put the app into a bubble so it could run in a Linux environment, and provide secure isolation.

In confirming a Linux client for Teams, Microsoft is encroaching on one of Slack’s most significant differentiating factors from the industry giant.

It’s particularly significant given that Microsoft announced in July that it has more users than its key competitor; boasting more than 13 million active daily users versus Slack’s latest reported figures of 10 million users.

This can partially be attributed to the fact it’s packaged into Microsft’s Office 365 ecosystem of productivity apps by default. But it’s also been considered fairly staggering considering Teams was lagging behind its rival as soon as April.

The rivalry between the two platforms has indeed been hitting up during 2019, with Microsoft banning its employees from using Slack in June, declaring some versions of the workplace service are not secure.

Oracle earnings flat as CEO steps down citing health reasons


Keumars Afifi-Sabet

12 Sep, 2019

Oracle’s chief executive Mark Hurd is stepping down from the company on a temporary basis for health-related reasons, as the software giant released its quarterly earnings earlier than expected.

The co-CEO, who shares his role with fellow chief executive Safra Catz, requested a leave of absence to address health-related issues, the company announced yesterday, following nine years at the company.

The news was announced in conjunction with the latest financial results, and has been disclosed just a few days before the company’s annual OpenWorld conference is set to kick off in San Francisco next week.

“To all my friends and colleagues at Oracle, though we all worked hard together to close the first quarter, I’ve decided that I need to spend time focused on my health. At my request, the Board of Directors has granted me a medical leave of absence,” said Hurd. 

“As you all know, Larry, Safra and I have worked together as a strong team, and I have great confidence that they and the entire executive management team will do a terrific job executing the exciting plans we will showcase at the upcoming OpenWorld.”

Hurd’s announcement overshadows the company’s roughly flat financial results for the first quarter of the 2019/20 financial year. Oracle declared revenues of $9.2 billion last quarter; the same figure year-on-year versus the first quarter for 2018/19.

Cloud services and license support revenue, meanwhile, climbed slightly to $6.8 billion versus $6.6 billion year-on-year, while cloud license and on-premise license revenue slumped to $812 million from $867 million.

“Autonomy is the defining attribute of a Generation 2 Cloud,” said Oracle’s CTO Larry Ellison. “Next week at our OpenWorld conference, we will announce more Autonomous Cloud Services to complement the Oracle Autonomous Database.”

As for the company’s leadership, Catz will continue on as sole CEO, while Ellison, who co-founded the company, will handle Hurd’s responsibilities. The company hasn’t announced how long Hurd will be away from his post.

Slack launches Euro Data Residency


Bobby Hellard

12 Sep, 2019

Slack is rolling out the ability for customers to keep their data in Europe with Data Residency, the company has announced.

The first will be in Frankfurt, Germany, before rapidly expanding across Europe.

Until now, Slack customers had their data stored within the US, but with its rapid adoption around the world, the company has recognised this is not always suitable for data regulations and companies outside the States.

So its introducing Data Residency, which is currently in beta, as Ilan Frank, head of enterprise product at Slack told IT Pro.

“It went live on Wednesday, our first customer is already live in beta right now,” he said. “This will be the case for the next three months, but in December we will be making this generally available.

“It should be completely invisible to the end-user and that is what we hope to gain from the beta. The biggest question with something like data residency is performance, so we are optimising that and expect to see no visible latency change for the end-user.”

The rise of cloud computing has transformed how companies use and store data. Businesses around the world are creating their own internal policies for where data can be stored, while governments and third-party regulators are enforcing data residency requirements.

For Slack, it’s more about its own growth and user experience, particularly as the company has become one of the go-to communications platform for startups.

“This goes along with our increased popularity in large enterprise companies,” added Frank. “We are seeing a lot of demand for Slack in large and regulated companies. And with that, the demand for finely granulated controls, an increased focus on security and enterprise.”

The data for this initiative is user-generated, which includes messages, posts, files and searches, and will be stored at rest within the desired data region and whether in transit or at rest, will be encrypted.

The cloud news categorized.