CloudVelocity Takes Off

Perhaps the most significant barrier to a true hybrid cloud operating model is a wide gulf of manual processes required to run existing multi-tier apps and services seamlessly across data centers, colocation facilities and public clouds.  That gulf is perhaps the largest barrier to the enterprise adoption of public cloud. As of today there are […]

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Cloud Brokers: The eHarmony of Cloud Infrastructure?

A long-lived match made in the cloud will require cloud-lovemore detail than providers and brokers are currently offering

Buried in blogs around the Internets are references to a research survey conducted by research firm ESG earlier this year on behalf of VMware. While obtaining the full contents require more than my meager pockets contain, the summary data held several nuggets of gold, among them this one on compatibility across cloud and on-premise infrastructure:

quote-badgeImportance of compatibility: 78% of respondents reported that it was also important that their cloud service providers’ infrastructure technologies were compatible with their internal private cloud/virtualized datacenter.

New Study Shows Growth of Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) Adoption

I'm guessing that if they'd used a term more common to networking / infrastructure domains, say interoperability, they may have gotten more ping on this statistic. And yet, I don't think interoperability is exactly what this statistic refers to. Interoperability and compatibility imply some subtle differences. Compatibility implies a level of mutual understanding at the data level which, for infrastructure, means control-plane compatibility. Policy sharing, as an example. Interoperability implies a lower-level of exchange at the data plane, protocol processing and such.

Assuming that what these 614 global respondents – all IT managers with budget responsibility – were considering important is really mobility of infrastructure service application, i.e. operational consistency, across infrastructure, this leads to an interesting question. How does one know whether a cloud offers such compatibility or not?

Cloud Brokers: Catalogs

Most discussions on cloud brokers today continue to focus on establishing matches between consumers of cloud and providers via characteristics like price and location and sometimes performance. But rarely do we see a requirement for matching infrastructure service capabilities (and thus compatibility) across environments. Most cloud providers do offer catalogs of a sort from which services can be selected and provisioned, but these are not very shareable, if you will. They aren't in a neat, publicly accessible list that can be compared against other providers' lists.

Much in the same way registries were central to the notion of enabling the success of service-oriented architectures, cloud catalogs will be central to the success of cloud broker services' ability to compare and contrast offerings. Like profiles in on-line match making services, cloud catalogs will enable the process of matching consumers with providers based not only on simple characteristics like price and performance, but on deeper more critical capabilities like security and data integrity services, acceleration and optimization, and application-layer networking.

But it's not just about listing out services. To really get to the heart of compatibility, if what we're desiring is operational consistency, we need not only a more standard method of describing infrastructure policies (rule sets, processing directives, etc…) but the means to determine whether a given infrastructure service is capable of not only accepting but creating such a policy. Such policies must be abstract, they cannot be specific to any given environment. We need a way to describe the rules used to configure Amazon Security Groups, for example, such that they can be consumed and implemented by Rackspace, or BlueLock or an OpenStack-based private cloud framework.

While there are certainly efforts around describing aspects of cloud – virtual machines, applications, and even layer 2-3 networking – in a standards-based format, there's very little in the way of efforts to do so at the infrastructure service layers. Organizations for whom infrastructure compatibility is an important factor in the provider decision making process need exactly this kind of information to aid in their transition from private to hybrid and public architectures.

Cloud brokers could provide this level of metadata, if providers recognize the importance of disseminating that information in a way that's easily consumable and are willing to offer the data organizations need to make their decisions.

Making a compatible match between two people requires a lot more detail than just age, gender, and hobbies. It's also going to take a lot more detail than just price and location to make a compatible match between cloud consumers and providers when critical business functions are on the line.

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Dell Announces Private Cloud Built on OpenStack

“This year we’ve seen enterprises turn increasingly to Dell Services to help modernize and adapt their IT environments to manage the growing challenges and opportunities presented by these disruptive forces,” said Suresh Vaswani, president, Dell Services, as Dell’s CEO Michael Dell used his keynote at this year’s Dell World conference in Austin, Texas to unveil a technical preview of its private cloud.

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CA To Get New CEO

After a six-month search, CA Technologies, one of the biggest American
software companies, has hired Michael Gregoire, the former CEO of Taleo,
the cloud-based talent management ISV that Oracle bought in April for $1.9
million, to replace its retiring CEO Bill McCracken next year.

McCracken, 70, will leave the board on January 7 and formally retire March
31.

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Will Audiogalaxy buyout move Dropbox into a cloud music service?

There have been intriguing developments in terms of utilising the cloud as an entertainment vehicle during the past 24 hours, with Dropbox acquiring personal music streaming service Audiogalaxy and Amazon’s Cloud Player arriving on Samsung Smart TVs.

The acquisition of Audiogalaxy by cloud storage expert Dropbox may be a sign of things to come. Dropbox already allows limited music streaming as part of its cloud storage solution, and with Audiogalaxy’s expertise in that area, it seems like a match made in heaven.

In a blog post entitled “Hello, Dropbox” the three founders of Audiogalaxy, Michael Merhej, Tom Kleinpeter and Viraj Mody, wrote: “Over the last few years we’ve built a wonderful music experience on the web and mobile devices, attracting loyal users from all over the world.

“Today, we are thrilled to announce our team is joining Dropbox!” the blog continues, adding: “We are excited about the …

SYS-CON.tv Interview: Cloud Identity Management

“Companies today have customers and employees that require access to internal applications as well as cloud applications and that creates a challenge for IT. How do you manage the users who want access to those applications across multiple domains and Ping Identity solves that problem – it has a solution that helps you manage identities,” explained Mike Desai, senior director at Ping Identity, in this SYS-CON.tv interview with Cloud Expo Conference Chair Jeremy Geelan at the 11th International Cloud Expo, held November 5-8, 2012, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.

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Cloud Computing: How to Stop Being Afraid & Learn to Love the Public Cloud

CloudVelocity emerged from stealth mode Wednesday with a new name, a $5 million A round from the Mayfield Fund, and a hybrid cloud automation platform meant to entice the enterprise to push its multi-tier application into the scary public cloud as a seamless extension of its private data center.
It claims it can do it safely and without modification or performance degradation. Heady stuff if true.
Mayfield Fund managing director Navin Chaddha goes further and claims, “CloudVelocity will have the same impact on public cloud adoption as VMware did on the adoption of server virtualization by making public clouds look like internal data centers.” Mayfield incubated the start-up for the last couple of years.

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This Is Not Just ERP, This Is Two-Tier ERP

The rise of Big Data and the monolithic systems that are now being built on increasingly cloud-based data models is a reality we cannot ignore.
This reality has popularized discussions relating to the core component mechanics of many firms’ IT stacks.
Key among these technologies is ERP, or Enterprise Resource Planning to afford it its full moniker. The term can be taken to be a relatively broad expression as it encompasses software applications that oversee the management of suppliers, customer service, order tracking and all manner of demand and supply-related indicators…
… or to put it more simply, ERP systems look after companies’ “systems of record” data.

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3D Sound Powered by the Cloud – Voxeet Launches Mobile Apps

Cloud Computing is finally changing the sound of conference calls. As hard as Skype and Skype alternatives tried, none of the peer-to-peer solutions has kicked the archaic audio bridges in the dust. The quality is just not good enough for important business conversations. Newcomer Voxeet wants to change that with their cloud computing architecture. Already out as kick-butt web app Voxeet is now available on iPhone and Android app stores.
Anyone who’s been on a conference call-of which there are more than 100 billion minutes worth each year-knows firsthand how awful they can be. Voice quality can be muffled and choppy. Background noise can be distracting. If more than one person is speaking at the same time, it can be impossible to tell who is whom, or even worse, the sound can cut out entirely. Voxeet’s Natural Conferencing technology eliminates all of these problems, and more.

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Innovation Guru Jeremy Gutsche, Small Business Expert Tim Harmon and VMware President Tod Nielsen to Deliver Keynote Speeches at Parallels Summit 2013

Register for Parallels Summit by Dec. 31 and receive the opportunity to attend a Parallels Certified Training Course for free. That’s a $2,000 savings! Plus, when you use the code ATGNB89Z, you’ll receive $100 off of your Parallels Summit registration! Don’t miss this amazing opportunity to grow your business. Register today at http://www.parallels.com/summit/2013/.
We’re thrilled to announce an exciting roster keynote speakers for Parallels Summit 2013, the leading global annual gathering of the cloud industry, scheduled from February 4-6, 2013, at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada. Parallels featured keynote speakers include Jeremy Gutsche, an innovation expert, award-winning author of Exploiting Chaos, and founder of TrendHunter.comTim Harmon who as Principal Analyst, Forrester Research, Inc. serves technology marketing professionals in developing SMB go-to-market channels; and Tod Nielsen, Co-President of Application Platform, VMware. Each are industry experts whose collective insight is highly sought-after for creating strategies to market IT services to small and medium businesses (SMBs).

Members of Parallels’ leadership team will also deliver keynote speeches – including Birger Steen, CEO; Serguei Beloussov, Executive Chairman of the Board & Chief Architect; and Jack Zubarev, President, Marketing and Alliances. These hosting industry authorities will share what Parallels has been developing in the last year including the latest innovations in Parallels software, offering attendees deep insight into their customers, and access to the broadest ecosystem of partners – all to make it easy for you to sell cloud services to SMBs.

 

Parallels Summit will feature rich sessions with integrated in-depth content arranged in three distinct tracks:

 

  • Business track will feature innovative ways to understand and more deeply analyze customers behaviors
  • Technical track is focused on how to make the best use of the latest innovations from Parallels R&D
  • Developer track is for those who want to build and integrate rich services using the Application Packaging Standard (APS) in a way that was never possible before

In addition to the keynotes and training sessions, conference attendees will receive a detailed overview of Parallels product roadmap in advance of public announcements. Parallels SMB Cloud Insights™ research will be updated with all new analysis for US, Global, Mexico, and Brazil exploring what services SMBs say they want to buy from cloud service providers.

“I am looking forward to Parallels Summit 2013. Gathering the brightest and most innovative minds in the industry, Parallels Summit creates moments for attendees to make important connections,” said Birger Steen, CEO, Parallels. “Attendees will discover the latest solutions, gain insight from industry experts, network with their peers and move their business forward. All this in just a couple of days because the entire ecosystem will be there.”

 

Parallels invites you to register now and join the more than 1,500 industry influencers, leading technology analysts, media editors and reporters and online influentials from across the globe. From cloud service providers and developers, hosting companies, communication service providers (CSPs) to value-added resellers (VARs) and independent software vendors (ISVs), Parallels Summit 2013 is an unrivaled opportunity to build relationships with the leading players in the cloud space.

 

Attend Parallels Summit and you can also meet and interact with other leading players in the hosting industry, including key executives and technical staff from Platinum and Gold event sponsors IBM, Symantec, Microsoft, Enom, LuxCloud and OpenXchange among the over 50 event sponsors from across the entire hosting ecosystem.

 

Register today at http://www.parallels.com/summit/2013/.

 

 

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