Cloud Computing provides the technology foundation to capitalize on Big Data for corporate success. The flexible infrastructure offered through Cloud Computing–combined with increased storage and processing power of new technologies in the Cloud—provide the rich, agile compute platform to handle the volume, variety, velocity, and validity needs of Big Data. Insert a fourth layer into the Cloud Computing stack (Knowledge as a Service) between PaaS and Saas to reduce human-intensive ontology work in favor of automated, algorithm-driven features designed to exploit disparate data in the Cloud.
Examining Corruption & Technology
Good government makes for wealthy countries. This may seem to be self-evident, but is it true?
One way to address the question is to look at the Corruption Perceptions Index, produced by Transparency International, and which we incorporate into our algorithm in the research we’ve been doing for the past two years.
The Corruption Perceptions index, like any measure, is controversial, in this case because it measures only the perception of something that would be difficult to measure rationally in any case.
But perception is often reality, and corruption, like porn, is something that you know when you see it.
There is a chicken-and-egg problem: does corruption cause poverty, or does poverty cause corruption? And are there examples of countries which are relatively wealthy but rated as corrupt? Are there any poor countries rated as not corrupt?
Of the top 20 highest-income nations among the 99 we’ve surveyed, 15 rate a 7.5 or higher on Transparency International’s 10-point scale. The exceptions are two oil-rich nations (Kuwait and the UAE), the United States, France, and Italy, the latter at a lowly 3.9.
The developing, hot-growth economies do not rate well. Take the BRICS, please: Brazil (3.8), China (3.6), India (3.1), and Russia (2.4). Russia maintains the highest income in this group, although it could be argued that it remains a declining superpower rather than an emerging economy. There’s also plenty of discussion in the world about how China’s Communist dictatorship remains (allegedly) less corrupt than India, the world’s largest democracy.
Other hot-growth countries fare poorly in this CPI, including Indonesia (3.0), Vietnam (2.9), the Philippines (2.6), and Nigeria (2.4), all of which have per-person incomes raning from 3% to 7% of the United States. Some emerging countries do better, including Lithuania (4.8) and Jordan (4.5).
Chile (7.1), Uruguay (7.0), and Estonia (6.8) are the only developing nations with respectable CPIs. An odd case is found in South Korea, which is somewhere between a developing and developed nation and has a mediocre CPI (5.4).
Our research focuses primarily on Internet access and bandwidth, data servers, income disparity, and local cost-of-living. The CPI is an additional ingredient. South Korea and Estonia lead the current rankings. Vietnam ranks #9, and Bulgaria (3.3) comes in at #17. The rest of the Top 20 are well-developed nations with high CPIs.
When we examine the technological factors only, removing CPI and other societal factors from the algorithm, we find a Top 15 that has a very high correlation with very poor Corruption Perceptions. Romania (3.6) and Morocco (3.4) are the “leaders” in this group.
The correlated CPIs do rise dramatically in the next group of 15. But it’s clear that corruption is not a highly mitigating factor when it comes to technology-driven economic development, nor does it seem to be an enormous hindrance to the global investment community. An argument could be made that societies become less corrupt as they progress, and in the modern era of technology-driven transparency, will do so more quickly.
Certainly my experience living in Southeast Asia and traveling the region showed many societal and bright spots in countries that do not fare so well in the CPI. In my view, where there’s a nicely developing technology infrastructure, there’s hope.
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: Backup Strategies to the Cloud
Cloud-based enterprise backup solutions offer a plethora of benefits. Yet many companies face an uphill battle when it comes to using cloud-based solutions to back up critical business information. Whether due to data security concerns or strict compliance requirements, a standard cloud-based approach isn’t always feasible. But there are ways to reap the benefits of cloud-based backup while abiding by corporate security and/or compliance mandates.
In his session at the 11th International Cloud Expo, Andrew Renz, Senior Systems Engineer at Code 42, will outline how companies can leverage a variety of cloud backup strategies to confidently secure enterprise information. He will share wisdom gained from his experience selecting and/or deploying enterprise backup solutions for Apple, Oracle, Expedia and Intuit.
Does size really matter when it comes to the cloud?
In my experience, those tasked with making such business-critical decisions about what size cloud provider to opt for are confronted with several opinions on the matter, often from sources with their own biases on the subject.
To my knowledge, there is only one overriding advantage of a large cloud provider, namely price. Whilst companies who build bigger data centres can drive down the unit price offering cost savings to customers, flexibility in the contract is usually compromised as a result.
With large cloud providers it is nigh on impossible to get a contractual change, let alone a contract that is designed specifically for the needs of individual businesses.
Due to the sheer levels of governance in place, even the smallest of changes remain impossible as the system does not allow for flexibility – they operate on a “this is our offer, take it or leave it” basis.
In the case of …
FreshBooks Adds Balance Sheet Tool for Small Business Accounting
As part of FreshBooks shift from online invoicing only to cloud accounting for small businesses, they’ve expanding on their accounting offering with the release of Balance Sheets, a tool at helping businesses prepare to apply for loans, grants, submitting taxes, or seeking investors.
The new Balance Sheet tool allows users to see a summary of assets, liabilities, and equity and easily determine the health of their business.
FreshBooks claims more than 5 million users in 120 countries, and says “No one in North America has more paying users online other than Intuit’s QuickBooks Online. ”
More info on Balance Sheets is available at the FreshBooks Blog.
Symform to Exhibit and Speak at Cloud Expo Silicon Valley
SYS-CON Events announced today that Symform, a revolutionary, distributed cloud backup service, will exhibit at SYS-CON’s 11th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 5–8, 2012, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Symform is a revolutionary and secure cloud backup service. The Symform Cloud Storage Network protects your files, your business, and your bottom line: when you contribute to our network, we provide you unlimited cloud storage and backup for free. Unlike traditional data center storage, Symform’s network encrypts, shreds, and globally distributes data. This disruptive technology provides more secure, more cost-effective, and higher-performing cloud backup than any alternative today. Customers join the Symform network by contributing excess local drive space and, in exchange, receive free cloud backup.
Virtualization Takes Cloud to the Next Level
BancVue creates the services that empower its customers to beat the giants in their field by better leveraging agile IT.
The first thing we wanted to do was to abstract the applications and the operating system from the hardware so that a hardware failure wouldn’t bring down our systems. For that, of course, we went to virtualization. We experimented with various virtualization products. Out of those trials, vSphere was the best software for a heterogeneous environment like ours, where we had Windows and different flavors of Linux.
SolidFire, Canonical Deliver Deployable OpenStack Nova, Cinder
SolidFire, a provider of all-solid-state (SSD) storage systems for cloud service providers, announced today, in conjunction with Canonical, a production-ready reference architecture for deploying OpenStack Compute (Nova) and OpenStack Block Storage (Cinder). SolidFire will be demonstrating the deployment of 1,000 production- ready VMs with predictable performance and fine-grain quality of service (QoS) via Canonical, OpenStack Compute and Block Storage at the OpenStack Summit, taking place October 15 through October 18 in San Diego.
John Griffith from SolidFire and David Medberry from Canonical will co-present the summit’s first workshop: “How to Deploy a Best-of-Breed OpenStack Compute and Block Storage Cloud” on Monday, October 15, at 9:50 a.m. local time. The session will include information on deployment tools, tips and tricks, targeted use cases, benchmark results and key enabling technologies.
“SolidFire has done a great job leading the Block Storage project in line with the OpenStack philosophy of delivering a pluggable architecture with integration points for multiple vendors and technologies,” said Jonathan Bryce, executive director of the OpenStack Foundation. “It’s exciting to see more production implementations and configuration options available to OpenStack users.”
“Canonical has worked with SolidFire to ensure tight integration of Cinder into Ubuntu OpenStack packages to deliver a production-ready cloud infrastructure. As the reference operating system for OpenStack, Ubuntu was the natural choice to integrate with SolidFire’s solution,” commented Nick Barcet, Ubuntu cloud product manager at Canonical. “We believe SolidFire’s work in OpenStack is extremely important to the ecosystem, because it allows cloud providers to enhance their offering with high IOPS storage and unprecedented quality-of-service. They have also been leading the Cinder project in OpenStack to deliver a great abstraction layer that can be reused by other vendors to integrate their own solution.”
“Cinder has gotten off to a very successful start thanks to the hard work of more than 50 individual contributors,” said John Griffith, senior software engineer at SolidFire. “We delivered a deep feature set in our first release of Cinder, which allowed us to move quickly with Canonical in executing this powerful production-ready reference architecture for large-scale multi-tenant clouds.”
Key SolidFire-related features in the first OpenStack Cinder release include:
- Full SolidFire driver integration
- Ability to create, snapshot and manage SolidFire volumes using
OpenStack clients and APIs - Ability to set and maintain true QoS levels on a per-volume basis
- Ability to store instances on SolidFire volumes
- Enhanced boot from volume options, including support for SolidFire
volumes
SolidFire’s efforts around OpenStack are further evidence of its commitment to delivering proven, integrated storage solutions for its customers’ cloud infrastructures. This Cinder integration milestone follows SolidFire’s recently announced integration with major technology vendors across the cloud ecosystem.
Learn more: www.solidfire.com | www.twitter.com/solidfireinc | www.facebook.com/solidfire.
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: Leverage Connectivity to Speed Up Data Access
Fast and easy remote data access is essential for SaaS-based ERP systems today.
In his session at the 11th International Cloud Expo, David Shugars, Sr. Software Engineer, Research & Development at Plex Systems, Inc., will describe how Plex Online uses superior connectivity to provide simplified data access for compatibility with a broad range of standard reporting tools. With this powerful data integration, Plex users simply access business, production, financial, and other data from their manufacturing operations through queries, and combine the information with data from other sources as required to generate custom reports.
Asure Software Partners with FotoPunch for Mobile Employee Time Tracking
Asure Software announced that it has entered into a private label licensing agreement with FotoPunch, Inc. FotoPunch is a SaaS-based technology company that offers biometric and geospatial technology solutions to track employee time from virtually anywhere at anytime.
“We are very excited to be partnering with FotoPunch to offer mobile time and data collection solutions to our AsureForce™ Time & Labor Management (TLM) clients,” commented Pat Goepel, Asure’s Chief Executive Officer. “This partnership is in complete alignment with our strategy to quickly bring to market innovative, cloud-based solutions that work when, where and how workforces are operating today. FotoPunch technology is the first of its kind in the time and labor management industry.”
FotoPunch uses facial recognition and GPS software to allow employees to punch in and out using any mobile device, including smartphones, feature phones and dumbphones with a camera and SMS capabilities. When clients deploy this capability, they increase manager and employee productivity, reduce payroll costs, and avoid hardware costs. And users can access data without requiring Internet access, which is significant for highly mobile employees. The solution can also run through wall-mounted tablets in busy work areas.
From a workplace productivity perspective, managers have instant access to information via a web-based dashboard to track when and where employees are working, eliminate time fraud and stop buddy punching. FotoPunch also integrates with AsureForce TLM solutions and virtually any payroll solution.
“Our patent-pending technology will help expand Asure’s solution portfolio, but more importantly, this one-of-a-kind mobile technology provides truly measureable benefits to clients,” said Lance Ellsworth, Vice President of Business Development for FotoPunch.