CloudBerry Explorer Adds Support for Cloudian

CloudBerry Lab today released CloudBerry Explorer, an application that allows users to manage files in Amazon S3 storage buckets just as they would on their local computers. This new version offers support for Gemini Technologies’ industry-leading Cloudian Cloud storage solution.

Cloudian is an S3 API compliant, multi-tenant, multi-datacenter cloud storage platform that enables cloud service providers and enterprises to cost-effectively deploy extremely scalable and reliable object storage services within public and private clouds. The Cloudian platform leverages commodity servers and offers a fully distributed, peer-to-peer architecture, with no single point of failure. The solution easily scales from one node up to hundreds of nodes across multiple data centers, supporting petabytes of data. Cloudian also provides a comprehensive user interface for both end user applications as well as administrative functions, including billing, monitoring and provisioning.

CloudBerry Explorer allows end users to accomplish simple tasks without special technical knowledge, automate time-consuming tasks to improve productivity. The new version of CloudBerry Explorer helps users manage Cloudian storage just as they manage Amazon S3. Users can upload files to Cloudian, create buckets and folders and perform other management tasks simply and efficiently.

“Our Cloudian solution is all about accessibility, scalability and affordability, while offering unmatched performance and security,” said Giorgio Propersi, General Manager, Gemini Technologies. “CloudBerry Explorer is a great tool which reflects the same principles and goals as Cloudian. We are pleased to see it help even more customers adopt our leading cloud storage platform.”

CloudBerry Explorer is designed to work on Windows 2003/XP/Vista/2008 and Windows 7. Microsoft PowerShell command line interface allows advanced computer users integrate Amazon S3 storage access with other routines.

“Cloudian is one of the most powerful and accessible storage solutions on the market today,” said Aleksey Serkov, CTO, CloudBerry Lab. “We are pleased to meet growing customer demand by helping companies of all sizes adopt and manage Cloudian regardless of their technical expertise level.”

CloudBerry Explorer for Windows is a freeware. CloudBerry Explorer PRO costs $39.99 (US).


Cloud Computing: The Next Generation of Computing & Sustainable IT

NIST defines cloud computing as a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction. My own definition is slightly to the point, I consider cloud computing as Information Technology as a Utility Service. To be clear, I find Cloud Computing no different than Managed Services. It doesn’t matter if you utilize software as a service, platform as a service, or infrastructure as a service, the idea is to treat IT as a utility service to save overall costs.

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Mission-Critical Applications in the Cloud – Myth or Reality?

In his Opening Keynote at Cloud Expo, Henry Fastert, SHI’s Chief Technologist and Managing Partner, shares insight on how the latest generation of cloud computing is now capable of addressing the needs of the enterprise mission critical applications. These mission-critical applications require computing infrastructure that is secure, optimizes performance, and is highly resilient. The purpose of the keynote is to highlight how the latest cloud computing designs have evolved in terms of security, availability, and overall service quality to meet the needs of mission critical applications.

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VMware, Intel, and NEC All to Join OpenStack

At its first full Board of Directors meeting, due to be held Tuesday August 28th, The OpenStack Foundation will be considering among other things applications from VMware, Intel, and NEC to become Gold Members of the foundation. They would be joining prior Gold Members like Cisco, Dell, NetApp and Yahoo! The Foundation already numbers AT&T, Canonical, HP, Rackspace, IBM, Nebula, Red Hat, and SUSE as its Platinum members.

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Private Cloud 2.0: CMAP – The “SaaS Stack” for the Enterprise

A critical component of a Private Cloud 2.0 architecture is what Techcello call a ‘CMAP’ – A Cloud-ready Multi-tenant Application Platform.
In the same fashion that Private Cloud internalizes the IaaS model, so this can also be repeated for both the PaaS and SaaS layers too.
Indeed with virtualization well established it’s more so these areas where the enterprise will find the new opportunity growth areas for expanding IT productivity and ROI.

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Skytap Intros Cloud Foundry-Based Virtual Private PaaS

Skytap expects to put out bait next week at VMworld hoping to attract the enterprise to its cloud.
It will introduce a virtual private Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) that can spin up pre-configured multi-VM Cloud Foundry environments reportedly in under a minute in the Skytap Cloud.
It runs a secure VPN connection from the Skytap Cloud to on-premise infrastructure to create a secure self-contained network-isolated Cloud Foundry environment for experimentation, development and testing next-generation applications.

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Canada, Chile, Jordan Among Regional ICT Leaders

Where’s the global action in the ICT business?

The US remains the largest market, by far, four times that of number two China. Other large markets predictably fall within the large G7 economies.

The BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) have received a lot of publicity and investment over the past decade, and a lot of people have gotten excited recently over the potential of Indonesia, the largest ASEAN nation with a population well in excess of 200 million people.

But our research at the Tau Institute over the past year-plus draws a different picture. We don’t look at things on an absolute basis, ie, merely look at the size of something, the percentage of its development, and the percentage of its potential growth.

Instead, we’re creating a series of indices that provide a relative, “pound-for-pound” view of 85 countries and their ICT environments. What countries are doing the most with what they have? What countries are the most dynamic, ie, the most likely to change dramatically? What happens when we integrate and specifically weigh several technology, economic, and societal factors?

Our latest results show South Korea topping the world. We’ve also identified global leaders in overall development and development potential.

Regional leaders include Canada, Chile, Estonia, the Netherlands, Jordan, Morocco, Vietnam, New Zealand, and Ghana.

Our statistics are moderately complex, and placed on a logarithmic curve to get a clear view. We’re happy to enter discussions with anyone who’s interested in them.

We don’t account for population, so small, well-performing Estonia, as an example, will not be as attractive to many people as larger, successful Finland, or very large, lagging Russia. Communist Vietnam may not be as attractive as Communist China, even though it performs somewhat better.

Big regional laggards such as Brazil, India, Indonesia, and South Africa may still be more appealing than countries that do much better in our research, such as Chile, Thailand, the Philippines, and Ghana.

But we forge on. As I wrote yesterday, our research is intended simply to start conversations rather than finish tem. The cases of Kenya and Tanzania provide just one example. They’re neighbors, with similar populations (Tanzania’s slightly larger) and incomes (Tanzania’s slightly poorer).

Kenya has wider access to the Internet, but has done no better in providing broadband to its citizens. Its income disparity is higher, and the perception of corruption there is higher than in Tanzania. Our research shows Tanzania to rank slightly higher overall, and in terms of its potential.

Our result matches up with conversations we’ve had with people doing business in the region, who’ve found that Tanzania is a better place to find entrepreneurs, even as both countries present major challenges to development.

With 85 countries in the mix, there are thousands of permutations and views into this data. We’re working on creating a series of reports, and welcome any inquiries about reports you’d like to see.

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Violin to OEM vSphere

Violin Memory, the flash memory array merchant that’s been on and off about an IPO and pulled in an $80 million D round three or four months ago, is going to be OEMing vSphere from VMware, which is majority owned by traditional storage biggie EMC.
The company is evidently cultivating an appreciation of little oddities like that. Its CEO Don Basile used to run Fusion-io.
Anyway, the OEM deal will underpin Violin’s enterprise-oriented virtualization-in-a-box widgetry for running business-critical and Big Data applications “at the speed of memory” in virtualized and cloud environments.

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Violin to OEM vSphere

Violin Memory, the flash memory array merchant that’s been on and off about an IPO and pulled in an $80 million D round three or four months ago, is going to be OEMing vSphere from VMware, which is majority owned by traditional storage biggie EMC.
The company is evidently cultivating an appreciation of little oddities like that. Its CEO Don Basile used to run Fusion-io.
Anyway, the OEM deal will underpin Violin’s enterprise-oriented virtualization-in-a-box widgetry for running business-critical and Big Data applications “at the speed of memory” in virtualized and cloud environments.

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Defining Big Data for the Public CIO

Do you remember service-oriented architecture (SOA)? This concept led to tremendous new capabilities and efficient, mission-focused designs. Enterprises established architectures in which application interfaces, logic and data were separated and smartly reusable. After the term went mainstream, every company in the IT ecosystem grabbed onto it and began to use the acronym SOA to mean anything they wanted it to. Although it’s still a useful construct for IT professionals, when it comes to interacting with industry, the term has now lost much of its meaning.

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