Archive for May, 2010

Will Microsoft live up to it’s Cloud Promises?

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Microsoft plans on delivering supercomputing power to a broader audience of scientists via its cloud computing and server technologies, but will this really happen?

Earlier today (Tuesday), Microsoft announced its new Technical Computing group, that will let scientists focus on research without having to build or program complicated applications or server systems. Microsoft’s general manager of technical computing Bill Hilf said here: “Our goal is to create technical computing solutions that speed discovery, invention and innovation.”

Do you think this will ever happen or are they just trying to get some good cloud hosting press?

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CA Technologies with new Cloud Management Suite

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

CA Technologies is focusing on its systems management reach into the cloud. CA Technologies signaled to its extensive user group that it is executing its plan to extend systems management products into the cloud Monday.

On the second day of its 7,000-attendee CA World 2010 conference in Las Vegas, it announced four products in the Cloud-Connected Management Suite to help a traditional enterprise “bridge the gap” between data center operations and the public cloud. In doing so, it attempted to reposition the software firm formerly known as just CA. It wants to be a more forward-looking company, helping customers gain access to the next generation of business computing.

O’Malley said “shoppers for cloud services will be able to pull performance statistics for difference services in the Cloud Insight product and compare and contrast services. If users favor one metric over another for their business, say security, they can weight it more heavily in the index, then view their prospects through that filter. If they value speed of virtual server response, or consistency of availability, they can view services through those filters.”

“We believe cloud services are going down the path of manufacturing’s supply chain,” he noted. In effect there will be an IT supply chain of cloud services and “customers will need to understand the services available,” he said.

Read Full Cloud Management Suite Article

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New Cloud Commons Community

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

New Cloud Commons Community Helps IT professionals to learn and engage with peers.  This new community will help them figure out how to best use cloud computing in the world we live in.

“We are helping to develop a set of business-centric measures, mixing quantitative and qualitative data, that will provide chief information officers with a standardized method for comparing cloud services from internal or external providers,” Jane Siegel and Jeff Perdue, both senior scientists at Carnegie Mellon Silicon Valley, said in a statement.

Among the key components of the site will be:

  • A marketplace of cloud computing service offerings. This marketplace is expected to include vendor service ratings to enable participants to compare service options.
  • An area that will allow participants to provide feedback on their experience with third-party cloud services.
  • Features that will encourage: peer collaboration and networking, commentary on content posted on the site, and the sharing of cloud best practices.
  • Articles from industry analysts and subject matter experts, blog feeds from industry leaders, as well as white papers and stories on experiences from IT professionals.

Questions that they help IT cloud professionals answer:

  • What is cloud computing?
  • How is cloud computing different from hosting and outsourcing?
  • Why has cloud computing emerged now?
  • What are the benefits of cloud computing?
  • What are the risks of cloud computing?
  • What workloads should we run in the cloud today? What shouldn’t we run in the cloud?
  • Should we move to a private cloud as a steppingstone to the public cloud?
  • What three questions should we ask a cloud computing provider?
  • How should we get started with cloud computing?
  • Is cloud computing a revolution or an evolution?

“Today, there is no comprehensive, unbiased source that solicits and aggregates the most current and relevant knowledge about cloud computing and the accumulated, actual experiences that organizations are having with the cloud,” said David Hodgson, senior vice president of the Cloud Products & Solutions business line at CA Technologies. “Cloud Commons will address this need — providing IT professionals with situational awareness and visibility into what is possible with the cloud.”  This should help our world to develop a standard for cloud hosting.  This will help everyone to be on the same page.

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