Archive for May, 2010

VMware Acquires GemStone, Can Anyone Say Cloud Applications?

Monday, May 10th, 2010

VMware Acquires GemStone For Building Cloud Computing Applications.  “The acquisition is the latest in a series of moves that signal VMware’s determination to become a supplier of software to future cloud builders. It already dominates the creation of virtual machines that run applications. Last July it acquired SpringSource for $420 million to get the leading framework for building Java applications,” reported Information Week.

The spokesman for what is now the application development side of VMware is Rod Johnson, former CEO of SpringSource and general manager of VMware’s SpringSource division. “We view GemStone as the kind of modern middleware that the Java developer base will need” for applications that run in cloud data centers, he said in an interview prior to the May 6 announcement. Later stating “Cloud computing is a distributed deployment model, and for that reason, caching and data accessibility are of far greater strategic importance than before.”

“We see this acquisition as a common step being taken by large organizations like VMware, who want to create a single-vendor-controlled virtualized cloud stack,” said Gigaspaces CEO Zeev Bikowsky, a competitor. Cloud users looking for flexibility should stick with Gigaspaces, he added.

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By 2014 Cloud Computing Server Sales To Reach $12.6B

Monday, May 10th, 2010

The International Data Corp (IDC) said in a report earlier today that “Server revenue for cloud computing in the public sector is projected to rise to $718 million in 2014 from $582 million in 2009.”  IDC analyst Katherine Broderick later said in a statement “Now is a great time for many IT organizations to begin seriously considering this technology and employing public and private clouds in order to simplify sprawling IT environments,” server revenue for private-sector cloud market is expected to increase to $11.8 billion from $7.3 billion in the same period, IDC said.

What does this mean for top cloud hosting providers? You estimate that out  and you see that server sales for  cloud computing are expected to jump to $12.6 billion in the next five years.  As many new companies embrace “the cloud” their cost of virtualized computing will go down, leaving room for growth.

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GoGrid vs Amazon EC2 (cloud servers)

Friday, May 7th, 2010

So I am willing to try out almost every different type of hosting company out there.  I personally have over 600 websites that have several hundred thousand unique visitors a month.  I love GoGrid but wanted to try out EC2. After playing around with EC2 for several days, I came with the following conclusions. GoGrid & EC2 only looks similar. They are actually two different offering targeting different types of scenarios.

Here are my 4 pet peves with Amazon Ec2 Cloud hosting:

  1. Amazon EC2 doesn’t support Windows 2008. Can anyone say annoying?  Both because there are some features that I could have used and because Windows 2003 (their only Windows offering) is not supporting RDP saved passwords, and doesn’t support copy/paste in the login screen. Both of which make it horrible login experience with the crazy passwords Amazon assign.
  2. Spinning up a new instance in EC2 seems to take about 15 – 30 minutes, which is annoyingly long.  Long instance provisioning time sucks. Yes, I know about reserved instances, not applicable for my scenario. (GoGrid feels faster, but I don’t have any data to say if it is faster).
  3. Why does support cost so much?  We all need good cloud hosting support but paying $100’s a month for support blows when you can get it for free at other places.
  4. I setup an instance, told it to install security updates, and rebooted it. It never came up. I am not sure what I am supposed to do in this case. You have to enter a support contract to recover this, as far as I could tell. It seems that the response would have been: ‘just recreate the instance’.   There seems to be no good way to recover an instance.  Amazon Ec2 should fix this.

Here are my 2 pet peves with GoGrid Cloud Hosting

  1. When I was trying to send large amounts of data over FTP the connection kept being reset. This isn’t a normal use case but it made me wary of their connection.
  2. Tried to setup your SAN storage was rocket science and after 30 minutes of messing with network settings it still wasn’t working.

So what do I do?  Well as of right now I’m going to stick with GoGrid for some of my sites and keep looking for other cloud hosting companies that are better and will help with FTP and SAN problems both of which are a primary use of that platform for me.  What are your thoughts about this?

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