Posts Tagged ‘Cloud Hosting’

Rackspace Buys Cloudkik

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Large hosting and cloud hosting company Rackspace has aquired Cloudkick for an undisclosed amount of money. Cloudkick, which opened it’s doors in early 2009, helps to provide detailed graphs on your servers, and tools to categorize and keep information about what each server is doing.  This should help the cloud server giant know a little better what is going on with your servers.

Cloudkick has a little over 1,500 businesses that it helps, from Fortune 500 enterprises to small start-ups.  Cloudkick has helped more than 1 million servers know a little better what is going on.

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mSpot Cloud Music

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

mSpot allows customers to sync all your music collection across mobile phones and PCs/Macs to iPhones and I believe iPad’s with the launch of their new app. Since the service’s public launch in June, mSpot has seen over 1 million downloads of a similar app for Android phones.

The new mSpot application will allow users to upload their music to the mSpot Cloud and then listen to the music from both
desktop browsers and iPhones for free.  Free 2GB of hard drive space (aprox 1600 songs) and $3.99/month for the 40GB cloud hosting plan (36000 songs).

No doubt that cloud music will be huge in the near future.  Cloud musica!

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Hyper-V Cloud

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

http://news.cnet.com/i/bto/20081027/Windows_Azure_610x406.jpgMicrosoft announced that the Hyper-V Cloud has a new group of tools designed for businesses that are looking to generate their own Windows Server-based private cloud infrastructures.

This is one of a few private cloud initiatives Microsoft has announced within the past year, following the launch of Windows Azure Platform Appliance.

It’s kinda cool. Microsoft’s new Windows Azure platform lets service providers and large customers operate the Azure development and hosting platform as a private cloud from their own data centers so that developers are able to create new applications which they can run in the cloud.

Now users can choose from 70 global service providers that offer hosted versions of Microsoft-based infrastructures.  I wonder how this will change the cloud hosting world that we live in?  Would love to hear from all of you different comments on how you think this will change the world?

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