Posts Tagged ‘Cloud Hosting’

Vineet Jain Named a 2010 Cloud Storage Superstar

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Egnyte’s CEO Vineet Jain, has been named a 2010 Storage Superstar and the company has also been recognized as a 2010 Emerging Storage Vendor by CRN Magazine. The 2010 Storage Superstars is a selective list of the visionaries and researchers behind breakthrough innovations in the storage industry. The 2010 Emerging Storage Vendors is a list of cutting-edge vendors guaranteed to differentiate resellers’ product offerings.

“Solution providers who design and deploy storage infrastructures deal with a technology where change is the only constant,” said Kelley Damore, VP, Editorial Director, Everything Channel. “Small businesses and enterprises alike need to safely store, back up, recover and archive data and these Storage Superstars are many of the unsung heroes who have helped invent better ways of doing this. Yet many of these individuals seldom get the recognition they deserve. We congratulate all the ‘Storage Superstars,’ and are happy to provide an opportunity to shine the spotlight on them.”

Egnyte new hybrid cloud storage bridges the gap between local and cloud storage.  They still focus on being a leading provider of cloud file server solutions.

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GoGrid Coupon Code

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

So @gogrid just tweeted a new promo code for $100 off their service.  If you want to test out GoGrid & you are a new user, use promocode “GGMS” to get you a $100 credit. Check out GoGrid Cloud Hosting Review

http://www.techcrunchit.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/gogrid_panel.gif

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Atmos Online Cloud ShutDown

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Cloud storage provider EMC is huge, and the company has now shut down its Atmos Online cloud storage service not much more than a year after the service’s launch.  This just shows that you’re still taking on some risk if a cloud service itself is new and unproven.

For much of Atmos Online’s existence, there were a few ways to get access to EMC’s Atmos product on a metered basis. You could get it from AT&T, where it was sold as Synaptic Storage Services; you could also buy it from Peer1 Hosting, where it was sold under the CloudOne Storage brand; you could buy it from Hosted Solutions under the banner of Stratus Cloud Storage; or you could buy it from EMC via Atmos Online.

Let me just come out and say it: “there aren’t going to be standards“. This is already a commodity product, unavoidably. If they didn’t have any sort of lock-in, the service might not be possible at all. How hard would it be for services to migrate on a pricing basis, leading to an inevitable ‘crash’ when one of the services gets flooded?

As with the Wall Street meltdown, some regulation and oversight might make sense before these services get intertwined to the degree that they can be taken down in tandem from a 3rd party attack or mistake. We should start thinking of the internet more and more as infrastructure on the level of harbors, airports, railroads and highways. Cloud offerings push us farther and farther into this realm.

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