Archive for August, 2010

How Important Is Cloud Hosting To The Future Of Video?

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

There is an every growing concern about my iPhone4 that I have. You see, each movie you download on iTunes is over a gigabyte in size. If it’s in HD the file size plumps up to a few gigabytes. That’s per movie! Apple’s latest iPhone, the iPhone 4, has a maximum storage limit of 32 GB. If you’re lucky, that means 10 of these movies.  So what if I could access my data from anywhere in the world on the fly, from my own personal cloud server? How would this affect the way we all view our little PDA’s?

http://www.textually.org/tv/archives/2010/05/03/apple-iphone-video-the-office.jpeg

Netflix is the big success right now in terms of Hollywood content online. How do they do it? Increasingly, it’s through streaming. Hulu? Streaming. Apple’s model will obviously be different. But if they can convince the studios to allow customers to store their purchased movies on Apple servers (maybe in that new massive data center in North Carolina) and stream them as they need them, it will solve the storage problem.

When are they going to release a cloud hosting solution for us movie loving people?  I want to be able to put all my movies on a cloud server and access them when I am on a plane (with wifi of course), when I am on a business trip, when I am at work and bored out of my mind ;)!  The future of video is in the cloud.  Now when is a company going to come out with a GOOD solution that we can all use.

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TeleTech to Host Cisco Telephony

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

TeleTech announced that it will be hosting Cisco telephony and portal infrastructure for the Customer Interaction Cloud, a multichannel contact center solution made available by Cisco and Salesforce.com.

The On Demand cloud-based hosted network infrastructure  is combined with Cisco’s Unified Contact Center to form TeleTech’s new Customer Interaction Cloud.  The flexibility of the pre-configured contact center solution allows small and midsize businesses to take advantage of enterprise-class technologies at an attractive price point. Customer Interaction Cloud follows a cloud-computing or software-as-a-service (SaaS) model allowing customers with a simple broadband connection to access and rapidly deploy an innovative contact center solution without a capital investment.

The software-as-a-service model is changing the way companies think about their business. Rather than adding complexity and increasing fixed cost budgets, SaaS allows companies of all sizes to enjoy a variable-cost model without any capital investment. In addition, ongoing maintenance and upgrades are simplified due to the cloud based infrastructure.

“By combining the skills of two industry leaders, we have created a cloud-based, multichannel solution to meet today’s complex contact center requirements. The pre-integration of all components dramatically simplifies deployment and day-to-day use,” said Ken Tuchman, chairman and chief executive officer of TeleTech. “We are excited to work with Cisco to jointly deliver the next generation of multichannel contact center functionality.”

“As an industry leader in providing customer care solutions, Cisco seeks to collaborate with like-minded organizations that focus on customer success. We are working with TeleTech because of their expertise, industry leadership and history of innovation in developing next generation solutions designed to meet the demands of customer contact centers. Working together, we’re able to help our customers increase operational productivity, and improve total cost of ownership in their contact centers,” commented John Hernandez, vice president and general manager of the Cisco Customer Collaboration Business Unit.

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How Big is Amazon’s Cloud Computing Business?

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

How big is Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud hosting business? I have been doing a little research about the cloud services giant and here is some of the numbers that I got.

UBS Investment Research analysts Brian Pitz and Brian Fitzgerald released a report which puts revenue numbers of the giant cloud hosting company Amazon’s web services. The duo estimate that in 2010, AWS will generated about $500 million in revenues and will grow this to $750 million by 2011. By 2014, it would bring in close to $2.54 billion in revenues.

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UBS analysts believe believe that the total market for AWS type services will be between $5-to-$6 billion in 2010 and will eventually grow to $15-to-$20 billion in 2014. How do they arrive at these numbers?

  • IDC says the total global cloud market in 2010 will be $22 billion and $55 billion in 2014.
  • IDC says of the total servers and storage account for $5 billion-to-$6 billion in 2010 and $15-to-$20 billion in 2015.
  • Of the twelve AWS product lines, only two (EC2 and S3) compete in this subcategory. AWS essentially ‘rents out’ IT infrastructure to companies that seek to outsource IT needs such as Application Hosting, Web Hosting, High Performance Computing, Storage, E-Commerce, and more. Amazon was one of the first entrants (3Q06), and is a top player in the rapidly growing market. (UBS Research Report)

Can anyone else say that they are a giant in the cloud hosting space.  I sure wish that I was one of the first people to start cloud computing.  I’m still stuck with my 5 dedicated servers all across the US and UK! So question to our readers, do you really think that $2.5 billion dollars is possible in the next 3 years?  Do you think that AWS cloud hosting services can produce that much revenue in the next 3 years?

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