Posts Tagged ‘cloud server’

100,000 Android Applications Submitted

Friday, July 30th, 2010

As many of you know I am an iPhone nut.  I always buy the newest Apple products the day they come out (iPad, iPhone, Magic Mouse, MacBook Pro, etc).  That being said, I usually keep up on other product gossip to. It’s just fun for me to do.  I found it amazing that AndroLib says there aren’t 100,000 applications available in the Android store. There have, however, 100,000 apps been submitted to Android Market since its public debut, the site wagered this morning, up from approximately 5,000 in June 2009.

That’s pretty amazing for a phone that hasn’t been around for very long and has HUGE competitors out there.  Last week Google shared in its latest earnings call that more than 70,000 in total in the app store that had been approved and downloaded several million times.

What does this mean for the cloud hosting world?  Well, it’s also HUGE.  Cloud applications are becoming the new craze.  People download more apps then they go to the grocery store.  Hosting these applications in a cost saving environment is extreemly important to the thousands of developers out there.  I don’t care what platform you are working on. Cloud applications is a big part of the future of phones.  Are you on board or not?

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70% of New Cloud Hosting Customers Are Using Windows

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

At Microsoft annual FInancial Analyst Meeting, COO Kevin Turner made the statement “One of the most exciting things about our cloud strategy is that 70 percent of the wins in the cloud that we had in Q4, ladies and gentlemen, were new Microsoft customers,” Tuner told financial analysts. “Yeah, new Microsoft customers. They were IBM Lotus Notes customers, Novell e-mail customers. They were all this other stuff, in addition to the Microsoft customers, that we’re actually able to grow our portion of the pie this next year in a very dramatic way, because we can explode worker productivity.”

Let’s get this clear what he is saying, 70% of New Cloud Hosting Customers Are Using Windows for their cloud server.  He refers to “New” in this statement, meaning that NEW people switching from other places. The number Turner stated is staggering, assuming his definition of “new” means a customer who isn’t using Microsoft products somewhere else, which is a tough claim for this reporter to believe.

“We now have over 10,000 paying customers on our cloud infrastructure platform and that number is continuing to grow every day, Turner said. (By the way, I could not get Microsoft’s video plug-in to work in any non-Internet Explorer 8 browser; I’ve pulled the quotes from the live transcript, which uses a Java plug-in.)

Turner FAM 2010 slide

“Our second big focus for businesses clearly is around the Windows 7 and Office 2010 refresh,” Turner told FAM attendees. Microsoft sells nearly 8 copies of Windows 7 a second. “For the first time in a long time, we grew share versus Apple in the United States in laptops per IVC this past year. Thanks to Windows 7. In fact, we were up 2.7 points against Apple in the United States in laptops.” Now, I am a huge Apple fan and the fact that he’s mentioning Apple in a meeting like this means that they view Apple cloud servers and Apple cloud hosting as a large competitor in the Microsoft cloud hosting world.

I guess we’ll have to see what is in store for Microsoft that can oust the Apple Giant in the next year.  Can Microsoft cloud servers top the new apple cloud servers that are being released?  I guess we’ll see!

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DreamWorks New Cloud Hosting Deal

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

DreamWorks SKG has signed a multi-year deal with Cerelink for cloud server access.  This move will help them rendering movies like How To Train Your Dragon using elastic compute resources housed in Cerelink’s supercomputing-class facility in New Mexico.

How To Train Your Dragon
Cerelink is a high performance cloud computing  provider to the motion picture industry. It provides private clouds for rendering and other content creation and management application, based on a combination of data center space, scalable high performance computing and networking, in the form of Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS).
In my opinion this is going to change the whole motion picture industry.  Using cloud servers the motion picture industry will be able to save valuable resources.  I think this will help them to save a lot of money and put all that money to creating great movies.  How To Train Your Dragon has been one of my favorite animated movies this year to date.  Possibly one of the best animated films I have seen of all time.  The fact that a cloud hosting provider could help with this would be awesome and help out a ton.
Read Full Dreamworks Cloud Computing Story
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