Posts Tagged ‘cloud server’

Welcome to the Personal Cloud of SugarSync

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

SugarSync is one of several companies competing these in the cloud server arena.  SugarSync reported in the past year, the amount of data added to the SugarSync data centers went from an average of 1 terabyte of data to 5 terabytes of information. In total, the company now hosts two petaybtes of information.  That’s a ton of info.

ReadWriteCloud channel said “Services like SugarSync serve in many ways as personal clouds that people use for their own work. They seem like plain vanilla services but that as well is the benefit the services provide. They are very simple to use. Data is automatically backed up to the cloud.”  Later stating  “Services like SugarSync show how the data we create will become part of a personal cloud network. These services lay the ground work for a new generation of personal and business offerings that work with users to create data as a service opportunities.”

The will certainly be a big player in the cloud server arena.  Check out full cloud server SugarSync article.

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Fujitsu Unveils Global Cloud Strategy

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Fujitsu has launched its global cloud strategy.  They will focus on infrastructure, application, activity and content for their cloud server customers.

“Fujitsu has been developing its cloud computing technologies by looking at changes in society and how technology can help people cope with those changes – what we call a human-centric standpoint,” Fujitsu ICT services senior executive vice president Kazuo Ishida said in a statement. “In Japan, we have been successful in conducting trials involving ICT infrastructures in areas such as agriculture and healthcare. Through these offerings, we aim to become a leader in providing these types of services around the world.”

According to its Thursday announcement, the four-part strategy developed through the company’s real experience in working with customers on cloud computing services and delivery of solutions across the world.  As some of you remember, back in December 2009, Fujitsu America launched cloud services in North America.

“We will deliver a standardized cloud service through the deployment of our global cloud platform,” Fujitsu senior executive vice president Richard Christou stated. “To address the other modes of our consumption model, we will be making further announcements, including in conjunction with our key partners, in the coming months. Fujitsu is now in a position to work with customers to deliver the benefits of cloud.”

Read Full Cloud Server Strategy

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Profit From Cloud Computing

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Take a look at the latest earnings report by the cloud hosting giant Rackspace. Rackspace added just under 10,000 new customers in the fourth quarter, almost all of which were for its cloud computing services.  What does this mean for companies out there that are thinking of moving to the cloud?  I think it means that Rackspace is still making money.  Which possibly means that cloud hosting is still very profitable.  It does however help companies out and help them to save money.  Cloud hosting cost savings is huge when you look at the amount of money that a company  can save when they have no one on their site.

Cloud computing services account for around 10% of Rackspace’s total revenue as of Q4 of 2009. The other 90% comes from managed hosting  where customers rent and control specified servers within the company’s network of more than 50,000.  The benifits to the cloud would be the cost savings. But the drawbacks to cloud hosting would be you can’t see or touch any of the infrastructure your software touches when using cloud computing services. The “cloud” of storage and processing is all up to Rackspace to know what’s going on.  Although there are many people out there that hate that they don’t know what’s going on, cloud computing revenue with Rackspace rose 11.7% sequentially in Q4 and 93.2% over last year.  See the cloud hosting earnings report below.

Metric Q4 2009 Q3 2009 Q2 2009 Q1 2009
New revenue $7,117,000 $10,404,000 $6,918,000 $1,940,000
Additional servers 2,016 2,386 2,231 2,520
New revenue per server $3,530.26 $4,360.44 $3,100.85 $769.84
Cloud computing as a % of revenue 10.1% 9.4% 8.6% 7.5%

Data current as of Feb. 17.

Notice the pattern? Rackspace, which in October of 2008 acquired JungleDisk (cloud hosting giant) and Slicehost (vps/future cloud hosting) has been positioning itself in the cloud hosting business.  It appears to be successfully navigating the cloud hosting of a transition. High returns per server are once again the norm:

Metric Q4 2008 Q3 2008 Q2 2008 Q1 2008
New revenue
$4,783,000 $7,525,000 $11,216,000 $12,930,000
Additional servers 2,287 2,807 2,669 3,063
New revenue per server $2,091.39 $2,680.79 $4,202.32 $4,221.35

Data current as of Feb. 17.

At the same time, the inherent efficiency of its cloud hosting business has allowed the company to earn higher returns on capital. ROC soared from 8.6% in Q3 to 10% in Q4, Rackspace said in its earnings release. Not bad for a company stuck in a bare-knuckles fight with tough competitors such as Amazon.com‘s EC2.

Although we all fuss about cloud servers and how they will save us money and save our planet.  There are still people that are making money from hosting cloud hosting.  Rackspace, my hand goes out to you for making this possible!

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