Posts Tagged ‘google cloud hosting’

iPhone4 Cloud Services

Friday, June 25th, 2010

So I just got my new iPhone4 and I am loving it.  I am always reading the inside scoop on AppleInsider and came across this article about the difference between iPhone4 cloud services and Android cloud services.  Here is a photo explaining a little bit more thanks to Apple Insider.

iPhone 4 and  iOS vs. Android: desktop and cloud services
Apple Insider says “The drawback to Google’s cloud-only strategy for Android is that cloud services are notorious for falling offline and for losing users’ data. From Microsoft’s Danger, to the Palm Pre and Nokia’s Ovi service, to RIM’s BlackBerry NOC, everyone who has offered cloud services for smartphones has also lost users’ data. That maxim also applies to both Google and Apple, which like everyone else in the industry has inadvertently interrupted services and lost user data related to their cloud operations. ”

However, with iTunes and its “local backups by default” design, if your cloud services fail (and history indicates they will at some point), you can always revert to a local copy of your data you own and control. Google’s Android, like Microsoft, RIM, and other mobile platform vendors, not only bets that cloud services won’t ever fail, but also puts users’ backups in the cloud, ensuring that when they do fail, users will be completely helpless unless they’ve created a personal strategy to make their own local backups. Which nobody does, even when there is a way to do this.

Apple currently enjoys a strong lead in offering iTunes as a silver lining for cloud failures. Every iPhone is automatically backed up locally by default, making device replacement and upgrades easy and painless. Because Google and other vendors are focusing on improving and extending their cloud offerings, it looks like Apple will continue to enjoy an increasingly strong position with iTunes as a local sync hub, a factor that will prevent many iTunes users from even considering alternatives to iPhone, regardless of any potential, real advantages offered by Android. At the same time, Apple is pushing ahead its own cloud services in tandem with (and well integrated with) iTunes.”

I find it funny that they are bringing up the fact that Apple is trying to become a cloud hosting provider when all along Apple is more interested in providing the software to access those “cloud” services than providing those services.  But if they have the software to access those services, they might one day be providing those services, you never know.
I don’t know how you reach the conclusion that Apple is ahead in cloud services. That’s only debatably true if you are willing to pay for MobileMe. And that’s based on your own argument that MobileMe is better than Google’s services….a claim which is debatable. So how many people are willing to pay for MobileMe?

iPhone users are just lucky that Google isn’t Microsoft. They work to enable many of their services on the iPhone. So you don’t have to get an Android to use Gmail. That said Android’s integration with the cloud is simply better. For example, that little tidbit from Google I/O you neglected : cloud to device integration for maps and web bookmarks on the Chrome browser.

Ultimately, when it comes to Google’s cloud services on Android, it just works. Put in your email address during setup and your done. Android does the rest for you.

The rest of the complaints are nonsense. No computer backup? My Mac downloads my Gmail and Google calendars. That’s sync right there. Or does it not count because it doesnt go through an iTunes filter?Doubletwist works great with iTunes. And the Amazon Kindle app should be good when released. Why should anybody care if the app is from Google or not?

There’s many things the iOS does better than Android. Cloud services integration is not one of them….unless you spend an extra $6 per month. You may think that price is inconsequential. Most people don’t. 70 bucks to do something the phone should do for free.

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Voters Want Government To Embrace Cloud Computing

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

According to a survey that Google put out, Voters Want Government To Embrace Cloud Computing. “We were curious to find out what people across the country think about their local government’s adoption of new technologies…,” wrote Dan Israel, public sector marketing manager for Google Enterprise, in a recent blog post. That curiosity prompted Google to turn to Washington DC-based Clarus Research Group to poll 1,000 U.S. voters on their opinion on government technology issues.

The Google survey revealed that 92 percent of U.S. voters feel “public agencies should make better use of new technologies to cut government spending and improve efficiency.” This push, Israel later wrote, comes as some state and local government agencies embrace cloud computing with Google Apps deployments, like the cities of Orlando and Los Angeles and state agencies in Kansas and New Mexico.

“That’s certainly how we feel here at Google , and we’re glad that a clear majority of polled voters also appreciate the need to invest in 21st century technology in the public sector,” Israel wrote. The poll also found that 78 percent of voters are more likely to vote for a candidate for local or state office with specific ideas to cut government overhead and improve government employee productivity. Additionally, 70 percent of voters believe it is a good idea to use “the compute power and expertise of private companies to improve information technology departments in government agencies, and 75 percent believe government employees would be more productive with “quicker and more efficient email systems.”

Read Full Government Cloud Survey

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Google to Hold CIO Cloud Computing Confab Next Week

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Google to Hold CIO Cloud Computing Confab Next Week and it should be a good one!  It will be held just a few miles away from Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters.

“We hope to unite and challenge IT executives and thought leaders as we assess the impact of cloud computing and other emerging technologies on the way we all do business today and in the future,” Google said in the invitation to the event.

Google said the sold-out event will host 400 CIOs and IT executives and feature talks by various Google execs as well as some familiar speakers on the tech conference circuit.

The event includes a panel of “Cloud Adopters” featuring execs from Genentech, Motorola Mobile Devices and MeadWestvaco and another session on the mobile Internet.  This should be an amazing cloud hosting event for anyone out there looking to get into the cloud hosting, cloud server, or cloud computing area.

Full Article

On a side note: On Tuesday, just a few miles away from Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters, enterprise software giant SAP will be hosting an evening event it’s calling Cloud Computing 2011.

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