Rackspace Hosting is making a push into offering virtual  hosted desktops.
		The company last week announced it is working with Citrix  and the company's joint partners to deliver virtual desktops to users on PCs as  well as phones and tablets. Citing Gartner, Rackspace predicted 70 million  users will have virtual desktops by 2014.
		"We feel like it's the right timing. We are seeing a  convergence of the proliferation of mobile devices and cloud computing, coming  together as a good infrastructure to host virtual desktop solutions," said  Chris Zagorski, Rackspace director of enterprise product development.
		Zagorski explained that by leveraging the elasticity of Rackspace's  RackConnect cloud servers, customers can use them to create Xen farms and scale  up and scale down in minutes. It will work with Citrix's XenDesktop and XenApp  solutions. 
		Joint Citrix and Rackspace channel partners will provide  customized solutions, he said. Rackspace has also partnered with NetApp to  provide higher-speed storage and with Akamai and Riverbed to provide accelerated  connectivity. 
		End-user pricing can range anywhere from approximately $25   to $50-plus per seat per month, depending on configuration, according to  Zagorski. 
		For those wanting more turnkey offerings, Rackspace also has  partnered with Desktone, which offers an alternative to the Citrix offering. "The  Desktone solution is much more turnkey in terms of the pricing as well as the  control panel that they provide for customers to be able to add users,"  Zagorski said.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 30, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Back in February, Amazon Web Services announced it would support Oracle 11G Release 2 databases on its Relational Database  Service (RDS). On Tuesday, Amazon said the service is ready.
Amazon is offering two key licensing models for those who  want to run Oracle on RDS: "License Included" and "Bring Your  Own License."
Pricing for the version that includes a license starts at  16 cents per hour for a small instance. That price includes software, hardware and  RDS management capabilities. For those  with larger scale requirements, pricing for large instances is 64 cents. Extra-large, double extra-large and quadruple extra-large  instances are available for 85 cents, $1.70 and $3.40, respectively. 
For those who want to bring their own licenses, the rates  start at 11 cents for a small instance and 44 cents for a large instance. Extra-large instances are 65 cents, double extra-large instances cost $1.30 and  quadruple are $2.60. Amazon posted a detailed spec sheet and price list here.
"As  is generally the case with AWS, we'll be adding even more functionality to this  service in the months to come. Already on the drawing board is support for  enhanced fault tolerance," said Amazon Web Services evangelist Jeff Barr in  a blog post. 
"When  I demonstrate Amazon RDS to developers I get the sense that it really changes  their conception of what a database is and how they can use it," Barr wrote. "They enter the  room thinking of the database as a static entity, one that they create once in  a great while and leave thinking that they can now create databases on a  dynamic, as-needed basis for development, experimentation, testing and the  like."
Barr  said a Launch DB Wizard is available on the AWS Management Console that will guide  administrators through the various setup options.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 24, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Intel is rolling out what it describes as a hybrid cloud  service that will allow small and medium businesses to deploy bundled solutions  on their premises that would be administered by a managed service provider. 
		Think of it as having the benefits of paying for  Software as a Service, in that customers pay for usage but have the data and  apps on-premises. Still, it is managed by an outside provider.
		The Intel AppUp Small Business Service Catalog is kicking  off with solutions from about two dozen software vendors whose offerings will  run on the Intel Hybrid Cloud Platform. Among the software vendors  and ISVs  whose offerings are in the catalog are Allscripts, Asigra, Astaro, Coversant,  GFI, Intuit, KineticD, Level Platforms, Microsoft, Novell, Symantec and Vembu,  among others.
		Customers will have a server on premises based on Intel's  reference architecture by OEM partners that will be delivered by the MSP.  Initially single-socket Xeon servers will be available from Lenovo and white-box server vendors, with dual-socket servers to follow from Acer and NEC, and  perhaps others in the future. Customers can lease the servers from the MSP or  the vendors, Intel officials said.
		The Intel Hybrid Cloud software stack provides secure usage  monitoring that enables the pay-as-you-go service. The AppUp service catalog  consists of a variety of solutions, some that Intel officials outlined on a  conference call,  including:
		  - ERP as a Service: Running Windows Server 2008  R2, Intuit's QuickBooks and firewall, backup and anti-virus software from  partners in the catalog.
   - Collaboration as a Service: Windows Small  Business Server with Exchange and SharePoint, backup and anti-virus software.
  
   - Security as a Service: Astaro's unified threat  management suite.
  
   - Backup as a Service: Vembu's StoreGrid backup  software, which allows customers to backup locally and to a cloud provider such  as Amazon Web Services. 
 
		Everybody benefits in this model, explained Bridget Karlin,  general manager for Intel Hybrid Cloud. "The small business benefits  because they get access to the pay-as-you-go software. They have cloud access  to the software catalog for the applications that are important to them, and  they have their data on-site, with no capital expenditure up front for the  server hardware," Karlin said.
		For a physician's office, delivering electronic medical  record (EMR) solutions may be out of reach for some, Karlin explained. But if it can  be delivered in a cloud model, where the office can pay for it on a  subscription basis yet keep the data securely on-premise (a key requirement),  that might address many of the barriers to deploying the EMR solution.  
		"We've had some of our health care ISVs identify that  this is a fantastic solution to take their EMR applications, load that onto the  hybrid cloud server, maybe wrap it with some other offerings and basically  launch that up to the market as EMR in a box," Karlin said. 
		MSPs and ISVs also benefit, Karlin said, in that they can  immediately convert their customers to a subscription model or take on  customers that were otherwise out of reach. "They get access to an online  software catalog and from that catalog they are able to create their own  offers, they can put together different bundles, wrap their services around it  and essentially now create valuable offerings out to their small business  customers," she said. "And they get the benefit of a preconfigured  server that gets deployed on-site at the customer location that they can  conveniently and in a trusted manner remotely manage." 
		And of course, she added, the OEMs and white-box server  vendors benefit because they have the opportunity to deliver their hardware in  this new hybrid cloud model.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 24, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Last week's Exchange Online outages provided a healthy  reminder that chances are, if you sign on for Microsoft's Office 365, at some  point you may be destined to experience service interruptions, if not a full-blown  loss of service. 
Some angry Microsoft Business Productivity Online Services  (BPOS) customers reported they were down for many hours last  week. And yesterday, Microsoft confirmed more problems in the form of  delays in messages going through (most were by 15 minutes to an hour, All About Microsoft's Mary Jo Foley reported).
Those affected by  the outages have expressed frustration and even raised questions as to whether  moving off an in-house system to Microsoft's Office 365 is a prudent thing to  do. 
"If really bad delays  continue, there is little doubt we will be migrating back to internal Exchange  or maybe corporate Gmail. Business cannot function like this and I would have  very little confidence in MS's ability to support its SLA  in either this or Office [365]," said one poster to the Microsoft Online Services Forum. 
Microsoft acknowledges that service problems are  inevitable but expressed confidence that they will be minimal and will be  addressed expeditiously. "Any time you run a service for  someone else there may be hiccups and we do our best to remove those hiccups,"  said Tom Rizzo, senior director of Microsoft's Online Services, business in an  interview this week. 
"We are continuously learning. It's no different than  if customers ran the software themselves, where you can continuously learn to  run the software better or run your services better or support better, or  communications better," Rizzo said. "It's going to be a little bit of a learning process for  both us and our customers and our partners, but we're committed a thousand  percent to try to make the service  as seamless as possible and make sure it's  meeting the SLAs that we promised."
Indeed, others were more sanguine about the notion that  outages are inevitable regardless whether Exchange, SharePoint and other  applications are hosted internally or externally. Case in point is the city of San Francisco, which  this week announced it is converting its in-house farm of messaging systems  (a mixture of Lotus Notes and Exchange) to Microsoft's Exchange Online.
The city said it will spend $1.2 million a year to convert  23,000 mailboxes to Exchange Online, which is now part of BPOS but will  transition to Office 365 over the next year. 
San Francisco's  CIO Jon Walton said while he was concerned about the outages, it did not affect  his decision to go with Exchange Online. He suggested the city has experienced  outages with its in-house systems and if there has to be an outage, he'd rather  it be Microsoft's problem and not his to deal with.
"In the  past when we've had outages, it was a complex problem to solve. You had seven  systems. If the outage happened in the evening, you were calling workers back  in," Walton said. "With the Microsoft solution, they are available  24x7 to us."
Others I've chatted with this week had similar feelings.  What's your take? Have recent outages by Microsoft and other providers affected  your willingness to turn your messaging and collaboration infrastructure over  to Microsoft even with their financially-backed service-level agreements? Drop  me a line at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 20, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		The city of San    Francisco plans to migrate from its farms of Lotus  Notes and Exchange servers to the cloud with Microsoft's Exchange Online  service. 
Some 23,000 users across 60 departments and agencies in San Francisco will move to Exchange Online over the next  12 months, Microsoft and the city announced on Wednesday at a press teleconference held in San Francisco. Also considered were Google  Apps and LotusLive.
The deal is valued at $1.2 million per year, amounting to  $6.50 per user per month, San Francisco CIO Jon Walton said. "That is a  significant savings to the city, and as a matter of fact was one of the key ways  that the Department of Technology was able to achieve its 20 percent budget  reduction target for this fiscal year, which was directed from the mayor's  office," Walton said. 
The city is currently operating seven e-mail systems, and the  cost of administering them was a key factor in its decision to move e-mail to  the cloud. The fact that the city is a heavy user of Microsoft Office and  SharePoint and has started to use Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud service  weighed heavily in choosing Exchange Online, according to Walton. 
  
  Walton was well aware of  last week's Exchange Online outage, which left many customers fuming,  though Walton wasn't one of them. "The reality of it for us is e-mail  outages unfortunately are not something that haven't happened to us before,"  he said, noting the outage in San Francisco's case only led to a delay in delivery of  messages of four hours.
"We actually see what happened last week with the Microsoft  outage as really demonstrating why we think we made the right decision," Walton said. "We were  able to have a single point of contact. Microsoft kept us very up to speed. We  were in close contact with them. We lost no messages." 
As for Office 365, Walton isn't ruling that out for the  future, but it's not in the current plan. "We are certainly interested in  [Office] 365, because we have budget challenges here in the city. I think it  will come down to a conversation about cost," he said.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 19, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Autonomy is acquiring pieces of Iron Mountain's  digital division including its archiving, eDiscovery and online backup  offerings, the company announced this week.
The deal is valued at $380 million in cash, Autonomy  said. The acquisition of Iron   Mountain's assets will  extend Autonomy's own information governance business.
"Processing customer data in the cloud continues to  be a strategic part of Autonomy's information governance business," said Mike Lynch,  Group CEO of Autonomy, in a statement. "We look forward to extending  regulatory compliance, legal discovery and analytics to a host of new customers  as well as enabling the intelligent collection and processing of non-regulatory  data from distributed servers, PCs and especially tens of millions of mobile  devices."
The acquisition of the Iron Mountain  digital asset adds more than 6 petabytes of data under management and more than  6,000 customers to Autonomy. That will bring Autonomy's private cloud data to  more than 25 petabytes with a total customer base exceeding 25,000, the company  said. Some other points, according to Autonomy's announcement:
  - Assets acquired include digital archiving, eDiscovery and  online backup and recovery solutions of Iron Mountain  Digital, but not the technology escrow service and a medical records archive  service and other smaller operations which were recently shut down.
   - Active Iron Mountain Digital customers  will continue to be supported without disruption.
   - Autonomy to offer Connected, the digital data protection  product, to existing Autonomy customers across enterprise server, PC and mobile  devices. The addition of this product drives non-regulatory and structured data  into our cloud-based information processing platform.
 
The deal is pending regulatory clearance and other  closing conditions. Autonomy predicts the deal will close within 60 days.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 18, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		SAP is looking to make it easier for its solutions to work  in the cloud. Toward that end, the company has announced separate pacts with  Amazon Web Services and Microsoft.
The announcements were made at the company's annual Sapphire  Now conference, taking place this week in Orlando.
Under the agreement with Amazon, a number of SAP solutions  are now available on the Amazon cloud service, including SAP Rapid Deployment  solutions and SAP Business Objects offerings running on Linux instances. Within  a few months, the two companies will deliver support for ERP solutions running  on Windows instances, as well. 
The two companies have completed  testing and said that SAP solution deployments on Amazon meet the requirements  of on-premises SAP solutions. 
"As  a pioneer in cloud computing, Amazon Web Services has a proven model that  provides the combination of low cost -- along with stability, reliability and  security that is now certified and available to our customers," said  Sanjay Poonen, SAP's president of Global Solutions, in a statement.
Under the Microsoft  deal, the two companies have agreed to provide tighter integration between SAP's  software and Redmond's  virtualization and cloud computing offerings. Among other things, SAP is going to  make it easier for .NET developers to work with SAP solutions. Moreover, the  two companies plan to link SAP's forthcoming landscape management software with  Microsoft's System   Center and Hyper-V  virtualization technology.
"Through these connected offerings,  SAP and Microsoft customers will be able to easily scale their deployments in  their own data centers or through private clouds," said Ted Kummert,  senior vice president of Microsoft's Business Platform Division, in a blog post.
The plan also calls for enabling hybrid cloud deployments  using Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud service in the future.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 18, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Tools vendor Quest Software is looking to make it easier to  manage applications running in Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud service. 
		The company is at Tech-Ed this week in Atlanta showing three new tools: Cloud  Subscription Manager, Cloud Storage Manager and Spotlight on Azure.
		When it comes to the cloud, "The largest challenge that  we come across in talking to our customers seems to be around cost and cost  management, particularly in understanding whether you're under-deployed or  over-deployed with your cloud assets," said Quest's chief architect  Douglas Chrystall. 
		
				Cloud Subscription Manager pulls in all the objects that you've  got running in Azure. It will analyze those objects, look for objects which are  not being used and notify the administrator. It could be a database, additional  work or server roles that have been created, storage created that's just not  getting used or perhaps being under-utilized, Chrystall explained.
		It may recognize, for example, that a database hasn't been  used for six weeks, and perhaps it should be decommissioned from the cloud. "It  will actually give you an analysis where we report back," he said.  "We've found organizations that have  literally managed to decide to [lower] their cloud costs pretty much overnight  just by running the product for the first time."
		
				Cloud Storage Manager helps manage the cost of storing data  in Azure. Storing data in the cloud can become costly, especially if it's data  that isn't being used. Cloud Storage Manager allows you to browse, search and  basically analyze your storage accounts in Azure.
		"What we've done with the Cloud Storage Manager is give  you a Windows Explorer way of examining cloud storage," Chrystall said. "We  allow you to browse through your cloud storage just as if it was directories  and subfolders." That's important, he noted, because cloud storage is  flat. There's no such thing as a physical directory  or subdirectory -- it's  all managed from the root node, he pointed out.
		"We give you a way of managing that storage basically  like a virtual directory structure, and we allow you to copy files from your  on-premise storage systems through to the cloud-based storage systems and vice  versa," he said. Cloud Storage  manager also lets you synchronize an on-premise directory with a cloud  directory. 
		
				Spotlight on Azure provides performance and diagnostics for  apps running in the Microsoft cloud. With the tools Microsoft provides, you can  monitor and look at the performance of individual roles and see how they're  performing, but there's no way to see how a fully deployed application is  performing as a whole, Chrystall said.  
		"From running Spotlight on Azure, within seconds you  can tell exactly how your Azure application is performing," he said.
		All three of these tools consist of software that is  installed and runs on desktops. They are now in beta and are slated for release  this summer. The company hasn't disclosed pricing yet but indicated the Cloud  Storage Manager will be offered as a freebie. 
		Asked if this software will be offered for other cloud  services, Chrystall indicated that is the plan for later this year, though he  declined to elaborate other than to say Quest is looking at the top three or  four cloud providers.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 17, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		CA Technologies on Tuesday said it will offer its popular  ARCserve backup and recovery solution as a service using Microsoft's Windows  Azure cloud platform.
The move makes CA the latest traditional backup and recovery  software company to launch its Software as a Service (SaaS). Just last week, CA's key rival in the backup and recovery field,  Symantec, said it will offer a version of its popular Backup Exec  as a cloud-based offering. The new Symantec service, called Backup Exec.cloud, will  allow customers to stream their backups to Symantec datacenters.
CA's ARCserve will be available as a subscription service  using  Azure as the cloud platform and storage repository. It is the  first time CA has offered ARCserve on a subscription basis.  Azure will  be the exclusive cloud platform for ARCserve's SaaS solution, though CA is  developing other non-SaaS technologies that will work with other cloud  providers.
"We think that  their SLAs, their security, everything about the Azure service really services  our market well, so we're excited to partner with those guys," said Steve  Fairbanks, CA's VP of product management for data management. "What's  unique here is you're getting the combined local backup capabilities and the  cloud storage capabilities all sold as a convenient service."
CA last year released the latest version of its ARCserve software, called ARCserve D2D, which the company  says allows backup and bare metal restores from physical and virtual servers.  It lets customers  take a complete snapshot of a server or desktop and store a  copy of that locally, enabling faster recovery time objectives, according to Fairbanks.
Customers will "have  all of those very fast recovery capabilities locally and then we give them the  ability to specify the critical files that they would like to store in the  Azure cloud for a complete disaster scenario," he said. "Heaven  forbid if they were to lose their entire site."
Enterprise Strategy Group analyst Lauren   Whitehouse said the CA offering will appeal to shops that want to back up data   both locally and offsite. "The ARCserve-Azure solution can be a hybrid approach   where there is data stored locally (at the client's site) to facilitate   day-to-day operational recoveries and data stored in the cloud for longer-term   retention and, in some cases, the doomsday copy should the client's primary   location or data copies not be available for recovery," Whitehouse said in an   e-mail.
The service will use  secure socket layer (SSL) connections and employ 256-bit AES encryption for  security. 
CA has not disclosed  pricing but ARCserve subscriptions will include fees for using  Azure.  Setting up an ARCserve account will automatically establish an Azure  subscription. The service is expected to go into beta this summer and will be  commercially available this fall.
 
	
Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 10, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Internap plans to launch a dual-hypervisor compute cloud  service giving customers the choice of a VMware-based stack or the open source  OpenStack platform. 
The move marks the company's first foray into the public cloud. Its  current portfolio consists of colocation service, managed hosting (including  dedicated private clouds) and a content delivery network (CDN).
Atlanta-based Internap offers a proprietary network backbone  it calls Managed Internet Route Optimizer, or MIRO, which the company claims  boosts network performance while reducing latency. The company also runs  redundant carrier backbones throughout the world. Internap, which grossed $244  million in revenues last year, says it serves 2,700 enterprises worldwide. 
As for its new offering, which will also use MIRO,  customers can choose between a more costly cloud service with a VMware  hypervisor or the less expensive OpenStack-based cloud service powered by Xen.  The company said it is providing the ability to transition from the VMware  stack to OpenStack.
"What we find when we talk to CIOs, almost all have  done server consolidation and virtualization using VMware internally, so they  are very comfortable with VMware, but they realize that open source hypervisors  are likely the future just the way Linux sort of supplanted Solaris,"  explained Paul Carmody, Internap's senior vice president of business  development and product management.
"They're interested in going with a partner that offers  them a cloud that mimics what they've done internally with server  consolidation, with the option to test out and eventually migrate into more of  an open source hypervisor model, for better cost profiling," Carmody said.
Internap announced support for OpenStack in January, when it launched a public cloud storage  service. The OpenStack-based service went into beta at the time and will be  generally available by the end of June.
The cloud-based compute services will be generally available  in the third quarter. Carmody said there will be a private beta with existing  customers beforehand.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 09, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		With its beta of Office 365 now out, Microsoft has once  again come out swinging against its arch rival Google, this time arguing that the  lower cost of Google Apps for Business may be a mirage.
		Google Apps for Business costs $50 per year. Microsoft's equivalent offering, the forthcoming Office 365 Plan P1, which includes Exchange Online, calendaring and Office Web Apps, will cost $72 per year.
		In a new  whitepaper titled "Counting the Hidden Costs of Google Apps,"  Microsoft points to the following Google add-ons and their associated price tags: 
		  - Postini, which offers security and Gmail  retention: $33 per year
   - Power Panel, which provides delegation of  administrative tasks: $8 per year
   - Google Apps help desk support: $360 per year
 
		There's a laundry list of other potential costs, but you get  the point. Tom Rizzo, Microsoft's senior director of online services, calls it the "The  Hidden Google Tax." 
		"The 'Google Tax'  is unnecessary and can add up quite quickly," Rizzo said in a blog post. "This is  especially true when running Google Apps alongside Microsoft Office. On the  surface, Google Apps may seem like acceptable replacements for enterprise-grade  products such as Microsoft Exchange Server or Microsoft Office. But many IT  organizations have found that Google Apps bring extra hidden costs."
		Opinions will vary as to whether this is  Microsoft's latest attempt at FUD, or if these add-ons really add up. A  commenter on Rizzo's own post raised the question of how many shops will opt to  pay the $360 per year for Google Apps help desk support. Another said Rizzo's post was spot-on. 
		For shops where cost  will dictate which vendor to go with, this debate will rage on and require  companies to look at their needs and actual migration costs. 
		What's your take  on Microsoft's latest assault? Fact or FUD? Drop me a line at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 05, 20115 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		More information on Hewlett-Packard's public cloud strategy  came to light on Tuesday when The  Register's Cade Metz stumbled upon a key HP executive's LinkedIn profile. 
The exec, Scott McClellan, chief technologist and interim VP  of engineering and cloud services at HP, has since removed the info from his  profile. But The Register captured  the information, which reveals that McClellan was responsible for helping  build a distributed object storage business from scratch, a service that offers  compute, networking and block storage, and what appears to be a Platform as a  Service (PaaS) offering that is optimized for Java, Ruby and other open source  languages.
According to The  Register, HP plans to announce more about its cloud services at VMworld  this August, suggesting it will be based on VMware's technology. Here's the  LinkedIn profile information captured before McClellan removed the data: 
  HP  "object storage" service: built from scratch, distributed system,  designed to solve for cost, scale, and reliability without compromise. 
  HP  "compute," "networking" and "block storage"  service: an innovative and highly differentiated approach to "cloud  computing" -- a declarative/model-based approach where users provide a  specification and the system automates deployment and management. 
  Common/shared  services: user management, key management, identity management &  federation, authentication (incl. multi-factor), authorization, and auditing  (AAA), billing/metering, alerting/logging, analytics. 
  Website  and User/Developer/Experience. Future HP "cloud" website including  the public content and authenticated user content. APIs and language bindings  for Java, Ruby, and other open source languages. Full functional GUI and CLI  (both Linux.Unix and Windows).
  Quality  assurance, code/design inspection processes, security and penetration testing. 
HP CEO Leo Apotheker disclosed  the company's plan to offer a cloud service during its analyst meeting back  in mid-March. At the time, the company said it will first offer a storage  service toward the end of this year or early next year. That would be followed  by a compute service and, ultimately, a PaaS offering.
The LinkedIn entry appears consistent with that plan, though  it suggests HP is favoring an open source approach to its PaaS. It remains to  be seen whether HP will support Microsoft's .NET Framework or move forward with  plans to deliver technology based on Microsoft's Windows Azure platform. 
Last summer, HP, along with Dell and Fujitsu,  announced  plans to deliver technology based on Microsoft's Windows Azure Appliance.  So far, none of the companies have delivered the appliances or services based  on the platform. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 05, 20112 comments