The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) plans to roll out a community  cloud that will let its member firms acquire compute, storage and network  capacity as well as Software as a Service.
Scheduled for an official launch in the coming months, under  construction is a private cloud that would make it easier for firms to  acquire capacity without having to incur capital expenditures, said Stanley  Young, CEO of NYSE Technologies, which provides IT services for NYSE Euronext,  the parent company of NYSE.
Speaking Monday at the High Performance Computing Linux Financial  Markets Show and Conference in New    York, Young emphasized NYSE is not building a public  cloud. "There is still a lot of distrust with public clouds even though  one could argue they are highly secure," Young said.  "A lot of compliance officers don't like  that concept. But they like the concept of a community cloud, which is run by a  brand like the NYSE."
Also presenting was Feargal O'Sullivan, NYSE Technologies'  VP of platform development, who explained that one of the key goals was to  provide member firms with rapid provisioning of service.
"Just call us up, tell us you want X amount of  computing power. We will set it aside and then we will provide you with the  interface to turn it on," O'Sullivan said. "So if a new user wants to  get up and running with a strategy, forget about getting cabinets, forget about  ordering servers...just log on to the Web site and sign up for X amount of  storage, X amount of memory [and] X amount of CPU."
Asked about pricing, O'Sullivan said NYSE Technologies will start  with a fixed resource pool with a monthly fee, "but we are looking to get  to the point where we can make it more elastic."
Yet to be revealed are the vendors providing the  infrastructure for the NYSE's cloud. "We're working very hard with some of  the industry-leading players to make sure we have a very solid platform that  really hits the ground running," he said in a brief interview following  his presentation. "We are going to be making quite a big splash."
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on April 06, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Start-up Exoprise Systems has come out of stealth mode.  Its first product is aimed at helping customers determine whether they should  move off Microsoft Exchange to a cloud-based alternative.
CloudReady Insight is a Software as a Service (SaaS)  offering that monitors an Exchange implementation with the aim of determining  whether an organization should remain with the premises-based version or move  to an alternative, such as Google Apps for Business or a hosted version of  Exchange.
"It's a platform for understanding everything that you  have about your on-premise infrastructure, total cost of ownership, end user  readiness [and] reliability, and in all of those areas we help you compare what you  have from your existing infrastructure to what's available in the cloud,"  said Exoprise founder and CEO Jason Lieblich.
The service actually points to a customer's existing Active  Directory and Exchange servers and  analyzes all of the asset information it  can collect. It also goes through all the mailboxes. "We help segment  your user base and try to show you whether or not you should stay on Microsoft's  stuff or if you could adopt alternative solutions," he said.
The service also determines whether an organization  has a large number of power users, a finding that might sway a recommendation  toward sticking with a premises-based version of Exchange, Lieblich said. 
There is a free version that provides "simple  breakdowns" and a paid version that offers more detailed reports,  starting at $10 per user in an organization. Over the next few weeks, the  company will release a product that lets customers orchestrate and automate  deployments of cloud services, and at the end of April it will offer a monitoring  tool. 
The Waltham, Mass.-based  company was launched two years ago by Lieblich, who previously serviced  as CTO of virtualization at Citrix Systems. The company is small; it only has  five employees, though Lieblich said he expects to have 10 later this year. 
Exoprise has $1 million in funding from Fairhaven  Capital and a number of angel investors.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on April 06, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Small and medium businesses are strong candidates to extend  their use of cloud computing services over the next three years, according to a  study released last week by Microsoft. 
Based on a survey conducted by Edge Strategies for Microsoft of 3,258 companies employing 250 or fewer people, 39 percent of SMBs plan to use paid  cloud services, up from 29 percent today, suggesting a 34 percent increase.
"What that's telling us is SMBs are starting to  understand the value proposition of what it means to have certain workloads  hosted or offered through a remote solution versus having it on their premise,"  said Monish Sood, marketing manager for Microsoft's communications sector.
The larger the company, the more likely they are to use paid  cloud services. Fifty-six percent of those with 51 to 250 employees said they  will use paid cloud services, while 81 percent will use any type of cloud  services (paid or free). By comparison, 37 percent of small companies with two to 10  employees will be using paid cloud services in three years. 
Among the most widely used hosted services are accounting  and payroll, e-mail and collaboration. Currently, 14 percent of those surveyed  said they use a hosted accounting and payroll service. That figure will  increase to 20 percent in three years. Hosted e-mail accounted for 10 percent  of current users, a figure that will jump to 14 percent in three years, and  collaboration will escalate from 8 percent today to 17 percent. 
Other services that are expected to show significant gains:  data archiving and compliance services, which will grow from 5 percent to 13  percent; traditional file data storage and backup, set to grow from 8 percent to 15 percent;  CRM, rising from 7 percent to 14 percent; Web conferencing, increasing from 7 percent to 13 percent;  and file sharing, growing from 5 percent to 11 percent.
Despite these gains, traditional IT services will still  remain dominant in three years, according to 52 percent of those surveyed,  while 30 percent will use free services, and 17 percent will use paid  offerings. Only 33 percent will only use a traditional e-mail client, compared  with 26 percent who will use a browser, and 40 percent using multiple methods  to access messages. 
The primary reason SMBs are attracted to cloud services is  that software will be up to date, according to 77 percent responding, with 71  percent saying access from any device anywhere is the second-most appealing  reason. Cost came in third, with 63 percent  saying the ability to save  money is a key factor, and 49 percent said that cloud offerings provides access  to services they couldn't get in-house.
Those that are not leaning toward using cloud services  appear happy with the infrastructures they now have. Fifty-seven percent said they  believe they have more control over the data if it's in-house, 56 percent  responded that their existing infrastructures are sufficient for the next  several years, 53 percent declared not knowing enough about cloud services and  30 percent said the cloud is too risky, more costly and not secure.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 30, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Salesforce.com has agreed to acquire Raidian6, which  provides a service that monitors multiple social networking sites, for $326  million in cash and stock.
The deal furthers Salesforce.com's push into bringing social  media tools to its enterprise customers. Salesforce.com already has its own  social media service dubbed Chatter, which provides a Facebook-like environment  for enterprise employees.
The Radian6 Engagement Console discovers what's being said  about companies. It functions as a sophisticated search engine and is intended  for companies that want to manage their reputations, enabling them to react to  complaints on scores of social media services, blogs, discussion forums and media  such as YouTube.  
"With Radian6, Salesforce.com is  gaining the technology and market leader in social media monitoring,"  said Marc Benioff, Salesforce.com's chairman and CEO, in a statement. "We  see this as a huge opportunity. Not only will this acquisition accelerate our  growth, it will extend the value of all of our offerings."
Radian6 counts among its customers Dell, General Electric,  Kodak, Molson Coors, PepsiCo and United Parcel Service.
Forrester analyst Zach Hofer-Shall described the deal in  a blog post as the most significant yet for what he described as social  media data acquisition. "Salesforce.com can now cover social listening,  data analysis, customer profiling and record storage, and social engagement all  under one offering," Hofer-Shall noted.
"The move also furthers Salesforce's commitment to  social media. Through its engagement console, Radian6 helped popularize the  concept of social customer support -- an area that Salesforce will happily  improve through this acquisition," he added.
That Salesforce.com is acquiring Radian6 is not a huge  surprise. Just earlier this month, the two companies entered into a partnership, announced at the CloudForce conference in New    York, in which the Radian6 Engagement Console would be offered as an option to  Salesfore.com's new Service Cloud 3.
The Radian6 Engagement Console is available to agencies  (such as public relations and advertising) for $600 per user per month, or  to corporations starting at $1,750 per month for five users.
Salesforce.com said it intends to create a bridge between  Chatter and Radian6 that will enable organizations to discern what their  customers are saying about them, presumably from the Chatter interface. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 30, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		The MSPAlliance has instituted a new certification standard  for cloud and managed service providers that aims to provide more transparency  to customers.
The MSPA's Unified Certification Standard, or UCS, provides  an auditing framework by which MSPs and cloud providers can offer more  public-facing information about how their operations are run and safeguarded.
"It will encourage MSPs to be more transparent with how  they do things, especially the cloud providers," said Charles Weaver,  president and co-founder of the MSPA, in an interview.
"Cloud providers need to have more openness in who has  access to data, where do the datacenters reside, where is the helpdesk," he said. "Just  basic things like that. They're historically not open with that information  unless they are asked. Now they can do it in a much safer way."
The MSPA has arranged for the accounting and auditing firm  of Frost PLLC to perform audits for members  based on the UCS standard. The audits will gather information on various  control objectives such as how duties are segregated by the service provider to  ensure there are checks and balances, how data is encrypted and where data is  stored.
UCS mimics a SAS 70 report, Weaver said. Level 1 UCS audits  are based on information gathered during a fixed certification period by which  a provider shares what controls are in place. Level 2 tests those controls over  a period of time and are forward-looking, Weaver explained. 
"So there will be a greater level of assurance to the  end user in a Level 2 [audit] because that's basically saying, 'Not only were  controls in place as of this date but they carried forth over a period of time  and we examined and tested them over a period of time,'" he said. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 30, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		With the release of its System Center Virtual Machine  Manager 2012 (SCVMM 2012), Microsoft is aiming to help its customers move  from creating virtualized infrastructures to building and managing private  clouds. Set for release later this year, Microsoft issued a beta of  SCVMM at the Microsoft Management Summit, taking place this week in Las Vegas.
Explaining how SCVMM will enable private clouds, Brad  Anderson, corporate VP of Microsoft's management and security division, said in a  blog post Tuesday:
"Our  management offerings are designed to help IT organizations build private cloud  solutions that deliver application services, not just virtual machines. With  our approach, the applications drive the IT infrastructure, not the other way  around. The management technologies at the center give both IT managers and  application managers throughout the company a unified view into applications in  private, public and hybrid cloud scenarios. With a Microsoft private  cloud, customers can use the infrastructure they know and own today to build  and deliver private cloud computing as a managed service, including other  vendors' tools, platforms and virtualization technologies."
Microsoft describes SCVMM as a core component of private  cloud solutions, where IT can create common infrastructure and application  services. Private clouds, according to Microsoft, are resources dedicated to an  organization whether they are on or off premises. That's not unlike how others  describe private clouds. Like public cloud offerings, Microsoft  says that private clouds offer self-service, scalability and elasticity,  while providing added control and customization from dedicated resources. 
The combination of Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 Hyper-V and System Center  will provide the basis of building and managing dedicated cloud environments  providing Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS).
In addition to offering what it calls Hyper-V Cloud  deployment guides and access to service providers, Microsoft said it is also  offering IaaS assessment services through its partners and Microsoft Services. 
On top of SCVMM 2012, Microsoft has unveiled some key  enabling technologies, including System Center Project, code-named "Concero." System Center  Project is the successor to the Microsoft SCVMM Self-Service Portal that will allow department-level managers to deploy  and administer apps on both public and private cloud resources. 
Also enabling Microsoft's vision of private clouds, as  reported by my colleague Kurt Mackie, is System Center Operations Manager 2012, which now fully integrates Microsoft's AVIcode  acquisition,  helping pinpoint flaws in applications built on Microsoft .NET  and J2EE platforms. System   Center Service Manager  2012 enables self-service requests from business managers to request cloud  resources. And finally, System Center Data Protection Manager 2012 adds "enterprise-class"  centralized backup and protection, de-duplication support and SharePoint  integration functionality.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 24, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		SAP AG has moved to make its CRM applications available to  workers using Verizon Communications' Computing as a Service (CaaS) cloud  offering. 
With the move, announced last week, SAP customers can use  SAP CRM from their computers or mobile devices through Verizon's cloud-based  managed service offering.
That was made available thanks to the release of SAP's Rapid  Deployment Solution (RDS), which the company said includes templates that allow  for the deployment of SAP CRM-type apps in the cloud in an eight-to-12-week time  frame.
"It significantly reduces implementation platform for a  CRM deployment," said Kevin Flynn, SAP's senior director for business  development. The release of RDS for CaaS is the latest move in a relationship  between Verizon and SAP inked last year. 
Verizon will provide the services to customize and implement  the SAP CRM apps in a browser-based interface: The user ultimately is given a  URL to launch and run the CRM app, explained Jeremy Webb, a cloud principal at  Verizon. 
"We have preconfigured architectures already designed that  we can quickly deploy in our Computing as a Service environment and we've built  an implementation methodology around this where we're going to be sending a  resource out to the customer site," Webb said.
Typically, the Verizon team will work onsite during a six-to-10-week implementation period. "We will work with the customer. We'll gather  requirements and we work with them for the overall implementation of the  service," Webb said. 
Despite some of the preconfigured architectures, Webb said  the engagements do involve customization. "This is a fairly robust CRM  solution, so there is still a level of customization to the customer's business  needs," Webb said. "We sit down with them, they can have a set level  of customizations that they can make as part of the overall scope of the  service, and that's why the implementation period is so long."
SAP's CRM offering is the first of a number of apps from the  company that Verizon will offer over time, Webb said. As for other partners,  Webb would only say Verizon is on the lookout for other opportunities. SAP CRM  is Verizon's first fully managed cloud offering. 
Back in November, SAP made its mobile apps available with  Verizon's Managed Mobility Platform. Through that pact, companies can integrate  their SAP CRM apps with Verizon Managed Mobility, which hosts SAP's Sybase  Unwired Platform (SUP). In this instance, SUP provides an interface between SAP's CRM  suite and multiple mobile device types. 
Verizon is also the first certified global partner for SAP  cloud services but SAP's Flynn said there are other partners as well. Also  certified to offer RDS in the cloud is IBM. Meanwhile, SAP is working with 20  certified cloud service providers to date. 
"As you would expect, most of our customers run their  applications on premise," Flynn said. "SAP sees systems running on  the cloud. We're in the early stages of that market."
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 23, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Unisys wants customers to start thinking about their cloud  deployments more holistically. The company has rolled out a new framework by  which it delivers its cloud services as an integrated part of the entire IT  portfolio. 
The goal is to keep various cloud efforts from falling into  their own silos. In support of that model, Unisys is launching what it calls  its CloudBuild Services, aimed at helping IT design, plan and implement cloud  services within a complete enterprise environment.
"On-premise infrastructure is going to be maintained  for a long period of time. It's not going away, and the concept of how you  integrate the cloud and these new models is still one that I don't think all of  us cloud people have addressed very well so far," said John Treadway,  Unisys' director of cloud solutions and services. 
Treadway added that "this is the year of the private cloud"  and explained that CIOs should be thinking about the "hybrid enterprise"  rather than hybrid clouds. CloudBuild Services are built around a consistent  approach to all datacenter types, including internal systems, internal private  cloud, hosted private clouds, public clouds and outsourced datacenters. 
In Unisys' model, there are three components of the hybrid  enterprise: applications, datacenters and management. For apps, that means  coming up with a framework that builds flexibility to build and transform  software with the option of deploying them to any of the five aforementioned  datacenter types. Likewise, it calls for consistent methodologies for  different datacenters and, on the management side, a common management  environment with controls to manage compliance, risk, governance and costs. 
"Unisys cited the need to implement organizational  change management to address the people and business process issues that arise  with cloud," noted IDC analyst Gard Little in an e-mail. "Other providers  may be delivering organizational change management services as well, but Unisys  is the only vendor pointing that out to us right now."
The new CloudBuild Services portfolio has three core  deliverables: Accelerator, which includes developing a roadmap and discovery  report (a process that takes about a week); Plan and Design based on a "concept  of operations," which can take anywhere from eight to 12 weeks (sometimes a bit  less and other times longer); and Implementation, which includes the  integration of infrastructure, automation, service catalog development,  operational transformation, datacenter consolidation, service-desk integration,  and training and transitional services. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 23, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Many have criticized Hewlett-Packard for being late to the  cloud. Looking to undo that perception, CEO Leo Apotheker took his best stab at  swaying critics, revealing that HP intends to be a major player in the cloud.
		Apotheker made  his cloud push at the company's annual analyst meeting, dubbed HP Summit  2011, making his first public statements since he became CEO  in November.
		"We intend to be the platform for cloud and  connectivity," Apotheker told analysts. "The opportunities in the  cloud are extraordinary and we are positioned to lead with our portfolio and to  lead with our customers who need a trusted partner to help navigate the journey  ahead."
		THINKstrategies analyst Jeff Kaplan points out that while HP has  been moving in this direction for some time and boasts a loyal following by SMB  and enterprise customers as well as its strong partner network, it faces a  bumpy road ahead.
		"HP is also burdened with legacy products, both  hardware and software, as well as cumbersome business processes," Kaplan  wrote in a  blog post. "Many of its systems are too expensive. Nearly all of its  software is too complex. And, too many of its business processes are too  disjointed. So, attacking all of these market opportunities simultaneously in a  cost-effective and profitable fashion isn't going to be easy."
		Derrek Harris of GigaOM put  it even more bluntly: "It's not that HP doesn't have a cloud business, it's just that the  business is somewhat less than compelling," Harris wrote. "Essentially,  HP has some cloud hardware and management software, as well as some hosted  cloud services. It's very reminiscent of IBM's arguably lackluster cloud  portfolio, and just seems like an infrastructure vendor tweaking its existing  products to suit a cloud-hungry customer base without having any cloud in its  DNA." 
		Pund-IT analyst Charles King echoes those concerns. In a  research note, he questioned how HP can differentiate itself against its  competitors, notably IBM and Oracle, considering much of it is in line with  what they are doing. HP also is reliant on its partner base, much of which could  be "irked" by HP's decision to create its own cloud offerings through  its services business. 
		Service providers are a big business for HP and Dell has  promised not to compete with its service providers, King noted. "So if you  were a threatened SP, which vendor would you choose?" King asked. 
		Overall, though, King said HP's cloud vision is practical. "It  takes good advantage of existing HP solutions and services, and stretches them  a bit (but not too much) to pursue emerging market opportunities," he wrote.  "As a result, they should satisfy existing HP customers and provide the  company a stable position for pursuing new clients and business."
		What's your take on HP's cloud strategy? Drop me a line at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 16, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Amazon Web Services (AWS) this week has begun enabling customers  to target its Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) service directly via the Internet. 
Until now, customers using Amazon's EC2 cloud service could provision a  separate section of the Amazon cloud called Amazon VPC via a virtual private  network (VPN) connection to an existing customer's datacenter.
Amazon said this should be a welcome development for those  who don't want to use VPN connections to link their datacenters to a VPC. 
"While I would hate to be innocently accused of  hyperbole, I do think that today's release legitimately qualifies as massive,  one that may very well change the way that you think about EC2 and how it can  be put to use in your environment," said AWS Evangelist  Jeff Barr in a  blog post.
"You can now create a network topology in the AWS cloud  that closely resembles the one in your physical data center including public,  private and DMZ subnets," he added. "Instead of dealing  with cables, routers and switches, you can design and instantiate your network  programmatically. You can use the AWS Management Console (including a  slick new wizard), the command line tools, or the APIs. This means that you  could store your entire network layout in abstract form, and then realize it on  demand."
Amazon said it is not charging extra to deploy a VPC, Barr  noted, nor for creating a subnet, network access control lists, security  groups, routing tables or VPNs. Nor is there an extra charge for traffic between  S3 and EC2 instances in the VPC.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 16, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Over the past year, Google has added more than 100 new  features to its Google Apps Web-based suite of applications. Of course, because  they are Web apps, new features are available to users in real-time -- or after  they refresh their browsers. 
For many enterprises, though, such changes are not always  welcome. Recognizing that, Google is now offering two new ways for customers to  take advantage of upgrades: scheduled release and rapid release.
"Customers on the Scheduled Release track gain access  to new features on a regular, weekly release schedule following the initial  release of those features," said Anna Mongayt, Google's manager of online  sales and operations, in a  blog post. "This delay allows time for administrators to familiarize  themselves with new features using a test domain, educate support staff and  communicate any changes to their users. New features will be released on the  Scheduled Release track each Tuesday, with at least a one-week notice following  the initial feature launch."
This will affect updates to Gmail, Contacts, Google  Calendar, Google Docs and Google Sites effective immediately. Organizations  that previously had "pre-release features" enabled in the Google Apps  control panel will automatically be assigned to the Rapid Release track. If  not, your shop will be assigned to the Scheduled Release track, she noted.
In conjunction with this new plan, Google has created a site  that will allow users to determine what upgrades are coming and when. The site is now available.  
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 16, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Amazon Web Services' new CloudFormation offering promises to  simplify the development and deployment of applications to its cloud service. 
Announced last  month, CloudFormation provides sample templates that let developers and  system administrators describe various AWS resources such as Amazon EC2  Instances, Elastic Load Balancers, AWS Elastic Beanstalk and Amazon Relational  Database Service (RDS) Instances. Amazon refers to the complex  combination of resources as "stacks."
That was welcome news to one startup, Stamford, Conn.-based  Kaavo, which argues it has a more robust alternative to CloudFormation and  hopes it creates demand for its own product, called Kaavo IMOD, which stands  for Infrastructure and Middleware on Demand. 
"Although this is the first release of CloudFormation Service  and it is still in [the] very nascent stages of providing a full application-centric  solution, there are a lot of similarities with Kaavo's solution," said Jamal  Mazhar, Kaavo's founder and CEO, in a blog post. 
The so-called Amazon CloudFormation "stacks" or  templates resemble Kaavo's system definitions, according to Mazhar. I spoke  with Mazhar who explained Kaavo IMOD can be used in customer datacenters using  VMware's vCloud API or Eucalyptus cloud platform software, or in public clouds  including those provided by Amazon, Rackspace Hosting, Terremark and IBM. 
Kaavo's software, which runs in the cloud, solves two  problems, Mazhar explained. First, it automates the deployment of complex  applications and configurations. "You can get the server and the storage  and network resources from cloud providers within minutes, but it is no fun if  you spend days configuring the software and deploying the applications,"  he said. "What we do is enable you to automatically deploy and configure  your complex multi-server applications within minutes."
Second, it allows admins to automate the administration of  their sites while responding to pre-defined events. "We give an autopilot  framework, where you can define the events and you can preprogram the responses  for what to do in case of those events," he said. 
For its part, Kaavo is a small, privately funded company employing fewer than  20 people. Mazhar said its core customer base consists  of enterprises that are running various pilots and Web 2.0 companies. One such  company is SellPoint, a  provider of online video tours of consumer products.
Kaavo's pricing starts at $100 per month for two servers running 24x7 with additional server  usage costing 6 cents per hour, amounting to $45 per month if it's running 24x7. Customers  have to pay for cloud usage separately from their provider. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on March 10, 20111 comments