Last week came the  news that Paul Maritz will step down from his position as VMware CEO on Sept. 1 to become chief strategist of parent company EMC.
		The  unexpected management shakeup at VMware leads to the question, "Is VMware succeeding in its effort to reshape its image as a supplier of datacenter virtualization technology to that of a cloud infrastructure and platform provider?"
		Here's another one: Was the decision to remove  Maritz from the CEO role and install him as chief strategist of EMC a reward for a job well-done or was he kicked upstairs for not moving fast enough?
		More important, is the incoming VMware CEO, Pat Gelsinger, who is currently president of EMC's Information Infrastructure and Products unit (effectively its bread and butter storage business), equipped to meet VMware's goal of  "moving to the next phase of cloud computing with the software defined data center and solving the problems of the post PC era," as described by EMC Chairman and CEO Joe Tucci in a conference call announcing the shakeup?
		Tucci explained the changes by saying, "The time to make these kind of changes is from a position of strength when you are performing well and when you have customer permissions to play in these new markets and customers are giving us permission to play in these new markets."
		Forrester VP and principal analyst James Staten isn't buying it. "That's good spin but I read it differently," Staten said. "If all was sunny, they wouldn't be unseating the VMware CEO. Our clients tell us they aren't moving up to vCloud (it and they aren't ready). We don't see evidence of success from VMware on the sales of their management tools and they haven't successfully linked CloudFoundry to the hypervisor forming the cloud OS Paul pitched."
		Gartner research VP Chris Wolf agreed. "VMware still has its work cut out," Wolf said. "The cloud is extremely competitive and VMware is up against heavyweights such as Amazon, Google, and Microsoft. VMware needs to do a better job incentivizing providers to make VMware software a mainstay in the cloud."
		According to a research note by Pund-IT principal analyst Charles King in wake of the news, VMware has an edge over its key virtualization infrastructure rivals Citrix and Microsoft. 
		"VMware has stayed ahead of the game by delivering superior management features and services but most industry watchers believe that the next stage of this market will be defined by increasingly sophisticated hardware/software integration," King noted. "If that's the case, it's difficult to think of a better person to lead VMware than Pat Gelsinger. Along with his deep knowledge of the x86 technologies that are core to VMware's solutions [he was Intel's CTO before arriving at EMC], Gelsinger's intimate understanding of how to get the most out of integrated hardware and software should serve him well in his new position."
		Gartner's Wolf agreed but with a caveat. "Gelsinger has a proven track record and should do a good job filling Paul's shoes at VMware," he said. "Pat is not afraid to roll up his sleeves and talk tech, and that will win him favor with VMware's product groups. Still, the pressure will be on. Gelsinger is taking over a company where VMware is the dominant market leader. If Microsoft were to erode a significant part of VMware's market share, then the Gelsinger era would likely be perceived as a failure."
		Clearly there's some succession planning going on here as well. Tucci said he plans to stay on at least through the end of next year but it remains to be seen what his plans are afterward, but it is believed he is nearing retirement. While many thought Gelsinger was in line to succeed him, Wolf said EMC may be considering Maritz for the top spot. "Paul is one of the top tech visionaries in the industry, and is well-qualified to lead EMC's strategy in emerging areas such as cloud, big data, and next generation application platforms," Wolf said.
		Nevertheless, Forrester's Staten has his doubts. It's "not clear [Gelsinger] is the right guy to replace Paul or the guy VMware needs right now but he was next in line," he said. "Nothing in his background suggests he is better equipped. We'll see if he can prove there's more to this than pure succession and EMC tightening the reins on VMware."
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on July 26, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		On the heels of its announcement last month that Windows Azure customers will be able to run virtual machine instances, Microsoft this week released the  community technology preview (CTP) of Windows Server for Hosting Providers in a move that would enable third-party hosting providers to build cloud service offerings running on Windows Server. 
Based on Microsoft's forthcoming Windows Server 2012, the suite will allow hosting providers to provision and manage through System Center, Windows Azure Web Sites, virtual machines, the Service Management Portal and API.
The move should aid hosting providers that want to offer services that are compatible with Windows Azure. Microsoft announced the CTP release at its Worldwide Partner Conference, which took place this week in Toronto. 
Indeed, hosting providers are gunning to offer services that are compatible with Windows Azure and private clouds running Windows Server, said Sinclair Shuller, co-founder and CEO of Apprenda, which last month launched Apprenda Azure. 
As the name implies, Apprenda's software will let organizations create private clouds that have the same characteristics as Windows Azure service except they run in a customer's datacenter. Nevertheless customers can also shift workloads or create hybrid clouds that split workloads, applications and data between Windows Azure and Apprenda Azure, Sinclair said.
In concert with Microsoft's announcement this week, Apprenda joined three other vendors  -- Cloud Cruiser, Derdack and ServiceMesh  --  to create the  Private Cloud Solutions Suite (PCSS). All four are Microsoft ISV partners. Cloud Cruiser offers a billing and chargeback system, Derdack's Enterprise Alert provides alerting and notification and the ServiceMesh Agility Platform is used for provisioning, governance and management of hybrid cloud applications. 
"Microsoft doesn't have all the moving parts to provide a full robust full blown private cloud deployment platform," Sinclair said. Maybe not now but what will Sinclair do if Microsoft decides to offer one in the future?
"They could do whatever they want but in the context of private cloud but we don't see Azure coming on premises," he said. "They've talked about it in the past but it hasn't materialized. We work very closely with the team and we don't have any personal fear that's going to happen. Microsoft wouldn't be telling 1,000 systems integrators worldwide they should be looking at Apprenda for private PaaS if they planned on jumping in."
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on July 12, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		It's official: Google will offer an Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) cloud. The company launched Google Compute Engine at its annual Google I/O developer conference -- a move that was widely expected, though overshadowed by the announcement of the Nexus 7 tablet. 
By launching an IaaS, Google is taking on some large players like Amazon Web Services, Rackspace, Verizon, IBM, Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft, which earlier this month launched its own long-anticipated IaaS service.
Like Microsoft, whose Windows Azure was just a platform as a service, Google's cloud portfolio other than its Google Apps service, was the Google App Engine PaaS. But in launching GCE, which is now in limited preview, Google is taking it slow. For now it's only offering Linux virtual machines (translate: no Windows) support. While there's plenty of demand for Linux, Google is still only reaching out to a limited segment of the enterprise market. 
And will it play ball in supporting any of the other cloud vendors' platforms and APIs to enable portability with public, private and hybrid clouds? The IaaS market is fragmented with a variety of compute platforms such as OpenStack, CloudStack and of course Amazon. While these and other players such as Eucalyptus and Nimbula have services that let companies move instances from Amazon to other public and private clouds (as does Citrix CloudStack), we are a long way from removing true cloud lock-in as a barrier. 
And vendor lock-in, according to a Rackspace-commissioned study released this week, is a key consideration by 86 percent of customers in choosing a cloud vendor. While Google has yet to make a strong public proclamation on where it stands with regard to IaaS portability (that is, will it join or support OpenStack or CloudStack efforts?) there are some aspects of GCE worth noting:
  - 	Google appears to be targeting compute-intensive workloads, particulary for compute-intensive applications requiring 100 virtual machines or more. 
 
 
- 	Customers can store their data locally, on a new persistent block storage device it is offering or via its existing Google Cloud Storage service.
 
 
- 	GCE will offer networking capabilities to enable customers to create and manage their compute clusters. 
 
 
- Developers can either configure and control their VMs using a scriptable command-line tool or Web UI or use Google's APIs to build or link to a management system. Google has partnered with RightScale Puppet Labs, OpsCode, Numerate, Cligr and MapR, whose tools will integrate with GCE.
Craig McLuckie, the product manager for GCE said in a blog post that Google intends to use its vast infrastructure to power GCE. "This goes beyond just giving you greater flexibility and control," he noted. "Access to computing resources at this scale can fundamentally change the way you think about tackling a problem."
Do you think Google will emerge as a major IaaS player? What does it need to get there? Drop me a line at [email protected] or leave a comment below.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on June 29, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft and Symantec have   inked a co-development agreement to build a so-called Disaster-Recovery-as-a-Service (DRaaS), the companies announced at this week's Tech-Ed conference in Orlando, Fla.
		Under the terms of the  pact, which appears to be in the early stages, Symantec will extend its Storage  Foundation High Availability for Windows and Veritas Volume replicator disaster  recovery (DR) software to Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud service.  While the resulting deliverable will be a continuously  available data protection service, Symantec officials said the new data  replication software will use Windows Azure as a storage target sometime in  2013.
		It is not likely that beta releases will be available before  the first half of next year, said Jennifer Ellard, a senior manager of Symantec's  storage and availability management group. This is Symantec's first entry   into the Azure ecosystem, Ellard said. 
		Asked if Symantec intends to link its Backup Exec software  to Windows Azure, Ellard said there are no such plans at this time. Symantec previously announced  plans to offer Backup Exec, targeted at small and medium businesses, with  its own cloud-based option. Backup Exec customers can now use the cloud  services of Nirvanix. And the company in February announced plans to offer a DR  option to Backup Exec with Doyenz. Furthermore, Symantec's NetBackup works with  cloud services from Nirvanix, AT&T, Rackspace and Amazon Web Services. 
		Symantec is not the first vendor to tie its data protection  software to Windows Azure. CA Technologies last  year announced plans to offer Windows Azure as a backup target for its  ARCserve backup and recovery software, and CommVault recently  added Windows Azure as a target for its Simpana 9 Express backup and  archiving software.
  
But Symantec officials explained that unlike traditional backup  and recovery software, the replication solution is aimed at providing better  recovery times and recovery points. The Storage Foundation software provides  online storage management, multipathing, volume snapshot service  (VSS)-integrated snapshots and volume replication. 
		The Cluster Server software provides high availability over  LANs, metro and campus environments and wide-area networks. "It monitors  apps for faults and failures, provides automated failover and drills down below  the applications and its dependencies," Ellard said.
		As far as cloud services go, Ellard said Symantec only plans  to offer this solution with Windows Azure. "There's an actual affinity for  us running on Windows, to align with Azure on the development side," she  said. "We are very familiar with it programmatically and the implementation  is easier. We have a lot of confidence in Microsoft and we see Azure growing  and becoming more extensible."
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on June 14, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		After billions of dollars in investment and seven years of development, the Oracle Public Cloud launched last Wednesday as expected. 
CEO Larry Ellison said at the launch event that all of his company's key infrastructure  and applications are now available as cloud services.
		
The long-planned effort, known internally as "Fusion," will  allow customers to procure Oracle's broad product line as elastic,  consumption-based services. Despite trailing its rivals in offering a broad  cloud portfolio, Ellison argued Oracle is now delivering a public cloud service  that lets enterprise IT customers seamlessly move their premises apps to its  cloud and vice versa. "You can move things gracefully back and forth. You're  not making a forever commitment to keep it on our cloud," Ellison said.
		
Touting its security, Ellison said Oracle Public Cloud is  not based on a multitenant architecture. "When you're using our database,  your data is not commingled with other customers' data. It's secure and it's  separate," he said.  
		Among Oracle's core products  available as a service are its flagship database, WebLogic (for developing, deploying and managing Java  apps), developer tools and Web services components (for building  apps using PHP, Ruby and Python), mobile  tools for building cross-platform native and HTML 5 apps, document  collaboration, Web site services and analytics. 
  
Also available is Oracle's broad portfolio of apps including ERP, human capital  management, CRM, talent management and customer service. The company is also  offering Oracle Cloud Social Services, which includes its own enterprise social  network platform called the Oracle Social Network. It includes Oracle Social  Data Services for aggregating data from public social networks such as Facebook  and Twitter, Oracle Social Marketing Engagement Services and Oracle Social  Intelligence Services.
 
	
Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on June 13, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Whether or not Microsoft succeeds in making Windows  Azure a viable alternative to Amazon Web Services, it  won't be for lack of trying. Last week's major refresh of the 2-year old Windows Azure platform could make it a formidable  infrastructure as a service (IaaS) provider.
		Microsoft corporate VP Scott Guthrie officially outlined the new Windows Azure at a webcast event in San Francisco on Thursday, as well as in a blog post. In addition to offering IaaS, Microsoft  is adding support for Linux servers, Guthrie said. 
		Sporting his trademark red shirt, Guthrie described a  boatload of new features to the Windows Azure platform, revealed numerous new  partners -- companies typically associated with the likes of Amazon and cloud  providers backing such efforts as the open source Cloud Foundry and OpenStack  projects -- and demonstrated a cloud infrastructure that promises to lend itself  to more portability between enterprise datacenters and other cloud providers.
		"We are announcing the most significant release of  Windows Azure yet. It elevates Azure to a new level [and] it opens it up for  even more developers to use," Guthrie said. "Today's release of  Windows Azure is more flexible than ever. We're supporting more operating  systems, more languages, more open protocols and releasing all the Azure SDKs  on GitHub under an open source license. You can now use the best of the  Microsoft ecosystem and the open source ecosystem together and you can build  better and more scalable solutions than ever before."
		First, he demonstrated the new Windows Azure portal, which  provides IT pros and developers a unified view of all of the services and  applications that can run in the cloud environment. Customers can drill into  different services, virtual machines and storage and view stats.
		Guthrie explained that enterprise customers for the first  time can shift workloads from their Windows and Linux environments to Azure,  pointing out that all of the virtual machines in the new Microsoft cloud will  support the VHD file format. "Because we're running the same file format,  it's really easy for you to take a VM whether it started off in your own  datacenter and upgrade it into Azure," he said. "You don't have to  run an import-export process, you simply upload it and enable it within Azure  and it works. There's no conversion tools or agent you need to install the VM,  it just works."
		Guthrie also talked about the new Virtual Private Networking  solution, aimed at simplifying the connectivity between Azure, enterprise datacenters and other cloud providers. "What's nice about our virtual private  networking solution is you can integrate it with pretty much any back-end network  provider," Guthrie said. "We don't require you to install any custom  software on your existing enterprise network or datacenter. Instead we  integrate with existing VPN hardware and software and interoperate well with  Azure."
		Among some other features Guthrie outlined:
		  - Identity       Services: Customers can integrate their cloud applications with their       enterprise identity infrastructures, notably Active Directory. Windows       Azure Active Directory, or WAAD, is a REST-based service that provides       access control to cloud apps. Customers can apply existing Active       Directory policies to Azure.
 
 
- Distributed       Cache: A new in-memory, low-latency distributed cache that lets customers       provision dynamic scaling of capacity based on the needs of an       application. "What's nice is you don't have to modify any application       code or redeploy your application in order to increase or decrease the       cache side," Guthrie said. It implements the memcached, distributed       memory caching protocol.
 
 
- Service       Bus: New secure messaging and relay capabilities are suited for integrating       cloud-based solutions with enterprise apps in a secure but loosely coupled       architecture. That is enabled through better tooling in Visual Studio and       the introduction of cross-platform libraries, allowing the service bus to       work from any operating system and various languages. 
 
 
- Media       Service: This new managed service is aimed at distributing media in       various formats including Flash, Silverlight, HTML 5, iOS and Android.       Using REST calls, customers can upload media to Azure, describe how it       should be encoded and in what format and the service will be streamed to       devices. Users can implement DRM as well. "It's a real compelling way       to use media," Guthrie said.
 
 
- Web       Sites: Will let developers build and deploy Web sites in the cloud that       can scale based on ASP.NET, PHP and Node.js, as well as support for       WordPress, Joomla, Drupal, Umbraco and DotNetNuke.
Some key established cloud partners joined the Azure  ecosystem such as cloud management vendors RightScale, ScaleXtreme and Opscode;  monitoring tool suppliers AppDynamics and New Relic; NoSQL database providers 10gen  (MongoDB) and Cloudant (CouchDB) and various other cloud providers including  Joyent, CloudShare and Appfog. 
		Microsoft is making some substantive upgrades to its Windows  Azure cloud platform. Do you think its moves will appeal more broadly than its  existing platform as a service (PaaS)? Drop me a line at [email protected] or leave a comment below.
 
	
Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on June 11, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Hewlett-Packard this week said it is  extending links to Amazon Web Services EC2 as well as its own forthcoming  HP Cloud service in an effort to broaden connectivity from its private cloud  portfolio of hardware and software.
		HP  made several noteworthy announcements at its Discover 2012 conference  taking place in Las Vegas  this week. The company also announced its first vertical market cloud service  with solutions aimed at the commercial airline industry, a new version of its  CloudSystem Matrix templates, Cloud Service Automation software and a  cloud-based service that allows users to print from any mobile device without requiring  print drivers. HP is also rolling out new cloud consulting services for  enterprises seeking to build hybrid deployments.
		Company officials emphasized its blend of public and private  cloud offerings and focus on providing a hybrid delivery model. "You  should be able to move that service or workload transparently and easily and  support that with the converged cloud across all deployments across one simple  consumption experience, a simple portal," said Steve Dietch, VP of  Worldwide Cloud in HP Enterprise Group, speaking at a press conference Tuesday. 
		HP already offered connectivity from its CloudSystem to the  public cloud service from Savvis, but adding Amazon Web Services to the mix was  a tacit acknowledgement that its customers may prefer to use that company's  services over HP's own forthcoming public cloud offering, said Forrester Research  analyst James Staten. "That's an acknowledgement by HP of the power of  Amazon," he said. 
		Despite the bevy of incremental announcements, Staten said  the vertical solutions for the airline industry were most noteworthy. Struggling  airlines are aggressively moving to build new apps that support mobile users  for offerings such as loyalty programs and other amenities. Thanks to its  acquisition of EDS and its own services business, HP has strong outsourcing  relationships with the major airlines. "They've taken some of these things  that were in traditional outsourcing modes and moved them to the cloud,"  Staten said. 
		The airline industry offerings consist of the HP Passenger  Service Solution, which provides various passenger services and ties into  reservations and travel management systems; the HP Airline Service Oriented  Architecture Platform, a suite of industry-specific Web services designed to  build apps that can help airlines generate added revenues; and HP Enterprise  Cloud Services, a private cloud that ties server, storage and network functions  that provides capacity on demand, allowing airlines to scale up and down as  business needs dictate.
		The new cloud-based printing service, called HP ePrint  Enterprise 2.0, is a suite of downloadable apps for Android devices, iPhones,  iPads and BlackBerrys that allow users to print on any HP network printer  without requiring drivers. Users can also securely print files from their  devices by requiring the use of a password to actually retrieve the document  from a printer. 
		Upgrades to CloudSystem Matrix, the company's software for  building and provisioning IaaS private and hybrid clouds, includes an improved  graphical user interface and tooling that enables IT administrators to build  out virtualized environments in days, said Terence Ngai, HP's worldwide  director for enterprise cloud solutions.
		Similarly, the revised Cloud Service Automation software was  upgraded to speed up the development of Software as a Service (SaaS) cloud  apps, Ngai said. "The benefit is quicker time to market," he said. 
		The company also launched HP Application Performance  Management 9.2 for Converged Cloud and updated versions of the HP Application  Lifecycle Management (ALM) and HP Performance Center suites. And HP is building  on its cloud consulting offerings with new HP Cloud Planning Services, targeted  at enterprises looking for needs-analysis assessments.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on June 07, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		10gen, the company backing the popular open-source NoSQL-based MongoDB database and a cloud-based monitoring service to support it, today said it has received a cash infusion of $42 million.
Leading the latest round of venture funding was New Enterprise Associates and backed by existing investors Sequoia Capital, Flybridge Capital Partners and Union Square Ventures. In total 10Gen has raised $73 million.  The huge investment is the latest sign that MongoDB is gaining momentum as a repository for emerging big data applications.
Former DoubleClick founder and CTO Dwight Merriman and Eliot Horowitz, also an engineer coming from DoubleClick, which is now part of Google, led development of MongoDB and subsequently launched 10gen.
MongoDB is popular because it is better suited than traditional relational databases for handling documents and other unstructured data types. Unlike relational databases designed to store data in tables and rows, MongoDB stores JSON-type content with dynamic schemas. MongoDB aims to "bridge the gap between key-value stores (which are fast and scalable) and relational databases (which have rich functionality)," according to a FAQ on the 10gen site.
"We want to change the database market, to make MongoDB the best way for companies to build new applications," said Merriman, who is now10gen's CEO. "Our goal is to give tech teams not only a database that scales to any big data level required but also helps developers be productive and more nimble. That has been the vision of the MongoDB open source community and we want to continue to help make that happen."
MongoDB databases are frequently stored on cloud-based infrastructure such as Amazon Web Services EC2 and Microsoft's Windows Azure, among other services. 10gen said it plans to invest the funding in further development of MongoDB and the cloud-based MongoDB Monitoring Service as well extending support for its customers and community of developers.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 29, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Google's cloud-based productivity suite picked up another key security certification on Monday: the ISO 27001 standard.
ISO 27001 is recognized internationally. Like other cloud security certifications -- SAS 70, SSAE 16/ISAE 3402 and FISMA, for starters -- ISO 27001 is important to enterprise customers who are wary of the cloud because they don't know if their data is safe.
 Gaining ISO 27001 certification requires an independent third-party audit. Google's auditor, Ernst & Young CertifyPoint, certified Google Apps. 
"ISO 27001 is one of the most widely recognized, internationally accepted independent security standards and we have earned it for the systems, technology, processes and data centers serving Google Apps for Business," wrote Eran Feigenbaum, director of security for Google's enterprise business line. 
Microsoft's Office 365 is also ISO 27001 certified, taking that argument off the table as both companies battle for enterprise customers. ISO 27001 is particularly important to multinational companies that are bound either by regulations or customer requirements that ISO 27001 audits have been conducted by validated third-party auditors, explained Dave Anders, CEO and managing partner at Phoenix-based SecuraStar Information Security, a consultancy focused solely on helping large enterprises prepare for ISO 27001 audits. 
IS0 27001 certification is a complex process but in short it means an organization has an information security management system that outlines a company's risk assessment and controls in place to address that risk. The standard covers IT assets, personnel as well as physical security of datacenters. "One of the most important aspects is risk and how it's controlled," Anders said, in an interview. 
Google said its ISO 27001 certification covers its systems, applications, people, technology processes and datacenters using Google Apps for Business.  "What they are now telling the world is they have reasonable validation," Anders said. "It doesn't mean they won't have a break-in or loss of confidentiality, integrity and availability, which is the three-risk components in ISO 27001, but they're saying they have reasonable assurance that they've put a value on risk and they are addressing that value on risk to mitigate it with controls and that somebody has checked it, that's their reasonable assurance."
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 29, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Bellevue, Wash.-based Opstera, which launched in January,  is rolling out a free cloud app monitoring tool designed to measure the quality of service (QoS) of Microsoft's Windows Azure platform and, eventually, other platform as a service (PaaS) offerings. 
CloudGraphs provides continual workload tests against Windows Azure and scans the various Windows Azure datacenters throughout the world roughly every 15 minutes. The online tool will determine latency and other service-level characteristics, drilling into specific datacenters and services offered as part of the Windows Azure platform like compute storage and content delivery network. The dashboard will provide real-time and historical information.  
Paddy Srinivasan, Opstera's CEO, said the company is offering the service free hoping to build community support for its monitoring technology. "We have gotten great feedback from the Azure influencer community and the MVPs, and we feel that if we open it up to the community they can build around it and start contributing more sophisticated tests using our infrastructure," Srinivasan said. "We want to increase community contributions so we are opening it up so the tests become more sophisticated and meaningful."
By building such a community, Srinivasan is hopeful it will fuel its commercial offerings. Its initial service, AzureOps, monitors more than 100 million Windows Azure metrics per month, according to the company. AzureOps provides a detailed view of complete cloud solutions, including third party services running atop of Azure. 
Asked why Windows Azure customers would prefer such a service to Microsoft's own management offerings including the recently released System Center 2012, Srinivasan said AzureOps is completely cloud-based, meaning it doesn't require an investment in the software. But more importantly, it's able to monitor Azure metrics that System Center can't at this point, he noted. 
The company was formed by the founders of Cumulux, Microsoft's 2011 Cloud Partner of the Year. Onetime Microsoft Windows Azure team members, they launched Cumulex in 2008 and sold the consulting and app deployment part of the business to Aditi Technologies. After that deal closed late last year, the Cumulux founders launched Opstera, where they decided to focus on application performance management. 
So far, the company claims it has 150 paying customers for its service, which costs between $50 and $800 per month. The company is backed by bootstrap funding from the Cumulux buyout and $650,000 from some undisclosed angel investors. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 17, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As promised, Hewlett-Packard today released an open beta of  its public cloud service and disclosed more than three dozen partners that are  supporting it. 
		The company's HP Cloud Services, as  reported, is an Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) offering targeted at  enterprises, developers and ISVs looking for an off-premises alternative for  compute and storage capacity. Available for testing immediately is HP Cloud  Compute, HP Cloud Object Storage (announced  earlier this week) and the HP Content Delivery Network, all of which will be  made available on a usage basis.
		
				
				HP's public cloud services clearly aim to compete against  the IaaS portfolio offered by industry leader Amazon Web Services. The HP  public cloud offerings are based on the open source platform OpenStack,  designed to allow interoperability among public cloud providers that support  the platform, such as Rackspace, and compatible private cloud infrastructure. 
		The 37 vendors that announced support for HP Cloud Services  include application vendors Otopy, PXL and SendGrid; database suppliers CloudOpt,  EnerpriseDB and Xeround; development and testing companies SOASTA and Spirent;  management vendors BitNami, CloudSoft, enStratus, Kaavo, RightScale,  ScaleXtreme, Smartscale Systems and Standing Cloud; mobile providers FeedHendy  and Kinvey; New Relic, which offers a monitoring solution; PaaS platform  providers ActiveState, CloudBees, Corent Technology, CumuLogic, Engine Yard and  GigaSpaces; security vendors Dome9 and SecludIT; and storage suppliers  CloudBerry Lab, Gladinet, Panzura, Riverbed Technology, SME Storage,  StorSimple, TwinStrata and Zmanda. 
		Rounding off the list is infrastructure management vendor  Opscode and billing provider Zuora. For its part Opscode, which supplies the  popular Chef cloud infrastructure management portfolio, said it's offering complete  integration with HP Cloud Services to provide infrastructure automation via its  Open Source Chef, Hosted Chef and Private Chef solutions. Using Opscode's  plug-in for HP Cloud services, Opscode said customers can build and manage HP  Cloud Compute instances. 
		Riverbed said its Whitewater cloud storage gateways will  work with HP Cloud Object Storage, aimed at those who want to provide disaster  recovery alternatives to traditional tape-based backup. And RightScale is  adding HP Cloud Services to the portfolio of services and cloud infrastructure  its solution can manage. With HP's new cloud service, RightScale now manages  six public cloud providers and three private IaaS platforms, including  OpenStack, Citrix CloudStack and the Amazon-compatible Eucalyptus. 
		Another management supplier, Standing Cloud, said HP Cloud  Services is another alternative for hosting its marketplace for developers, IT  pros and ISVs. The Standing Cloud Marketplace provides on-demand application  hosting, installation and management. With security vendors such as Dome9  announcing support for HP Cloud Services, customers will have options for  ensuring protection, a key concern among enterprise customers. The Dome9 cloud  security service will integrate with HP Cloud Services, via an API key that  enables the cloud server security and policy-based automation.
		There are many other examples but the point is HP is trying  to come out of the gate showing that it has lined up a broad partner ecosystem.  Do you think HP is going to give Amazon a run for its money? Leave a comment below or drop me a line at [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 10, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		On the heels of its move to expand  its partner ecosystem, Amazon Web Services (AWS) on Wednesday said it will hold its  first conference aimed at bringing partners, customers and the AWS team  together.
		Amazon will hold "AWS re: Invent 2012" on Nov. 27 to 29 at the  Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas.  Targeted at developers, enterprise IT and startups, the conference will consist  of over 100 sessions, though the company has not announced specific  content. According to the preliminary  conference Web site, AWS is looking to bring together its product and  development teams and its systems integration and ISV partners with customers,  venture capitalists and press.
		Among the topics AWS plans to cover are big data, high-performance computing, Web apps, development of mobile apps games and  enterprise IT applications, the company said. 
		"AWS re: Invent is an opportunity for our current and  future customers to learn proven strategies for taking advantage of the AWS  cloud and take home new ideas that will help them invent within their own  businesses and deliver more value to their customers," said AWS worldwide  marketing head  Ariel Kelman in a statement. 
		The company is recruiting potential speakers to give  presentations. The deadline to propose a presentation is May 31.
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on May 09, 20120 comments