Untitled Document
Untitled Document
|
SaaS Six Ways To Decide Which “aaS” Is Right for You
Making sense of the complex “as a Service” ecosystem
Apr. 15, 2010 11:15 AM
Hubspan Session at Cloud Expo
The benefits of doing things "as-a-Service" (aaS) and leveraging cloud-based technologies are well-known and documented, such as a low barrier to entry, reduced capital outlay and infrastructure, easy scalability, and device/location independence. Many companies also appreciate the reliability of service and the ability to leverage specialized domain knowledge expertise from an experienced aaS provider.
However, there is still a great deal of confusion about the many different types of aaS and questions remain over how much companies should rely on the cloud. Specifically, when is the right time to turn to aaS rather than build and manage in-house and what are some of the pitfalls that can be avoided when moving to an aaS-based solution?
Leveraging the cloud and delivered as a service, each aaS has the ability to help you do things faster, better, cheaper. The most attractive characteristic of the aaS movement is a flexibility that allows for an incremental or selective approach to deployments. You don't need to do it all at once, and you can mix and match.
The following is a brief synopsis of current aaS variants, when you should consider them, and what the future might hold for this technology.
First, here's a quick cheat sheet of three most common aaSes:
- IaaS - stands for both Integration-as-a-Service and Infrastructure-as-a-Service
- SaaS - Software-as-a-Service
- PaaS - Platform-as-a-Service
Integration-as-a-Service (IaaS) is probably the oldest, and has historically been the most stagnant, of the aaSes. IaaS originally functioned as a connector, providing integration for businesses to transmit documents to each other, such as EDI (electronic data interchange) and VANs (value added networks). Examples of this type of business document interchange go back to as early as the 1960s and really took hold during the '70s and '80s when early service providers helped companies automate this exchange. IaaS improved substantially once documents could be sent digitally over the Internet.
Typically, IaaS provided a backbone network, routing services, monitoring, reporting, and a normalized format to transact messages between business partners. While effective, this first iteration of IaaS failed to exploit the full potential of a rapidly maturing Cloud Computing environment and does not attempt to align the integration with the broader business process, such as supply chain management.
Thus, we move next to Net2 IaaS, a more advanced version, that incorporates business processes. As the key to meeting the needs of your customers, business processes are the lifeblood of your enterprise and demand continuous management and improvement. Net2 IaaS moves you in this direction by building on the simple customer transaction messages of IaaS and extending it to provide data transformation and correlation services. It also enables more policy and business intelligence-based integration processes, including access control rules, exception handling and intelligent reporting, among other capabilities. This is where the technology is today with leading integration vendors.
The next logical step with this aaS we'll call Business Collaboration Integration as-a-Service (BC IaaS). The core component of BC IaaS is the establishment of governance across inter-business services. At this stage, integration, business process management and service-oriented architecture (SOA) come together in the cloud. BC IaaS adds the governance and management through SLAs, advanced compliance and security, and precise message exchange expectations. This approach strengthens customer and partner relationships by establishing firm rules and building trust through transparency - without sacrificing any of the efficiencies and automation of IaaS. The platform also offers the capability of building strong vertical solutions that apply to both specific businesses and industry sectors.
Another, yet different IaaS, Infrastructure-as-a-Service, is just what it sounds like, an outsourced infrastructure that replaces the need to build your own. This includes a secure premise with high throughput Internet backbone connectivity, a continuous power supply, dedicated computer hardware, basic router/firewall and backup services. A variant on this is Virtual Infrastructure-as-a-Service, which we'll call "VIaaS," which uses virtual provisioning to segregate multiple customers' applications on shared hardware. An example of this is the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud that provides resizable computing capacity in the cloud, allowing customers to pay only for the capacity they use.
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is perhaps the best known aaS. This is when a specific piece of software or an application is delivered as a service and available on-demand via the Web for users. SaaS comes in two flavors: UI-based SaaS and Machine-to-Machine (M2M) SaaS.
Salesforce.com (a leading customer relationship management SaaS application) is a good example of UI-based SaaS. Salesforce.com is a pre-canned application exposed as a service, allowing the customer to interact with a Web site to access the application from anywhere. Web sessions are protected by an authentication login, and each company has its own view of the application.
M2M SaaS allows a customer's application to interface with a SaaS application to get information. This can range from basic queries, such as accessing a stock market quote to more complex services. One example would be an ERP procurement application that accesses airline flight pricing information and business rule data in response to an employee's travel request.
A Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) can be used by customers to create and run Web-exposed applications (Windows Azure, Salesforce's Force.com, and Google Web Toolkit are examples). PaaS is typically presented as a design studio the provider makes available to you, where there are widgets you can use to create your own applications. You own the life cycle (including promotion/test) of the application and all intellectual property, even though you are building on the vendor's PaaS. It offers robust fault tolerance and a true virtual machine sandbox with strong data segregation.
The most attractive element of PaaS is that it is Web-exposed. You can create a vertical application and have people work with the application without building out your infrastructure or worrying about stability or performing back-ups. It's another example of faster, better, cheaper.
Clearly, there are a lot of aaSs in IT today. Combined with the power inherent in cloud computing, each of these aaSs holds immense potential. Determining how and when to utilize which technology requires a good grounding in what is available today, what is on the horizon, and, most important, how new deployments will advance your business objectives by anticipating, meeting and exceeding the needs of your customers.
IT guys are a skeptical lot and with good reason. It would be naïve to assume the opinion of an aaS vendor comes without its share of bias; however, an assiduous vendor (such as Hubspan) will have done its homework, studied all available materials and is able to present key facts. While each company should do its own research and find solutions and vendors that best meet its specific requirements and budget, there are some universal, key points to keep in mind:
1. Start small: One of the great aspects of aaS is the ease of scalability; you can to start with one application, one integration project or one business process and grow as needed once you're ready. Carefully choose your first foray into incorporating any aaS. Make sure it's the most likely to succeed and will bring visible, quantifiable returns, and is aligned with business goals. Also, make certain it represents the most logical path toward the full adoption of your strategy. For example, your company's best bet might be moving storage and back-up data to the cloud, utilizing the cloud for some of your development environment or leveraging one of the well-known SaaS-based applications for CRM.
2. Watch out for aaS pitfalls: While the benefits are great, there are still pitfalls to avoid. For example, sometimes the services offered are too granular or focused too narrowly on one area; they don't expand or provide for integration with other applications or services. Imagine the pain around managing several dispersed but tightly interconnected services. Debugging becomes a huge challenge and vendors can try to blame each other, requiring you to log into and analyze several different management sites. Password management can also be cumbersome.
3. Beware the hidden costs: Make sure you understand the pricing tiers and any potential additional costs that can be added to your fees. For example, if your service is payload-size based, you will need to carefully watch the size of your transactions. Or there might be a premium fee for any unexpected spikes in throughput, which you may or may not be able to forecast. Areas such as these should be negotiated and built into the contract so you do not end up with billing surprises.
4. Look for best practices: Do some research to understand how other companies like yours are using the cloud and aaS solutions. Also, there are some good rules of thumb out there you can follow. For example, Gartner has laid out how different types of users are taking advantage of different cloud architectures and why.[1] Gartner views every aaS as fitting into one of three fundamental layers: Application Services, Application Infrastructure Services and System Infrastructure Services. Application Services are attractive to large enterprises as the best path to acquiring unique applications. For the SMB, it's a way to reduce the work-load and capex costs of internal IT departments. Similar capex cost concerns compel smaller ISVs to utilize Application Infrastructure Services, while large enterprises can use them to accelerate time-to-market. System Infrastructure Services are used by large enterprises as a way to reduce costs and as a good way to take care of time-boxed projects such as development work and testing.
5. Choose the right third-party vendor: Forrester Research has delineated important characteristics to look for when choosing a SaaS vendor, which is applicable to any aaS.[2] Forrester's list includes everything from making sure the SaaS vendor is financially stable to security, architecture and roadmap, among others.
- Vendor finances (profitability, cash and investors): Make sure they are viable for the long term. This entails committed investors, as well as a strong existing customer base. Forrester notes that just because many SaaS vendors are small does not mean they don't have a strong financial footing.
- Dedication to SaaS: Many vendors are 100% dedicated to SaaS, while others use this as one of many delivery models. There are tradeoffs with each approach, but some of the benefits for those focused on the cloud and services are agility and more frequent product updates. However, hybrid models that combine on-premise with the cloud are potentially an attractive feature from vendors that offer both.
- Customer base / Subscriber base: What is interesting about this category is Forrester notes that having a few large customers or many smaller ones can be good economics for a SaaS vendor.
- Strong architecture: A truly cloud-based architecture capable of getting you started quickly and providing excess capacity as you grow are crucial. Watch out for small maximum user limits or single tenancy design.
- Security and privacy: Ensure that your company's and related industry security standards extend to your aaS provider. Review the vendor's capabilities around data protection, identity management, physical and personnel security, and others. Vendors should be able to provide audit documentation around key mandates, such as PCI or SAS 70. This is obviously a top priority and can be the determining factor between moving forward with an aaS in the cloud in the first place. One question to keep in mind is whether the security you can provide yourself is superior and more cost-effective than the security provided by a third party who has the experience and expertise that comes from providing security to many customers over many years?
- Back-up and redundancy: Ask the vendor where the SaaS solution is hosted and how they manage back-up. Also, vendors should be able to clearly state their recovery point objective (RPO).
- Roadmap for new functionality: Upgrading traditional software applications is cumbersome, costly, and inconvenient. An aaS vendor should be able to add new features and services with minimal interruption on a regular basis. In addition, your vendor should anticipate your needs and help you grow by innovating as the industry matures.
And we would add:
- Look for strong SLAs: While not in Forrester's list, this is important. Any aaS vendor should have clear Service Level Agreements (SLAs) in their contracts around uptime, maintenance downtime, performance response times, support levels, etc.
6. Ensure the highest level of security: As mentioned briefly above, security in the cloud is paramount. A cloud platform should adhere to the highest levels of network security, physical security and data protection. When evaluating cloud vendors, here are some key questions we recommend you ask:
- How does the vendor plan on securing your data and segregating the data from other customers?
- Is the data encrypted both in motion and at rest and what key management policies do they employ?
- What access control do they enforce for the application and physical security?
- What third-party groups audit their security? What compliance or other certifications do they possess?
- What is their disaster recovery plan and how does data security figure into those plans?
- What visibility do you have into the process?
- What is their network topology? Are they consistent with best practice tiered networking?
The benefits of cloud and "aaS" are real and quantifiable. With the right research, plan and vendor, your company can reduce costs, improve operational efficiencies, become more agile, achieve business and IT alignment, and increase levels of customer and partner satisfaction.
References
- Gartner presentation: "Application Platforms for Cloud Computing: Who, Why and When". Yefim Natis. December 2009
- Forrester Research: SaaS Valuation Criteria. Liz Herbert. February 22, 2010.
About Max CoburnMax Coburn is Chief Architect and a product strategist for Hubspan Inc, a leading provider of cloud-based business integration solutions. Max has over 20 years of software development and system architecting experience, with particular expertise in communications, security and Internet services. Prior to joining Hubspan, Max led strategy and development for sophisticated merchandising management and warehouse automation systems for leading game company, Nintendo. While at Sierra Online (Cendant), Max implemented early Internet game-to-game communications with user chat and inter-gaming capabilities, while also architecting a complex rules engine to drive e-commerce initiatives. At Hubspan, Max has architected much of the company’s proprietary integration application, including cutting-edge capabilities around security, PCI compliance, data sharding, caching and smart queuing, as well as a sophisticated business process language that enables complex choreographies and business rules. He also designs systems and features that enable intelligent interoperability across standards, formats and protocols in a cloud computing environment. About Margaret DawsonMargaret Dawson is responsible for Hubspan’s overall marketing strategy and programs, including channel marketing and product management. She has more than 20 years of experience in global marketing, working with leading companies in the network security, semiconductor, personal computer, software, and e-commerce markets, including Microsoft and Amazon.com. At Microsoft, she led a product management team for two network security products. Dawson has worked and traveled extensively in Asia, Europe and North America, including ten years working in the Greater China region, consulting with many of Taiwan’s leading IT companies and the Taiwan government and serving as a foreign correspondent for BusinessWeek Magazine. Margaret holds a BA in Communication from the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington.
Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
Articles & Feature Stories By Maureen O'Gara  Dell pulled out of the race to acquire 3PAR Thursday morning after HP upped its $30-a-share bid of last Friday to $33 a share, pushing 3PAR’s valuation past $2 billion to about $2.1 billion.
3PAR sent out a statement Thursday morning saying that Dell went to $32 before the three-day clock ran out on it Wednesday at midnight, and HP countered with $33.
The 3PAR board has recognized HP’s revised $33 bid as the “superior proposal” and said it told Dell it would go with HP unless Dell put more money on the table under the perpetual matching rights clause in their original deal. Sep. 2, 2010 11:25 AM EDT Reads: 128 | By Maureen O'Gara  HP has upped its $30-a-share bid for 3PAR last Friday to $33 a share, pushing 3PAR’s valuation past $2 billion to about $2.1 billion.
3PAR sent out a statement Thursday morning saying that Dell went to $32 before the three-day clock ran out on it Wednesday at midnight, and HP countered with $33.
The 3PAR board has recognized HP’s revised $33 bid as the “superior proposal” and says it has again told Dell it’ll go with HP unless Dell puts more money on the table. Dell has three business days to better HP’s bid under the perpetual matching rights clause in their original deal. Sep. 2, 2010 11:15 AM EDT Reads: 258 | By Elizabeth White  SYS-CON Events announced today that Red Hat, the world's leading provider of open source solutions, has been named “Platinum Sponsor” of SYS-CON’s 7th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 1–4, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Red Hat, an S&P 500 company, is headquartered in Raleigh, NC, with over 65 offices spanning the globe. The company provides high-quality, affordable technology with its operating system platform, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, together with virtualization, applications, management and Services Oriented Architecture (SOA) solutions, including Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization and JBoss Enterprise Middleware. Sep. 2, 2010 10:00 AM EDT Reads: 632 | By Elizabeth White  SYS-CON Events announced today that Webroot, a leading provider in Web and Email Security, will exhibit at SYS-CON's 7th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 1–4, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Webroot provides industry-leading security solutions businesses worldwide. Webroot products consistently receive top review ratings by respected third parties and have been adopted by millions globally. With a wide range of security services for businesses,, Webroot also protects allows consumers to download music, store digital files, bank, shop, surf and search – safely. Sep. 2, 2010 09:38 AM EDT Reads: 235 | By Liz McMillan  Hiperos, LLC, a provider of on-demand solutions for extended enterprise management, announced on Thursday that Microsoft Corp. will use Hiperos to manage all critical aspects of the supplier lifecycle – from initial supplier registration and assessment of risk to active measurement of performance, monitoring of compliance, and maintenance of supplier information. It will also be used for governance and control of strategic relationships.
As Microsoft continues to build a world class procurement organization, this is an important milestone. During the past few years, under the leadership of Tim McBride, general manager and chief procurement officer, Microsoft has improved its strategic sourcing, enhanced its business and stakeholder relationship management, focused on relentless execution, and introduced a robust program infrastructure. Sep. 2, 2010 09:30 AM EDT Reads: 613 | By Salvatore Genovese  What is the Enterprise Cloud Living Blueprint?
In his session at the 7th International Cloud Expo, Brian Sledge, SVP Solution Architecture and Field Engineering for Adaptivity, will walk delegates through the creation and linkage of a living blueprint concept and how it helps firms realize a cloud delivery model.
Brian Sledge is the SVP Solution Architecture and Field Engineering for Adaptivity. He is responsible for both the creative side of the business and for the development of all product and marketing initiatives, strategic brand direction and consistent presentation of the company's brands across all channels of distribution, including direct customers and partners. This is inclusive of product & portfolio definition; messaging and positioning and overall go-to-market strategy and planning. Sep. 2, 2010 09:00 AM EDT Reads: 541 |
Untitled Document
| Cloud Expo - Cloud Looms Large on SYS-CON.TV |


  |

Cloud Expo 2010 East Opening Keynote by Oracle
View this Keynote, recorded live at the Jacob Javits Center, featuring Richard Sarwal, CSVP of Development and Hasan Rizvi, Senior Vice President of Oracle Fusion Middleware Products.
|
 |
The Science of Doing Business in the Clouds
During this Cloud Expo Day Two Keynote, Tony Bishop will describe Adaptivity’s systematic and prescriptive approach that combines Fit-for-Purpose infrastructure technologies and management capabilities in order to create the optimal economics, environment and autonomics needed for the business to leverage cloud services.
|
 |
Pete Malcolm, CEO of Abiquo Live From New York City
Join Pete Malcolm, CEO Abiquo, for this vendor-neutral keynote, where you will learn about the next chapter in the Virtualization story. What it is, what it means, why open standards are key, and most importantly, how it will revolutionize the way your organization manages IT.
|
 |
The Time is Right for Enterprise Cloud Computing
During his keynote, Rich Marcello, Senior Vice President of Unisys, will discuss the latest technologies and approaches that help knock down these barriers, creating the opportunity for attendees to now consider cloud managed services as part of their data center journey to secure "IT as a Service".
|
 |
Accelerating Innovation with Cloud Computing
Join Shelton Shugar, Senior Vice President of Cloud Computing at Yahoo! for a keynote elaborating on how Yahoo! and consumers benefit from Yahoo! Cloud Services and will describe Yahoo! Cloud Services and technologies. |
|
Cloud Expo Breaking News By Elizabeth White  SYS-CON Events announced today that Red Hat, the world's leading provider of open source solutions, has been named “Platinum Sponsor” of SYS-CON’s 7th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 1–4, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Red Hat, an S&P 500 company, is headquartered in Raleigh, NC, with over 65 offices spanning the globe. The company provides high-quality, affordable technology with its operating system platform, Red Hat Enterprise Linux... Sep. 2, 2010 10:00 AM EDT Reads: 632 | By Elizabeth White  SYS-CON Events announced today that Webroot, a leading provider in Web and Email Security, will exhibit at SYS-CON's 7th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 1–4, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Webroot provides industry-leading security solutions businesses worldwide. Webroot products consistently receive top review ratings by respected third parties and have been adopted by millions globally. With a wide range of security services for busi... Sep. 2, 2010 09:38 AM EDT Reads: 235 | By Salvatore Genovese  What is the Enterprise Cloud Living Blueprint?
In his session at the 7th International Cloud Expo, Brian Sledge, SVP Solution Architecture and Field Engineering for Adaptivity, will walk delegates through the creation and linkage of a living blueprint concept and how it helps firms realize a cloud delivery model.
Brian Sledge is the SVP Solution Architecture and Field Engineering for Adaptivity. He is responsible for both the creative side of the business and for the development of all product... Sep. 2, 2010 09:00 AM EDT Reads: 541 | By Pat Romanski  What are small, high-growth companies experiencing as they make their move to on demand applications and how they are dealing with concerns around security, integration, business disruption?
In his session at the 7th International Cloud Expo, Shawn Reynolds, Director at SAP, will discuss what benefits they are actually seeing versus what they expected and what advice they are giving software companies to help them achieve long-term growth and profitability. Sep. 2, 2010 08:15 AM EDT Reads: 630 | By Elizabeth White  Public cloud adoption by an enterprise may have numerous barriers and challenges surrounding data privacy, residency, and security. Transitioning from on-premise solutions to the cloud means ceding data governance to the cloud vendor. This may impact your enterprise regulatory compliance, adherence to industry standards, and internal data management standards. Depending on your jurisdiction, you may be subject the EU Data Protection Directive, or cope with a patchwork of disparate and overlappin... Sep. 2, 2010 08:00 AM EDT Reads: 677 | By Pat Romanski  Moving to the cloud raises lots of questions, mostly about security. Providers worthy of your business should answer them clearly and honestly. Amazon Web Services has built an infrastructure and established processes to mitigate common vulnerabilities and offer a safe compute and storage environment.
In his session at the 7th International Cloud Expo, Steve Riley, an evangelist and strategist for cloud computing at Amazon Web Services, will discuss common cloud security concerns, show how AWS... Sep. 1, 2010 10:30 AM EDT Reads: 615 |
Conference News & Updates  By Pat Romanski SYS-CON Events announced on Friday that Cloud Expo 2010 West, the 7th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo, has been extended to four days from November 1-4, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, California.
Cloud Expo 2010 West total show floor space increased from 20,000 sq. ft. in 2009 to over 100,000 sq. ft. in 2010 including the expo floor.
The expo floor will be open for four full days, November 1-4, 2010, in the Grand Ballrooms A through H.
Half of the Cloud Expo 2010 West exhibit space had already sold out during the last West Coast event in November 2009.
Cloud Expo is the world's leading Cloud-focused event since 2007, and is held five times a year, in New York City, Silicon Valley, Prague, Tokyo and Hong Kong. Reads: 7,550  By Corinna Melcon By employing the most effective and powerful marketing tools in tech media for more than 15 years, SYS-CON Events, Inc. and Cloud Expo, Inc. intensively pre-publicize Cloud Expo 2010 West - Santa Clara via an unmatched number of channels.
Cloud Expo, Inc. publicity platforms include multiple news syndication channels, more than a dozen Ulitzer.com channels, multiple Twitter feeds that are amplified to hundreds of thousands of followers, as well as Cloud Expo's "Most Powerful Cloud Bloggers" platform with millions of page views at http://CloudComputingExpo.com.
The event is streamed live to more than 50,000 concurrent viewers at any given time throughout the three days. All key media outlets, technology journalists, and press are VIP-invited to Cloud Expo 2010 West - Santa Clara.
SYS-CON.TV produces and broadcasts the most viewed tech interviews with movers and shakers and simulcasts "Power Panels" right from the show floor!
Reads: 6,778  By Fuat Kircaali This year's West Coast conference attracted 2,250 delegate, more than double a year ago. As far as the expo floor goes, out of 50 sponsors and exhibitors, 46 companies confirmed during the conference that they will participate in the 2010 Cloud Computing Expo at the same or higher level.
At SYS-CON Media we see our inventories are filling up to 100% capacity for the months of November, December, and January, and we are seeing better-than-normal RFP activity for the first quarter of 2010. Reads: 15,308  By SYS-CON TV Learn about the trajectory of Cloud Computing - where it came from, where it is today, and where it's headed tomorrow - direct from four Enterprise IT industry experts: Greg O'Connor, CEO of AppZero; Tony Bishop, CEO of Adaptivity; K. Scott Morrison, CTO of Layer 7 Technologies; and Marty Gauvin, CEO of Virtual Ark. Moderated by Cloud Expo Conference Chair, Jeremy Geelan, this "Power Panel" was recorded at the Times Square studio of SYS-CON.TV in connection with 5th Cloud Expo (www.CloudComputingExpo.com), held recently in New York City...the Largest Cloud Computing Event in the World. Reads: 4,565  By Carmen Gonzalez Ulitzer.com announced "the World's 30 most influential Cloud bloggers," who collectively generated more than 24 million Ulitzer page views. Ulitzer's annual "most influential Cloud bloggers" list was announced at Cloud Expo, which drew more delegates than all other Cloud-related events put together worldwide. "The world's 50 most influential Cloud bloggers 2010" list will be announced at the Cloud Expo 2010 East, which will take place April 19-21, 2010, at the Jacob Javitz Convention Center, in New York City, with more than 5,000 expected to attend. Reads: 15,973  By Fuat Kircaali I can't comprehend that any event producer anywhere in the world today would answer this question by picking any one of the five available options presented. "A leading tool?" What do you mean by "a leading tool?" What other tools would you possibly have in this day and age? This question, the survey itself and its participants belong to the last decade.
I personally don't use email anymore; I communicate through "Twitter."
We don't do press releases unless we have to; we tweet stories to our roughly 12,000 followers in 8 channels. The news gets amplified to hundreds of thousands instantly.
Even during Cloud Expo, we reach more people by Twitter than the announcements we make through loudspeakers in the convention centers.
I would love to contact the people who are conducting this survey and ask them if any company answered their first question as "don't really consider it."
In an age where I personally hail a cab at an airport through Twitter, I can't possibly comprehend which century bubble those people might be living in. Reads: 3,835  Further cementing its position as The Largest Cloud Computing Event in the World, the organizers of the 7th Cloud Expo, being held at the Santa Clara Convention Center, Santa Clara, CA, announced today that the event will also feature – on November 2nd, 2010 – a CloudCamp unconference.
CloudCamp @ Cloud Expo is aimed at anyone working with, or interested in working with, cloud technologies.
"With the rapid change occurring in the industry, we need a place where we can meet to share our experiences, challenges and solutions," said CloudCamp co-founder Dave Nielsen, who will personally be facilitating the process on site at the Jacob Javits. "At CloudCamp," Nielsen continued, "participants will be encouraged to share their thoughts in several open discussions, as we strive for the advancement of Cloud Computing."  By Kevin Hartig Cloud computing is becoming one of the next industry buzz words. It joins the ranks of terms including: grid computing, utility computing, virtualization, clustering, etc.
Cloud computing overlaps some of the concepts of distributed, grid and utility computing, however it does have its own meaning if contextually used correctly. The conceptual overlap is partly due to technology changes, usages and implementations over the years.
Trends in usage of the terms from Google searches shows Cloud Computing is a relatively new term introduced in the past year. There has also been a decline in general interest of Grid, Utility and Distributed computing.
Likely they will be around in usage for quit a while to come. But Cloud computing has become the new buzz word driven largely by marketing and service offerings from big corporate players like Google, IBM and Amazon. Reads: 79,800  By Elizabeth White Hasan Rizvi, SVP Product Development at Oracle, will present the opening keynote on extreme performance for your cloud platform at SYS-CON's 7th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 1-4, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley will feature technical sessions from a rock star conference faculty and the leading Cloud industry players in the world.
The growth and success of Cloud Computing will be on display at the upcoming Cloud Expo conference and exhibition in Santa Clara November 1-4 and in New York City Spring 2011. Reads: 1,636  By Elizabeth White Leading enterprises are revolutionizing the delivery of IT today. In his keynote on Day 2 of SYS-CON's 7th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on November 1-4, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA, Tony Bishop, the CEO of Adaptivity, will showcase multiple case studies and lessons learned of Global 2000 organizations that have radically changing the delivery of IT in their organizations by employing Cloud Utility IT models.
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley will feature technical sessions from a rock star conference faculty and the leading Cloud industry players in the world.
The growth and success of Cloud Computing will be on display at the upcoming Cloud Expo conference and exhibition in Santa Clara November 1-4 and in New York City Spring 2011. Reads: 1,501  By Roger Strukhoff Cloud Expo, Cloud Expo East, Cloud Expo West, Cloud Expo Silicon Valley, Cloud Expo Europe, Cloud Expo Tokyo, Cloud Expo Prague, Cloud Expo Hong Kong, Cloud Expo Sao Paolo are trademarks and /or registered trademarks (USPTO serial number 85009040) of Cloud Expo, Inc. Reads: 5,602 |
Untitled Document
|
|
|
Save $800
on your “Golden Pass”! Call 201.802.3020 or click here to Register Early Bird Expires September
3rd.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Please Call
201.802.3021
events (at) sys-con.com
|
|
| SYS-CON's Cloud Expo, held each year in California, New York, Prague,
Tokyo, and Hong Kong is the world’s leading Cloud event in its 3rd year, larger than
all other Cloud events put together. For sponsorship, exhibit opportunites and show
prospectus, please contact Carmen Gonzalez, carmen (at) sys-con.com.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
“ |
Cloud Expo was a fantastic event for CSS
Corp - we easily exceeded our objectives for engaging with
clients and prospects." |
|
|
AHMAR ABBAS
SVP, Global Infrastructure Management, CSS Corp.
|
| |
|
“ |
With our launch at Cloud Expo, we
successfully transformed the company from a relatively unknown
European player into the dominant player in the market. Our
competitors were taken by surprise and just blown away. We got a
huge number of really high quality leads..." |
|
|
PETE MALCOLM
CEO, Abiquo
|
| |
|
“ |
We were extremely pleased with Cloud Expo
this year - I’d say it exceeded expectations all around.
This is the same info we got from partners who attended as well.
Nice job!" |
|
|
MARY BASS
Director of Marketing, UnivaUD
|
| |
|
“ |
Cloud Expo helps focus the debate on the
critical issues at hand in effect connecting main street with
the next frontier." |
|
GREG O’CONNOR
President & CEO, Appzero
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Senior Technologists including CIOs, CTOs, VPs of technology, IT
directors and managers, network and storage managers, network engineers, enterprise
architects, communications and networking specialists, directors of infrastructure Business
Executives including CEOs, CMOs, CIOs, presidents, VPs, directors, business development;
product and purchasing managers.
|
|
|
The World's Most Influential Blogs By Dustin Amrhein  Maybe I’m just a geek, but to me, in our ever growing, massively scaled enterprise computing landscape, there are few technologies that peak my interest like memory-based data grids. It is nothing short of amazing to see an increasing number of enterprises use these solutions in a myriad of ways, all to solve an old dilemma: How can one efficiently and cost-effectively scale data while preserving quality of service characteristics of the data such as performance, availability, consistency, and m... Sep. 2, 2010 10:53 AM EDT | By Dana Gardner  Automation, policy-driven processes and best practices are offering more opportunities for optimizing virtualization so that server, storage, and network virtualization can move from points of progress into more holistic levels of adoption. Sep. 1, 2010 08:56 AM EDT Reads: 422 | By Mark O'Neill  I had a really good discussion with Kaitlin Brunsden from EbizQ on the topic of Cloud Security in general, and API Keys in particular. All too often, CISOs and IT managers do not realize that if their organization is using Amazon Web Services (AWS), for example, then the Secret Key ID used to authenticate to AWS is often sitting on a hard drive or coded into an application. This Secret Key ID, in combination with the Access Key ID (which is readily available through traffic logs) can be used by ... Sep. 1, 2010 06:43 AM EDT Reads: 160 | By Don MacVittie  I was pondering the weather in Northeast Wisconsin this morning, it’s gloomy and oppressively hot. Between heat and humidity, I’d say it felt more like the US’s Pacific Northwest than the Midwest. And it’s been image that way all summer. We’ve been plowed under with 80+ percent humidity for months, and every once in a while the temperature dips to remind us that we’re in Wisconsin.
It is the last day of August, tomorrow is September, when cool and wet is supposed to start converging upon us. ... Aug. 31, 2010 05:00 PM EDT Reads: 425 | By Arjan de Jong  In many documents and introductions to cloud computing we have been shown what the Cloud really means and what is possible to do inside it. Things that have been covered have been what systems make up the cloud right up to applications and services running in it.
This blog entry aims to covers another aspect and that is computation in the Cloud. Aug. 31, 2010 09:45 AM EDT Reads: 477 | By Cloud Ventures  Cloud computing is such a powerful investment area for government because not only can it modernize their IT and therefore enhance their business processes and reduce their own operating costs, but this same platform can also boost technology-enabled public innovation across a broader national capacity.
This can be aligned to government programs to create more of an ‘Innovation Nation’ program, such as the UK program of the same name. This encompasses aspects such as ICT skills and programs i... Aug. 31, 2010 09:30 AM EDT Reads: 523 |
Untitled Document
|
|
|

SARWAL
Oracle
|

COFFEE
Salesforce
|

KHAN
Sybase
|

MALCOLM
Abiquo
|

KHALIDI
Microsoft
|

RILEY
AWS
|

BARRETO
Intel
|

CHAKRAVARTY
Novell
|

CRANDELL
RightScale
|

GROSS
Unisys
|

SCHALK
Google
|

YEN
Juniper Networks
|
|
|
|