Microsoft Dominates Cloud Infrastructure Software Market: Synergy

Microsoft Dominates Cloud Infrastructure Software Market: Synergy

Cloud deployments and cloud-enabled systems now account for well over half of the $29 billion per quarter data center infrastructure market, according to Synergy Research Group. Synergy released Q1 2016 data on the cloud-building technology market this week which shows Microsoft continues to dominate the cloud infrastructure software market with a share of over 40 percent.

VMware has the second largest share of the cloud infrastructure software market, at just under 20 percent. Cisco and HPE hold the highest market share in public and private cloud hardware, respectively, and each company was second in the other category. Dell was third in both hardware categories. IBM, EMC, Lenovo, and Huawei were other vendors with substantial market share.

SEE ALSO: Cloud Companies “Might Feel Good About Themselves” But Good Luck Reaching AWS Heights: Report

“With spend on cloud services growing by over 50 percent per year and spend on SaaS growing by over 30 percent, there is little surprise that cloud operator capex continues to drive strong growth in public cloud infrastructure,” said Jeremy Duke, Synergy Research Group’s founder and Chief Analyst. “But on the enterprise data center side too we continue to see a big swing towards spend on private cloud infrastructure as companies seek to benefit from more flexible and agile IT technology. The transition to cloud still has a long way to go.”

In a soft quarter typical for the beginning of the year, infrastructure sales grew by 13 percent annualized in Q1, and 20 percent over the past year.

Synergy calculated total public cloud revenues at $20 billion per quarter as of September.

READ MORE: HPE Bets on Core Data Center Hardware Sales to Drive Profits

Source: TheWHIR

Cogeco Peer1 Recovers from Atlanta Data Center Outage

Cogeco Peer1 Recovers from Atlanta Data Center Outage

datacenterknowledgelogoBrought to you by Data Center Knowledge

Cogeco Peer1’s data center in Atlanta experienced a partial power outage Thursday afternoon, affecting some of the customers in the facility.

The data center outage started around 1:30 pm local time, company spokesperson, Shawna Gee, said. The company posted regular updates on its Twitter feed during the outage, and in a tweet around 6:30 pm Eastern reported that full power had been restored to the facility.

“There was a disruption in power to the facility,” Gee said. “It was partially affecting certain areas of the facility.”

As of Thursday evening, the root cause of the outage or the reason the facility’s backup power systems did not pick up the load had not been determined, she said.

“Everything has been restored. Our customer are back online.”

As with any major data center outage, some of Peer1’s customers took to Twitter to vent their frustration:

Another common occurrence is a competitor trying to lure angry customers from the provider experiencing the outage:

Original article appeared here: Cogeco Peer1 Recovers from Atlanta Data Center Outage

Source: TheWHIR

Container and Microservices Myths: The Red Hat Perspective

Container and Microservices Myths: The Red Hat Perspective

Brought to you by The VAR Guy

What are containers and microservices? What are they not? These are questions that Lars Herrmann, general manager of Integrated Solutions Business Unit at Red Hat, answered recently for The VAR Guy in comments about popular container misconceptions and myths.

It’s no secret that containers have fast become one of the hottest new trends in computing. But like cloud computing or traditional virtualization before them, containers do not live up to the hype in all respects. In order to leverage container technology effectively, organizations need to understand the history behind containers, their limitations and where they fit in to the data center landscape alongside virtual machines.

SEE ALSO: Microsoft Launches Azure Container Service

The discussion of container misconceptions below is a condensed version of commentary delivered by Herrmann to The VAR Guy.

Misconception #1: Containers are New

Container packaging as we use it today is new (highlighted by the Docker/OCI image format), as is the concept of using container orchestration like Kubernetes to scale workloads across clusters of hosts. But the idea of sharing an operating system instance in isolating different parts of an application is not. From Unix Chroot to FreeBSD jail to Sun Microsystems’ Solaris Zones, solutions have been available for splitting up and dedicating system resources for some time now.

It’s also important to note that many of the technologies inherent to Linux containers (namespaces, cgroups, etc.) have been the foundation of many first generation PaaS offerings. What’s new is the ability to leverage the container capabilities of Linux to run and manage a very broad set of applications, ranging from cloud-native microservices to existing, traditional applications.

Misconception #2: Containers are Completely Self-Contained Entities

Despite their name, containers are not completely self-contained. Each container “guest” system leverages the same host OS and its services. This reduces overhead and improves performance, but may introduce potential security or interoperability issues.

Misconception #3: Containers can Replace Virtual Machines

Containers won’t replace virtual machines wholesale because they don’t work exactly like virtual machines. Each has its place in the enterprise, and companies must figure out which makes sense for what workloads. In short, virtualization provides flexibility by abstraction from hardware, while containers provide speed and agility through lightweight application packaging and isolation.

So, instead of thinking of containers as replacing virtual machines, companies should be thinking about containers as a complement to virtual machines — with the workload and infrastructure needs determining what to use when.

Misconception #4: Containers are Universally Portable

Containers depend on the host OS kernel and services to function, with “depend” being the operative word. Containers also must cross physical hardware, hypervisors, private clouds, public clouds, and more. Indeed, for containers to be truly portable, developers must have in place an integrated application delivery platform built on open standards.

As with so many things, standards are key — across the entire ecosystem.

Misconception #5: Containers are Secure by Default

There are many benefits to running containers in the enterprise, but those benefits must be weighed against the risk that can arise with the technology. Think about two physical machines — you can isolate them on the network. If one goes down and/or is infected with a virus, the other machine can be pretty easily defended. In a containerized environment, on the other hand, the OS kernel on the host system is being used by all of the containers. This kind of sharing brings with it inherent risk.

The level of isolation provided by the Linux kernel is combining process isolation with namespaces which works very well, but by design doesn’t close out all potential paths malicious code could take to break out and gain access to the host or other containers. That’s why technologies such as SELinux provide a needed additional layer of policy and access control.

What is most important, though, is what’s running inside the container. Industry best practices such as relying on trusted components obtained from trusted sources, complemented with scanning capabilities to “trust but verify” enterprise applications, apply to containers as well. The immutable nature of containers creates an opportunity to manage changes at the image itself, not the running instance. So the container distribution architecture, often implemented as federated registries, becomes a critical element in managing the security and patching of containers.

Original article appeared here: Container and Microservices Myths: The Red Hat Perspective

Source: TheWHIR

Wix Takes Aim at Squarespace With AI-Driven Website Creator

Wix Takes Aim at Squarespace With AI-Driven Website Creator

By Gwen Ackerman and Gabrielle Coppola

(Bloomberg) — While companies such as Squarespace Inc. or Weebly Inc. will help you craft an attractive modern website, it’s still up to the user to create the content. Wouldn’t it be faster if an artificial intelligence could write it for you?

Israel’s Wix.com Ltd. announced Tuesday it’s enabling a technology to do just that. It’s baking an AI into its web development platform that trawls the open internet for person-specific information to create a unique, individual website with images, video and text. Pages can be expanded to include e-commerce elements, blogs or appointment bookings. Users just register their name and profession to start the process.

“We wanted to take this thing that was complex and hard and make it obtainable and put it in the reach of those for whom making a website is mind-blowing,” said Nir Zohar, president and chief operating officer of 10-year-old Wix.

Empowered Designers

The web design service market, which companies like Wix are disrupting, was worth about $24 billion in September 2015 and is expected to grow to $29 billion by 2020, according to IBISWorld. Companies offering online website development applications for the computer-challenged could slow growth for professional designers, as an increasing number of small businesses develop and maintain their own websites, the report said.

Wix’s new artificial intelligence tool will “empower” designers rather than displace them, by allowing them to focus on more innovative or complex tasks, Chief Executive Officer Avishai Abrahami told reporters and employees at Wix’s New York offices Tuesday.

Wix ADI, the acronym standing for artificial design intelligence, is the newest technology leap by the Tel Aviv-based company, whose free tools have helped 86 million people create websites. It’s a product that could help lift Wix ahead of competitors like Squarespace, Weebly, WordPress.org and Shopify Inc. if demand for automation goes the way the company anticipates.

Removes Friction

Wix ADI not only trawls the web to find personalized information, it also mines its database of 86 million users to produce content for its automatically-generated website templates.

“This should help accelerate growth to the extent it removes friction from the transaction,” Kerry Rice, an analyst with Needham & Co. in San Francisco, said by phone. “Continuing to make it easy, make it more accessible, and obviously they’ve got a lot of insight from their 80 million plus registered users — that’s something that no one else has.”

Wix anticipates Wix ADI will supplant Booking.com as the go-to system for small hotels and family bed and breakfasts, eliminating the fee payable to the Priceline Group’s service in the same way Wix Restaurants, released in March, seeks to remove the reliance of cafes and eateries on commission-based marketplaces.

The ultimate goal is to boost the ranks of the current 2 million subscribers who pay monthly between $4 for a basic domain to $16 for e-commerce.

Wix reported a first quarter revenue jump of about 40 percent last month and increased its financial outlook for the year, prompting Oppenheimer & Co.’s senior analyst Jason Helfstein to raise his price target to $32 from $25. In his note, Helfstein named Wix as saying “the clear leader” in web presence and services for small and midsize businesses, attributing its success to the focus on software development and new products.

Wix shares rose 1.7 percent to $27.50 in New York. They have rallied 67 percent since the company went public in November 2013.

Source: TheWHIR

Enhance Your Cloud Career with Penton Technology Professional Education Platform

Enhance Your Cloud Career with Penton Technology Professional Education Platform

The Penton Technology Professional Education platform has launched Thursday to offer an interactive experience for technology professionals to take their career to the next level. The platform offers courses on a range of technology topics including cloud and data center, development and devops, data center operations, and more.

“Our new education platform allows tech professionals to enhance their careers, advance their skills and access critical education on-demand,” said Rod Trent, Education and Conferences Director for Penton Technology.

The contemporary site is easy to navigate on all mobile devices and desktops. Besides access to exclusive courses taught by seasoned pros, the platform features interactive material, including embedded videos, quizzes, photos and graphics. The courses have been designed to provide high-quality continuing education in a convenient and user-friendly format.

“We’re seeing significant growth in interest in our deep dive, peer-based training at both our conferences and our eLearning classes,” Trent added. “That’s why we are creating a professional development ecosystem that capitalizes on learning-focused content at our conferences, on our web sites and forums, and at new on-site learning events we’ll soon be rolling out across the country.”

To celebrate the debut of the new platform, by Thought Industries, Penton Technology is discounting all on-demand classes by 20% through July 15. The expanded course offerings compliment Penton Technology’s onsite conference training.

This year IT/Dev Connections, which runs Oct. 10-13 at the ARIA Resort in Las Vegas, will present new on-site classes on various cloud services and Windows 10, and introduce on-site Microsoft certifications for the first time, including some that will not be available at Microsoft’s Ignite conference in September. There’s also an extensive array of new professional development workshops being offered at our upcoming Data Center World and HostingCon conferences.

We’d love to get your feedback on the new platform. Send it to Rod.Trent@penton.com.

Source: TheWHIR

IANA Transition Proposal Gets NTIA Stamp of Approval

IANA Transition Proposal Gets NTIA Stamp of Approval

The National Telecommunications & Information Administraton (NTIA) announced Thursday that it has accepted a proposal for transitioning the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to the private sector. The proposal meets the conditions set out in 2014 by the NTIA for the replacement of itself as overseer of ICANN with a number of accountability and transparency mechanisms and bylaws to balance the powers of multiple stakeholders and the ICANN board.

“Today’s announcement marks an important milestone in the U.S. government’s 18-year effort to privatize the Internet’s domain name system,” said US Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker. “This transition ensures that the Internet continues to flourish as a platform for innovation, economic growth and free expression. I want to thank the Internet’s diverse multistakeholder community, which includes businesses, technical experts, and civil society groups, for their dedication and hard work.”

SEE ALSO: Plan to Transfer ICANN Stewardship from US to Global Multi-Stakeholder Group on Course

The criteria set out by the NTIA for the IANA transition were to support and enhance the multistakeholder model, maintain the security and stability of the DNS, meet the needs of IANA service partners and customers, and maintain the openness of the internet, without recourse to a government-led organization. ICANN set out the proposal in March, which includes measures for “the community” to potentially block ICANN budgets, bylaw changes, and even board members, as a safeguard against takeover.

Oversight of the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) will be transitioned from the NTIA to “direct customer stewardship via contracts, service-level expectations, community-led reviews, and increased transparency.”

The proposal was weighed against recommendation from the Government Accountability Office and reviewed by a panel of corporate governance experts, NTIA said.

“The internet’s multistakeholder community has risen to the challenge we gave them to develop a transition proposal that would ensure the internet’s domain name system will continue to operate as seamlessly as it currently does,” said Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information and NTIA Administrator Lawrence E. Strickling. “The plan developed by the community will strengthen the multistakeholder approach that has helped the Internet to grow and thrive, while maintaining the stability, security, and openness that users across the globe depend on today.”

The Internet Association, the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA), and the Internet Infrastructure Coalition (i2Coalition) issued a statement in support of the proposals.

“The internet economy applauds NTIA for its deliberative and thorough work reviewing the ICANN transition proposals to ensure its principles for a successful transition are met. Our organizations agree that the proposals to transition ICANN from U.S. government stewardship to a bottom-up, multistakeholder model satisfy NTIA principles and provide the internet with the best path forward for self governance. It is important that Congress not artificially slow down the transition beyond theSeptember 30 expiration of the current IANA contract. We will remain engaged and vigilant as the transition proceeds to ensure the continued success of the multistakeholder model.”

Ecommerce lobby group NetChoice also expressed support for the decision.

US Senator Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) introduced legislation on Wednesday, the Washington Post reports, to require the Commerce Department to keep ICANN under the NTIA unless even more legislation is passed, ordering it to carry on.

Recently departed ICANN head Fadi Chehadé said a year ago that the government would approve a transfer plan before the fall Presidential election, despite the renewal of the existing contract just last August.

Source: TheWHIR

AWS Migration Competency Launches with Dozens of Partners

AWS Migration Competency Launches with Dozens of Partners

talkincloudBrought to you by Data Center Knowledge

Amazon Web Services has added five categories related to migration to the AWS Partner Network (APN) to encourage enterprise cloud migration. The AWS Migration Competency was unveiled in an announcement on Wednesday, along with dozens of initial launch partners providing migration services.

AWS Migration Competency partners are grouped by five sets of services. The solutions and experience of the partners can help businesses through all stages of complex migrations, from discovery and planning through operations, AWS said.

  • Migration Delivery Partners: 2nd Watch, Accenture, ClassMethod, ClearScale, Cloud Technology Partners, cloudpack, Cloudreach, Cognizant Technology Solutions, Corpinfo, CSC, FPT Software, Infosys, Logicworks, REAN Cloud, Serverworks, Slalom Consulting, Smartronix
  • Migration Consulting Partners: Apps Associates, Aquilent, Datapipe, Flux7, Pythian, TriNimbus
  • Migration Technology for Discovery & Planning: Atadata, Cloudamize, RISC Networks
  • Migration Technology for Workload Mobility: Racemi, CloudEndure, Atadata
  • Migration Technology for Application Profiling: New Relic, AppDynamics, Dynatrace Ruxit

AWS already offers a Professional Services Cloud Adoption Framework, and launched its Database Migration Service in October to move enterprise databases to AWS Aurora, but as Bill Kleyman pointed out in January, working with heterogeneous storage ecosystems requires expertise.

“More and more, I hear from customers who want to migrate large-scale workloads to AWS, and seek advice regarding their cloud migration strategy,” said AWS Chief Evangelist Jeff Barr in a blog post.

With over 30 percent of the cloud infrastructure market already, and a lead among public cloud providers for enterprises, AWS room to grow its revenue from enterprises is increasingly among cloud adoption laggards and business that might require a little more help and reassurance then the pioneers of public cloud use.

AWS announced a partnership with Ericsson in February to encourage telecom cloud migration by building cloud innovation centers.

Original article appeared here: AWS Migration Competency Launches with Dozens of Partners

Source: TheWHIR

Rackspace Launches Managed Magento Environments on AWS

Rackspace Launches Managed Magento Environments on AWS

Rackspace has launched managed Magento environments on Amazon Web Services and tiered support and service options for managed applications, the company announced Tuesday.

Managed Environments for Magento are pre-built Magento architectures running on optimized AWS infrastructure. It includes options for customizing the infrastructure of the Magento application, database, admin server, Redis, and Memcached, with one-click deployment.

Rackspace will also roll out Managed Cloud for Magento “in a few months” to deliver the same Magento environments on AWS using a software application for customers, Magento developers, and systems integrators to use themselves.

READ MORE: Rackspace CEO: Q1 2016 Growth Driven by Managed Cloud Services Demand

The expanded Managed Application Services options provide support options for business-critical applications: Magento; SAP Hybris; Sitecore Experience Platform; Oracle Commerce; Adobe Experience Manager; and custom Java and .net applications. Application support can be purchased based on “Tools and Expertise” for self-monitoring, “Alerts and Response” for proactive Rackspace management, and “Critical Application Services” for expert consultation on application environment design and performance.

“All of these additions to the Rackspace Digital portfolio offer our customers new ways of removing the burden of architecting and managing optimized digital environments, allowing them to focus on delivering differentiated customer experiences,” said Rackspace Director of Product for the Digital Practice Brant Jones in a blog post.

SEE ALSO: Rackspace Launches One-Stop Digital Services Practice

Managed services were the top growth segment for Rackspace in the last quarter.

Magento is the leading platform for ecommerce with a 29 percent market share, aheadWorks reported in March. Managed Magento, therefore, is a big potential market for Rackspace, and PayPal and Ipsos predicted in November that the global ecommerce market will surpass $661 billion in 2017. The addition of managed Magento on AWS follows on Rackspace’s launch of support for AWS in October.

Source: TheWHIR

We have the big data tools — let's learn to use them

We have the big data tools — let's learn to use them

Recently, at the Apache Spark Maker Community event in San Francisco, I was on a panel and feeling a bit salty. It seems many people have prematurely declared victory in the data game. A few people have achieved self-service, and even more have claimed to.

In truth, this is a tiny minority — and most of those people have achieved cargo-cult datacentricity. They use Hadoop and/or Spark and pull data into Excel, manipulate it, and paste it into PowerPoint. Maybe they’ve added Tableau and are able to make prettier charts, but what really has changed? Jack, that’s what.

Self-service is only step one on this trip to data-driven decision-making. Companies need to know their data before they can consider their choices — but this is still very much data at the edges with a meat cloud in the center.

So far, we use computer aided decision-making and computer-driven process where we have to: advanced fraud detection, algorithmic trading, and rigorously regulated processes (such as Obamacare). Generally, we don’t use it elsewhere.

Charter Urged by N.Y. to ‘Clean Up' TWC's Broadband Reputation

Charter Urged by N.Y. to ‘Clean Up' TWC's Broadband Reputation

By Christie Smythe

(Bloomberg) — Charter Communications Inc. was urged by the New York attorney general to improve broadband service for former Time Warner Cable Inc. customers following a $55 billion takeover.

In a letter to Charter’s Chief Executive Officer Tom Rutledge Wednesday, an enforcement official for New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said he hoped the company would “clean up Time Warner Cable’s act and deliver the quality Internet service New Yorkers deserve and have long been promised.”

Charter has said it intends to phase out the Time Warner Cable brand, which has earned low marks from customers for years. Schneiderman has been investigating promises by Time Warner Cable and other broadband providers of blazing-fast speeds that allow quick downloads of movies, music and television shows.

After asking New York customers to use open-source tools to test their Internet speeds as part of the probe, “the results we received from Time Warner Cable customers were abysmal,” said Tim Wu, senior enforcement counsel and special adviser to Schneiderman, in the letter. The company failed “to achieve the speeds its customers were promised” and “generally performed worse in this regard than other New York broadband providers.”

Wu, an influential law professor who advocates for freedom of access to Internet content and coined the phrase “net neutrality,” joined Schneiderman’s office last year. He helps advise the attorney general on enforcement efforts for new technologies.

Source: TheWHIR