451 Research Spotlights IndependenceIT’s V 5.0 Release In Impact Report

451 Research Spotlights IndependenceIT’s V 5.0 Release In Impact Report

IndependenceIT has announced the availability of a new Impact Report 451 Research, IndependenceIT Boosts User Experience with Cloud Workspace Suite 5.0, June, 2016, by 451 Research on IndependenceIT’s version 5.0 release. The new report, titled “IndependenceIT Boosts User Experience with Cloud Workspace Suite 5.0,” can be accessed here.

Version 5.0 is a powerful cloud management platform that addresses IT challenges at all levels with specific enhancements designed for cross platform software defined data center deployment and management, software defined networking, application workload delivery / management and Workspace-as-a-Service (WaaS). The new software has been given a complete user interface / user experience (UI/UX) re-write, new menu structure and iconography, enhanced workflow/functionality, and more. For the IT administrator, this provides an optimized experience and time saving features for greater control over the costs of service delivery. In the recently published report which focused on version 5.0, 451 Research commented on the product’s key enhancements.

“IndependenceIT has made good efforts in keeping pace with partner requirements for platform scalability and usability. The company seems to have identified its niche and is heading in the right direction,” said Agatha Poon, research director and author of the 451 Research Impact Report. “The latest release of Cloud Workspace Suite has added features such as live server scaling and automated server cloning that channel partners and enterprise IT find attractive. Playing the role of an aggregator that facilitates management across multiple platforms and cloud environments, the company has ample opportunity to pursue new customers in both enterprise and service provider markets.”

IndependenceIT’s software is an integrated workspace automation platform that manages Software Defined Data Centers (SDDCs), cloud-based workspaces, and application services for users anywhere, anytime and on any device. The cloud management platform is deployed globally by IT service providers, independent software vendors, and IT administrators to enable workspace-as-a-service solutions and app services. Cloud Workspace Suite allows its customers to quickly and easily provision, manage and monitor complete workspaces in public, private, or hybrid cloud environments. The new capabilities in version 5.0 include:

IndependenceIT is working with a broad range of partners in preparation for upgrades to version 5.0. The company expects IT administrators to quickly adopt the new platform and capabilities as they capitalize on the product’s extended support for third-party cloud and virtual infrastructure. As stated in the report, “The company has extended support for SoftLayer, in addition to AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google, OpenStack, VMware vSphere/vCloud Director, Microsoft Hyper V, and Citrix XenServer. Since it has always pursued the strategy of being the aggregation point that facilitates workflow orchestration across multiple platforms and cloud environments, rather than just being one of the WaaS platforms, IndependenceIT is a strong advocate for cross-platform integration and orchestration.”

The report continued by detailing capabilities facilitating automated SDDC deployments. “Having directly integrated with Azure Active Directory, version 5.0 enables customers to provide Azure AD-as-a-service with single-sign-on and multi-factor authentication across public, private, and hybrid clouds. The full integration with Azure enables customers to rapidly self-deploy new software-defined data centers for any workload, including WaaS, app services, and private apps.”

“Version 5.0 is the most important update since the company’s founding and the experts at 451 Research have recognized the innovations and user-led capabilities we have worked tirelessly to incorporate,” said Seth Bostock, CEO, IndependenceIT. “We invite both current and new partners to consider the industry’s most complete solution for real business agility and cost containment.”

Source: CloudStrategyMag

Abacus Data Systems Chooses Switch SUPERNAP To Host Cloud Customers

Abacus Data Systems Chooses Switch SUPERNAP To Host Cloud Customers

Abacus Data Systems (Abacus) has announced that its Abacus Private Cloud customers will be hosted by a Switch SUPERNAP data center in Las Vegas.

The agreement marks the third data center for Abacus, which is expanding rapidly as more legal industry customers of all sizes recognize the advantages of keeping their mission-critical applications and data in the Abacus Private Cloud.

Headquartered in Las Vegas, Nevada, with additional locations under development in northern Nevada, Michigan, Italy and Thailand, Switch’s Tier IV Gold SUPERNAP data centers are the highest-ranking colocation data centers in the world and are maintained by the highest-rated mission critical operations teams. With more independent cloud providers than any other technology campus, SUPERNAP connects thousands of clients and providers in one of the most cost-efficient and technologically secure environment worldwide.

The SUPERNAP data center campus in Las Vegas is the largest in the world with more than 2 million square feet and more than 1,000 clients. It is powered by 100% clean and renewable energy, making Switch the world’s largest colocation data center environment to operate using all-inclusive green technology.

“This partnership ensures Abacus Private Cloud customers will continue to enjoy the peace of mind that comes from knowing their data is safely housed in the most secure and environmentally sustainable facility available,” said Abacus CEO Alessandra Lezama. “Our growth comes from cost-effectively connecting and protecting the businesses of hundreds of thousands of customers worldwide.”

“The addition of Abacus Data Systems to the SUPERNAP cloud ecosystem further demonstrates the need for managed private cloud providers to select data centers that support the highest operational and efficiency standards in the industry. As hybrid cloud deployments continue to be the bellwether of companies with high compliance needs, true independent technology environments, like Switch SUPERNAP data centers, are the only choice,” said Adam Kramer, executive vice president of strategy, Switch.

Source: CloudStrategyMag

PayScale Index Shows Big Data Jobs Are Driving Wage Growth In Tech Hubs

PayScale Index Shows Big Data Jobs Are Driving Wage Growth In Tech Hubs

PayScale, Inc. has released the Q2 2016 PayScale Index, which tracks quarterly and annual trends in compensation and also provides a U.S. national wage forecast for the coming quarter. In the second quarter of 2016, U.S. annual wage growth was largely positive with national quarterly wage growth of 0.5% and annual wage growth of 2.5%. Wage growth has been experiencing a slight uptick in recent quarters in the U.S. and growth for data-focused jobs has been particularly strong. The PayScale Index predicts overall US wage growth in Q3 may dip slightly, but is still anticipated to be up 1.6% from the previous year.

“Annual wage growth for IT jobs has actually been slightly below the national average in the first half of 2016,” said Katie Bardaro, VP of Data Analytics and Lead Economist at PayScale. “However, as more organizations use increasing amounts of data, data-centric jobs are in high demand and appear to be driving wages up in the technology centers such as Seattle and San Francisco.”

Key findings in the Q2 2016 PayScale Index

Tech centers experienced strong growth:

  • Metros with a high prevalence of STEM workers performed well this quarter, with both San Francisco and Seattle high on the list of metros experiencing the annual wage growth at 3.5% and 3.4%, respectively. Seattle also overtook Houston for the most wage growth since 2006 at 15.2% versus 14.4%.
  • Wage growth in data-focused positions such as data analyst, data scientist, data mining engineer and business intelligence analyst has been very strong over the past few quarters and is contributing to overall wage growth in these tech-focused cities. 

Wages for mining, oil and gas exploration continue to fall:

  • Annual wage growth in the mining, oil and gas exploration industry decreased 2.3% last quarter. However, as far as wage growth since 2006, this industry has experienced the highest wage growth of any industry tracked by the PayScale Index at 14.9%.
  • Even with wages in the mining industry falling, Houston still experienced quarterly wage growth of 1.1% and annual wage growth of 2.3%.

Highlights for U.S. metro wage growth include:

The top five U.S. metro areas experiencing the most annual wage growth were:

  • Riverside, CA (4.2%)
  • San Francisco, CA (3.5%)
  • Seattle, WA (3.4%)
  • San Diego, CA (3.1%)
  • Tampa, FL (2.9%)
  • The three U.S. metros experiencing the least growth in annual wages were:
  • St. Louis, MO (1.8%)
  • Philadelphia, PA (1.5%)
  • Baltimore, MD (1.3%)

Positive Canadian wage growth:

  • Similar to the U.S., most measures in Canada showed an uptick in wages where annual wage growth was 1.5% nationally. The exception was the oil city of Edmonton where annual wage growth was down 0.1%.
  • Wages still buy less today than in 2006:
  • Real wages are down 7.4% since 2006, reflecting a slight improvement over the past three years during which real wages reached a low of more than 8%.

PayScale’s real wages are calculated by analyzing nominal wage growth and the average change in price of a fixed basket of goods and services.

Source: CloudStrategyMag

Avast to Buy AVG for $1.3 Billion to Add Security Software

Avast to Buy AVG for .3 Billion to Add Security Software

By Rodrigo Orihuela

(Bloomberg) — Avast Software agreed to buy AVG Technologies NV for $1.3 billion in cash to add software to protect mobile phones from malware as it aims to tap into the growing number of physical devices connected to the internet.

Avast, which is backed by private-equity firm CVC Capital Partners, will begin a tender offer for Amsterdam-based AVG at $25 a share in cash, the companies said in a statement Thursday. That’s 33 percent above AVG’s closing price Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

READ MORE: Mobile Malware, Extortion Among Top 2016 Cybersecurity Trends

The deal will give Prague-based Avast more opportunities in internet security-related business, providing it with more scale and an increased geographical reach in both its core business and newer areas such as Internet of Things, according to the statement. The Internet of Things is the name used to refer to the network connecting physical devices, ranging from fridges to cars and clothes, to the internet, a growing area of focus for companies.

The deal between the two companies, both of which were founded in the Czech Republic more than 20 years ago, will provide Avast with 400 million so-called endpoints, 160 million of which are mobile. Avast says it protects 230 million people and businesses with its applications.

Bankers from Jefferies International Ltd. advised Avast, while White & Case LLP and De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek NV provided legal advice. Morgan Stanley is AVG’s financial adviser and Bridge Street Securities LLC is advising AVG’s supervisory board. Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP and Allen & Overy LLP are legal advisers to AVG.

Private-equity firm TA Associates, AVG’s biggest shareholder with a 13 percent stake, has agreed to tender its shares. Avast plans to fund the transaction using cash on hand and debt financing. Credit Suisse Group AG, Jefferies and UBS AG agreed to provide $1.69 billion in financing. Avast also has contributed $150 million in equity investment.

Closely held Avast planned an initial public offering in 2012, but canceled the sale because of market conditions.

Source: TheWHIR

A Strategic Marketing Plan: What it is and Why You Need One

A Strategic Marketing Plan: What it is and Why You Need One

Leads, leads, leads – the ultimate prize in the business world; the one thing we all want is people lining up to buy our products or services. There are many ways to get leads: some more effective (or expensive) than others. To find a never-ending stream of qualified leads is the business equivalent of having a goose that lays golden eggs.

There is no magic trick to generating, nurturing or converting leads for your business, and there’s no quick shortcut either. What’s the answer then? A clearly defined, carefully considered marketing plan. A solid marketing strategy can not only improve the number of leads you get but more importantly, it can increase lead quality and your ability to close more deals, faster.

Sound out of your scope? It’s not. As much as it would benefit my colleagues and me at Total Product Marketing to leave you thinking that marketers have some innate skill or inborn wizardry that allows us to generate a strong ROI on marketing investments, the truth is, you can do it too. You just need to know where to start.

What is Marketing, Anyway?

Sales. Marketing. Branding. If these words all sound the same to you, you’re not alone. A lack of familiarity with the particulars of each, combined with the fact that, frankly, they are all closely related, means many companies view the terms as interchangeable. What’s wrong with that? Well for starters, if you don’t know where one ends, and the next one starts, you’ll struggle to determine what is driving your results, and what is just costing you money and resources without improving to your bottom line.

So let’s get clear on these from the start, shall we?

Start with what you know. We are all aware of what sales are, of course. High sales numbers are good, low sales numbers are bad, your boss’s sales targets are aggressive – but where does sales end, and marketing or branding begin?

Marketing: Put Yourself Where They Can See You

Marketing is tactical. Marketing is where you get to unleash your inner ninja and employ every weapon in your arsenal. It’s using processes, tools, and strategies to get yourself in front of your target market’s eyeballs. It can include advertising, but ads are only the tip of the marketing iceberg – it also includes search engine optimization (SEO), leveraging social media, email campaigns, content generation, and anything else you can think of to make sure your name gets seen.

Simplified: marketing is your microphone.

It’s how you get your message across, let your audience know who you are, what you do, and why they should want to do business with you.

Because marketing focuses more on the big picture and the wider audience than sales, it needs to be a longer-term investment of resources. Too many companies dive headfirst into marketing, create a Twitter account and publish a few blog posts and then kill the venture for poor returns before it ever has a chance to perform. Marketing takes time – but for those willing to invest, the results can be game-changing.

The other (very important) differentiation between marketing and branding is this: marketing is measurable. Whatever your weapon of choice, make sure you track key performance indicators (how many people read your blog, open your email, click your link) so you know you’re putting your resources to good use.

Branding: This is Who You Are

Branding is your organization’s identity or personality – it helps your audience identify what you stand for and determines how they perceive you. Your branding is all-inclusive; every interaction a prospect has with you is part of your brand – whether it’s seeing your logo, visiting your store or website, engaging with your customer service or watching your advertisements.

Your brand may motivate your buyer to choose your product or service, but branding is never so blatant or uncouth as to come out with anything resembling a sales pitch. Rather than saying, “Buy me,” your brand plucks at deeper strings within your prospect – letting them know you align with their values and are a business they want to support and endorse.

Your brand, while never directly involved in marketing or sales, is what sticks in the minds of your audience after they deal with you. It’s forever associated in their mind with you, your products and your company and has the power to create lifelong loyalties if you work at it. (Coke or Pepsi? Honda or GM?)

Unlike marketing, brand success is difficult to quantify. There are no metrics for how much your customers love you or feel like you understand them. At the same time, unless you’re giving your organization a complete virtual facelift, you’re probably not spending on branding either.

So How Do Sales, Marketing and Branding Work Together?

Short answer: in harmony. Sales, marketing, and branding will be most effective if they are aligned, which is why a deliberate strategy is invaluable. Sales efforts that clash with your carefully crafted marketing message will jar your prospect, leaving them, at best, confused, and at worst, untrusting of your brand and unwilling to do business with you.

Coordinating your efforts, on the other hand, can make the combination stronger than the sum of its parts. Enter the marketing and sales funnel, which, not coincidentally, lines up with the 3 stages of a buyer’s journey:

Attract (marketing) – get the attention of buyers in the Awareness Phase

Convert (marketing) – nurture your relationship with buyers in the Consideration Phase

Close (sales) – make the sale when buyers reach the Decision Phase

(In case you’re wondering where Branding went, branding encompasses everything and subconsciously impacts every stage of your buyer’s journey.)

A good marketing strategy includes sales, marketing, and branding to create a consistent experience for your customers and prospects. A prospect nurtured by a curated stream of content, showing how you understand his pains, needs the same touch from your sales team. All your valuable content marketing efforts will go out the window if, upon reaching out to you, he’s met with a catalog of features filled with technical jargon or an unresponsive sales rep, leaving your brand in shambles and your deal, incomplete on the table.

Applying the Funnel to the Cloud and Hosting Industry

That’s it. The basics of marketing in 15 minutes and enough of the fundamentals to start you on the path to developing your very own marketing strategy. That wasn’t so bad.

But why should you bother? The cloud and hosting industry is experiencing explosive growth – companies are flocking to your field with fistfuls of cash, ready to step into the brave new world of cloud computing. The business is there, yours for the taking. Why do you care about what I have to say? Why do cloud and hosting providers need a marketing strategy at all?

Because it’s a great way to differentiate yourself from your competition to get a slice of that booming market. Just as customers flock to your industry, so does competition. Your marketing plan can help you better segment and strategically target your audience to improve the effectiveness of your efforts.

Because generating new customers is the number one challenge faced by MSPs, VARS, and ITSPs. Cloud and hosting technology is developing and evolving rapidly; you can’t just rely on Joe Customer to recognize your superior offering and eschew all others in your favor – you need to show him what you’ll do for him.

Because your current customers don’t even know what you do. New service and product offerings appear in the cloud market every day, and there’s nothing worse than finding out your loyal customers have gone elsewhere for solutions, all because they didn’t realize you offered the same thing.

Marketing doesn’t have to be costly or flashy. Even with a limited budget and a little bit of time and commitment, a solid marketing strategy can help you solve those problems.

Use your marketing microphone to communicate with your market and build your brand. Let them know who you are and why you’re different. Educate your audience on the benefits you can provide and the problems you can solve for them. Build a relationship with prospects; let them know they can trust you, and that you want what’s best for them.

Want to learn more about how a solid marketing strategy can help create new opportunities for your business? Join us for our Strategic Marketing Bootcamp session at HostingCon, July 24-27th in New Orleans, LA.

Source: TheWHIR

Report: Microsoft and Oracle Gobble Up Data Center Space in Virginia

Report: Microsoft and Oracle Gobble Up Data Center Space in Virginia

datacenterknowledgelogoBrought to you by Data Center Knowledge

If you have been keeping an eye on the wholesale data center market in the US – that’s the market for big facilities leased to companies many megawatts (sometimes tens of megawatts) at a time – you know that the biggest cloud providers have been taking down space in top markets at a rapid pace.

While this is happening in a number of places, including Silicon Valley, Dallas, and Chicago, the Northern Virginia data center market has been seeing more action than others, and the latest report from a commercial real estate firm that tracks data center markets shows that the action isn’t letting up in the area west of Washington, DC.

Only two companies, however, were responsible for most of the action in Northern Virginia during the second quarter: Microsoft and Oracle. Both grew enormously in the past by selling software licenses, and both are now racing to expand their cloud services to compensate for shrinking software revenues, which are shrinking because of competition from other cloud providers.

Microsoft is ahead of Oracle in this race, and its cloud business is second only to Amazon Web Services, according to market analysts. The race has been accompanied by massive spending on data center construction and leasing.

Read more: Top Cloud Providers Made $11B on IaaS in 2015, but It’s Only the Beginning

Collectively, the two companies either signed or were close to signing data center leases with multiple data center providers totaling 55MW of capacity in Northern Virginia over the last 30 days, according to the latest report by North American Data Centers, a real estate firm that specializes in helping companies find data center space and negotiate leases.

Microsoft is responsible for about 30MW of that capacity, while Oracle is responsible for the rest, Jim Kerrigan, the firm’s managing principal and the report’s author, said in an interview with Data Center Knowledge. Not all of those leases had been signed as of Thursday, he cautioned.

Both Microsoft and Oracle were also among companies that signed some of the biggest single-transaction data center leases last year.

Microsoft signed at least three wholesale leases in 2015 – in Silicon Valley, Chicago, and Northern Virginia data center markets – totaling about 28MW of capacity, according to NADC’s annual report published in January. Oracle signed two deals, 5.5MW and 4.5MW in Chicago and Northern Virginia markets, respectively, the report said.

Source: TheWHIR

Rackspace Offers Partners Ability to Resell Azure, Office 365, Serving Up Scale and Support

Rackspace Offers Partners Ability to Resell Azure, Office 365, Serving Up Scale and Support

With a recent report suggesting Microsoft Azure could overtake Amazon Web Services (AWS) as the most popular cloud by 2019, news out of Rackspace this week that it will offer companies in its partner network the ability to resell Azure and Office 365 seems to come just in time.

The timing also plays well ahead of the annual Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference, which is expected to bring around 15,000 Microsoft partners to Toronto next week.

Rackspace started offering Office 365 almost exactly one year ago as an extension to its existing Hosted Exchange and email business.

READ MORE: Rackspace Launches Fanatical Support for Microsoft Azure

Kirk Averett, senior director of product at Rackspace, says his team is focused on building up the Office 365 business, which as of today is adding thousands of users every month making it “one of the larger Office 365 providers for Microsoft around the world.”

“This Office 365 business now adds about the same number of new users per month as our very mature and long-running Hosted Exchange business, which took 8 years to build to this point,” he says.

The new partner offering will certainly help with the success of its Office 365, and Azure, business. The offering, initially available to partners in the US and the UK, includes Rackspace’s 24x7x365 Fanatical Support, help with sales and marketing techniques, and free tools from BitTitan. The support also includes Microsoft premiere support escalations, which is typically a cost-prohibitive feature for smaller sized businesses.

“I feel like there’s a general mood in the customer marketplace that Office 365 is the de facto replacement or upgrade for your existing Exchange that you’re probably running at your own office location,” Averett says. “It’s really fascinating to watch that shift from ‘I don’t trust the cloud’ to ‘I’m willing to put all of my email and all of my file storage up with Microsoft’ I think that bodes well for continued strong growth with Office 365 for years to come.”

Working with channel partners has been part of Rackspace’s DNA for some time; in fact, a little over half of mailboxes Rackspace hosts itself (Rackspace hosts four million mailboxes total) “are actually sold through resellers, so we know that these partners are really powerful in connecting with the customer and solving customer problems and preventing customer problems,” Averett says.

Chris Rallo, director of channel sales at Rackspace, says the reseller offering is open to traditional VARs, born in the cloud VARs, ISVs, and others, but it is focused on a particular type of partner it hopes to meet at WPC 2016.

“The partners that we’re focused on are either building a SaaS application or developing an application. Really the true value is not only giving the infrastructure or licenses from Office 365 through Rackspace CSP but also providing that Fanatical Support directly to the reseller partner,” Rallo says.

“As a reseller continues to build applications for their end customer we’re providing that Fanatical Support on the infrastructure where they don’t have to worry about that,” he says. “It really speaks to our core differentiator in the market so for an ISV the thing that they need to work on or focus on the most is the application and not necessarily about the infrastructure.”

Averett and Rallo agree that Fanatical Support is a key differentiator of this offering compared to other reseller offerings for Office 365 or Azure.

“The fact of the matter is somebody who’s getting into Azure for the first or second time or somebody who is trying to transition an old email server to Office 365; you know we mention Fanatical Support almost casually but there are hundreds of important questions that people have to work through whether it’s what they’re doing or planning into this new world,” Averett says.

Next week at WPC will allow Rackspace to gather partner feedback that it will incorporate into the roadmap of the program. Rackspace’s new VP of channel sales Blake Wetzel, former VP of CenturyLink Channel Alliance, will be in attendance speaking to partners as well after just four weeks on the job.

“There’s every opportunity for them to influence path of the program,” Rallo says. “It’s still early days of this CSP world and we want to work together to build something great for them.”

Source: TheWHIR

6 'data' buzzwords you need to understand

6 'data' buzzwords you need to understand

Take one major trend spanning the business and technology worlds, add countless vendors and consultants hoping to cash in, and what do you get? A whole lot of buzzwords with unclear definitions.

In the world of big data, the surrounding hype has spawned a brand-new lingo. Need a little clarity? Read on for a glossary of sorts highlighting some of the main data types you should understand.

1. Fast data

The shining star in this constellation of terms is “fast data,” which is popping up with increasing frequency. It refers to “data whose utility is going to decline over time,” said Tony Baer, a principal analyst at Ovum who says he coined the term back in 2012.

It’s things like Twitter feeds and streaming data that need to be captured and analyzed in real time, enabling immediate decisions and responses. A capital markets trading firm may rely on it for conducting algorithmic or high-frequency trades.

Interoute Named As A Leader In Gartner Magic Quadrant For Managed Hybrid Cloud Hosting, Europe

Interoute Named As A Leader In Gartner Magic Quadrant For Managed Hybrid Cloud Hosting, Europe

Interoute has announced that it has been positioned as a Leader in Gartner’s Managed Hybrid Cloud Hosting Magic Quadrant, Europe, released June 28, 2016. This Gartner Magic Quadrant is an annual analysis of hybrid cloud managed hosting companies and the quality of their service offerings.

Interoute has integrated 16 cloud Virtual Data Centre (VDC) zones directly into its 70,000km private fibre network to form a global cloud services platform that has both private and public network capability. Over the last year Interoute has expanded its cloud platform in Europe and added a new zone in Istanbul. It has also extending its global reach in Asia, with a new VDC zone in Singapore.

Matthew Finnie, Interoute CTO, commented on the achievement: “We are extremely proud to again be named as a Leader in the Magic Quadrant for Managed Hybrid Cloud Hosting for Europe. We believe this confirms our global cloud platform is one of the best for meeting the ICT challenges of national and international enterprises doing business in Europe. As organisations around the world look to digitally transform their businesses, Interoute’s networked cloud platform integrates both their legacy and digital IT to accelerate this evolution. Bringing the critical applications of business and their users closer, at a national, pan European and global scale.”

The Gartner report co-authored by analysts Tiny Haynes, Gianluca Tramacere and Gregor Petri said, “Infrastructure hosting services are evolving, both to include hyperscale cloud providers and within providers’ own data centers in Europe to meet demands of data sovereignty and more agile computing… Managed hybrid cloud hosting represents the continuing evolution of the traditional and cloud enabled managed hosting market, as the influences of cloud IaaS continue to alter buyer behaviours and expectations.”

Gartner classifies ‘Leaders’ as companies that “have proved they have staying power in this market, can frequently innovate on their existing products and can be relied on for enterprise-class needs. They have proved their technical competence and ability to deliver services to a wide range of customers. They address multiple use cases with standalone or integrated solutions.”

Source: CloudStrategyMag

Take a closer look at your Spark implementation

Take a closer look at your Spark implementation

Apache Spark, the extremely popular data analytics execution engine, was initially released in 2012. It wasn’t until 2015 that Spark really saw an uptick in support, but by November 2015, Spark saw 50 percent more activity than the core Apache Hadoop project itself, with more than 750 contributors from hundreds of companies participating in its development in one form or another.

Spark is a hot new commodity for a reason. Its performance, general-purpose applicability, and programming flexibility combine to make it a versatile execution engine. Yet that variety also leads to varying levels of support for the product and different ways solutions are delivered.

While evaluating analytic software products that support Spark, customers should look closely under the hood and examine four key facets of how the support for Spark is implemented:

  • How Spark is utilized inside the platform
  • What you get in a packaged product that includes Spark
  • How Spark is exposed to you and your team
  • How you perform analytics with the different Spark libraries

Spark can be used as a developer tool via its APIs, or it can be used by BI tools via its SQL interface. Or Spark can be embedded in an application, providing access to business users without requiring programming skills and without limiting Spark’s utility through a SQL interface. I examine each of these options below and explain why all Spark support is not the same.