Report: US No Longer Lowest-Risk Country for Data Centers

Report: US No Longer Lowest-Risk Country for Data Centers

datacenterknowledgelogoBrought to you by Data Center Knowledge

There are more data centers in the US than anywhere else, and until at least three years ago, building a data center in the US was less risky than building one in any other country. According to recent risk analysis of global data center locations by a real estate services firm, however, that’s no longer the case.

US ranks third in electricity costs, fifth in ease of doing business, 15th in available network bandwidth, and 36th in corporate tax environment. These and six other characteristics add up to US being the 10th least risky data center location today, according to the firm.

The same report, Cushman & Wakefield’s Data Centre Risk Index, put the country at the top of the list just three years ago. Since 2013, US has been overtaken by four Nordic countries, as well as Switzerland, UK, Canada, Singapore, and South Korea.

The index ranks countries based on 10 factors that have a bearing on the level of risk for building and operating data centers. Different factors affect a country’s overall ranking to different degrees. GDP per capita, for example, doesn’t have nearly the weight of the likelihood of natural disasters, and water availability isn’t as strong a factor as political stability, or energy security.

Considering all 10, Iceland is the safest data center location bet you can make, followed by Norway, Switzerland, Finland, and Sweden, filling out the top-five in that order. Canada ranks sixth, followed by Singapore, South Korea, and the UK.

The report looks at 37 countries Cushman considers either major or emerging data center markets. It’s based on a survey of thousands of data center operators around the world.

So, what is it about Iceland that makes it such a safe haven for data centers? According to the report, the country ranks high in availability of renewable energy and water, low risk of natural disasters, political stability, low energy costs, and corporate taxes. It’s also better than many others in terms of connectivity, ease of doing business, and GDP per capita. Iceland ranked 22nd in energy security, its lowest ranking among all categories.

Risk, of course, isn’t the only thing driving data center location decisions. It is one of several variables itself, the other variables being things like proximity to end users and the ability to improve customer experience. While there are data centers in Iceland, there are relatively few of them.

Proximity to users remains a huge consideration, but corporations are also increasingly concerned about political stability, risk of natural disasters, and energy security when weighing data center locations. All three have surpassed traditional considerations like cost and connectivity in priority, according to the report. Collectively, these three factors now account for one-third of the overall decision, “implying a level of emotional sentiment throughout the survey following a number of major incidents over the past few years.”

The latest example of such an “incident” happened just recently, months after the survey was conducted. It’s unclear whether the UK’s current ranking on the index (it’s in the ninth place) would be different had the report taken into account the country’s vote last month to exit the European Union.

In a statement, Cushman’s head of London markets, Digby Flower, said real estate occupiers in London with strategic plans “will move slowly,” following the Brexit referendum, referring to the real estate market in general. There are signs, however, that demand for data centers as a subcategory of the real estate sector is less affected by Brexit than the category as a whole.

Download the full report here

Source: TheWHIR

Today's Boardroom Challenges are Service Provider Opportunities at HostingCon

Today's Boardroom Challenges are Service Provider Opportunities at HostingCon

The challenges and opportunities that faced boardrooms and lawmakers in the past year in the world of hosting and cloud are covered in the Issues and Trends track at HostingCon Global 2016 New Orleans. These include headline grabbers like state surveillance and access to customer data, and developing issues like the slow adoption of DNSSEC and IPv6

Phil Koblence, co-founder and COO of New York Internet, will make the case for using the specific requirements of enterprise customers to determine the right hybrid mix for them.

The issues and trends track includes a presentation of exclusive industry research by HostingCon, and the latest spending trends from 451 Research analyst and former WHIR editor Liam Eagle.

“Cloud business strategy” could mean many things, so James Lippie of Clarity Channel Advisors will help service providers identify what it really does, and should, mean to them. Kyle York of Dyn will explain how to leverage internet performance management to maintain control of business application delivery.

A panel featuring prominent women in the hosting industry, moderated by Virtuozzo Director of Channel Marketing Elisabeth Kurek, will discuss how to leverage regional groups supporting women in technology to recruit female talent and make organizational diversity a strength.

There are also sessions in the track covering opportunities in new storage technology, the advantages of culture over strategy, and new approaches to mitigating the limitations of virtual infrastructure, along with issues and trends speed roundtables.

The industry-leading, vendor-neutral conference and trade show is only a less than two weeks away, so register now so you don’t miss out!

Source: TheWHIR

With big data, CEOs find garbage in is still garbage out

With big data, CEOs find garbage in is still garbage out

Another day, another CEO survey. This one, from KPMG, finds that CEOs don’t trust their analytics, the way their team is using or implementing them, or even the data used to make decisions in the first place. In fact, only 31 percent of respondents see their organizations as leaders in the use of data and analytics.

You have to ask: What’s the CEO’s culpability in all that?

Despite the evidence that math makes better decisions than gut calls, many companies haven’t gotten there yet. The approach many are taking is still the wrong one. Deploying big data infrastructure with no plan and no use cases will go the way any IT project with no plan or destination in mind goes.

What’s funny about KPMG’s survey is that despite the lack of trust in both the analytics and the data, a set of very modern concerns emerge: Customer loyalty, understanding millennials, projecting relevance of current products/services, and understanding customer needs/expectations. You know what you need to do to achieve those things? Fix how you collect data and perform analytics. You know who should really push for that and view themselves as leading that charge? The CEO of any decent company (aided and abetted by a CIO, CDO, CTO, and so on).

WHIR Events Takes on Toronto During WPC 2016

WHIR Events Takes on Toronto During WPC 2016

WHIR Events made a special stop in our hometown of Toronto last night for a jam-packed event at C’est What. The city has been host to cloud providers all week with the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) running at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, so our event not only attracted a local crowd, but also many friends from as far as Ireland and Luxembourg.

Thanks to our sponsors IBM Softlayer, Lenovo, ThinkOn, Servermania, and Structure Research, we had a great evening of networking complete with complimentary hors d’oeuvres and an impressive selection of local craft brews (and some cocktails).

Thanks to our sponsors some of our lucky attendees walked away with some awesome prizes:

  • Dan White of Tax Audit Solutions won a Yoga tablet from Lenovo
  • Leslie Boultbee of OpenSRS (formerly the WHIR) won a Roku player from IBM SoftLayer
  • Sascha Born of Join Experience won a $200 Sunglass Hut gift certificate from ThinkOn
  • Myron Bonk from Insight won Beats headphones from ServerMania

Thanks to everyone who came out last night! We’ll see you in New Orleans later this month, July 26, 2016 for our event at HostingCon, which starts at 7:30 p.m. Get your RSVP in now if you’re planning on coming because this event is our biggest of the year!

Source: TheWHIR

TierPoint Now Offering Managed Microsoft Azure Services Nationally

TierPoint Now Offering Managed Microsoft Azure Services Nationally

TierPoint has announced the national expansion of managed Microsoft Azure services. The expansion builds on TierPoint’s acquisition earlier this year of Cosentry, which had previously rolled out these services.

This development enables TierPoint managed services on Microsoft’s Azure public cloud, including design, implementation, migration, and optimization. TierPoint also offers managed Office 365 services nationally, including initial environment assessment and performance recommendations, consulting and customization, hybrid environment design and synchronization of Office 365 with on premise Exchange.

“We’re seeing a steady increase in the growth of hybrid cloud solutions,” said Shea Long, senior vice president of products, TierPoint. “By offering managed services on Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform, we provide customers with greater flexibility in addressing their IT infrastructure needs. Our consultative approach, from solution design to migration, can help customers reduce time to market and minimize downtime risk through patching, monitoring, anti-virus, proactive notification, and more.”

Lansing Trade Group is a TierPoint client that has successfully migrated to a hybrid cloud solution, incorporating Microsoft Azure. Prior to the migration, Lansing faced a number of challenges including aging IT infrastructure, the need to auto-scale servers based on demand and only pay for what they used, and a need to shift traditional infrastructure tasks to a collaborative cloud provider.

 “We saw an opportunity to move to a more efficient cloud solution leveraging the Azure platform and TierPoint’s managed services,” said Jason Sears, director of IT, Lansing. 

Source: CloudStrategyMag

IndependenceIT Announces General Availability Of Adaptive Cloud Management Platform

IndependenceIT Announces General Availability Of Adaptive Cloud Management Platform

IndependenceIT has announced general availability of its adaptive Cloud Management Platform (CMP+) at the 2016 Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) in Toronto, Canada.

IndependenceIT’s next-generation software platform, CMP+, allows IT administrators to create and automate Software Defined Data Centers (SDDCs), as well as public, private, or hybrid cloud-based servers, applications, and workloads. The solution allows for greater choice in how these services are orchestrated and deployed. CMP+ permits administrators to provision and manage not only servers, but meaningful workloads where performance, availability, and accessibility can be tuned through administrative policies. Designed for both enterprises and IT service providers, the platform provides the highest level of automation and pre-set workflows to improve support, reduce administrative management, and lower costs.

In addition to enhanced automation and workflows, CMP+ provides a unified view of all workloads that enables organizations to reallocate and streamline resources for improved operational margins. The platform is an evolution of IndependenceIT’s innovative software suite that automates many manual and resource-intensive activities while enabling IT administrators to quickly create, easily manage, and adapt to changing conditions, such as fast scaling of workload capacity up or down.

In conjunction with the release of CMP+, the company is enhancing its partner program to support channel adoption and delivery. With respect to licensing, the enhanced program allows partners to self-deploy an unlimited number of SDDCs on any combination of public, private or hybrid cloud platforms for a minimum licensing fee of $100 per month per SDDC. The price includes the licensing or management of 15 end users or up to 50 virtual machines. The enhanced pricing model allows partners to take advantage of the innovative capabilities and rapidly deploying SDDCs and workloads on any platform with greater flexibility and easier management than previously possible.

According to a recent report by International Data Corporation (IDC)(1), “IndependenceIT’s Cloud Workspace Suite 5.0 – Enabling Choice in Public Cloud Virtual Client Computing Deployments,” March 28, 2016, “One compelling set of CMP+ features serve to even the playing field between the large IaaS suppliers and the companies that engage their services for VCC deployments. Because the environments, architectures, management tools, and business models are highly heterogeneous, migration is difficult and lock-in becomes a dangerous proposition. With the IndependenceIT solution the tasks to initially set up a Virtual Client Computing deployment on a given cloud or migrate an existing deployment to another provider are simplified and automated. Likewise, such tasks can be completed in minutes as opposed to days, mitigating the risks associated with lock-in.”

“With CMP+ we have elevated the ability to provision, manage, automate, support and adapt workloads to meet demanding business requirements,” said Seth Bostock, CEO, IndependenceIT. “Our platform brings new levels of efficiency to IT, while expanding choice and capitalizing on the value of existing investments. We welcome those interested in leveraging the technology for their business or IT services organization to visit with us at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference to experience the technology firsthand.”

Source: CloudStrategyMag

Inquidia Consulting Releases Pentaho Data Integration Component

Inquidia Consulting Releases Pentaho Data Integration Component

Inquidia Consulting has announced the release of a new software component that allows developers of big data architectures to easily integrate new data sources into Snowflake’s cloud-native data warehouse and analytic engine. Snowflake Computing’s Elastic Data Warehouse is simple and easy to deploy for incredibly fast, scalable, and highly concurrent analytic applications.

The component, designed for users of Pentaho Data Integration, can be plugged into new or existing Pentaho Data Integration deployments. The plugin includes both a Snowflake warehouse manager and a Snowflake bulk loader component. The warehouse manager can create, drop, resume, suspend, and resize warehouses during processing. The Snowflake bulk loader takes advantage of Snowflake’s parallelism to load structured CSV type data and unstructured JSON data into Snowflake faster than previously possible.

“At Inquidia, we have always focused on delivering resilient, sustainable analytic environments for our customers,” said Chris Deptula, senior architect for the Inquidia Labs project. “Inquidia sees Snowflake’s unparalleled data warehouse and analytic database technology at the forefront of the cloud analytics revolution. Our customers want simpler, streamlined and scalable operation of their Big Data, and Inquidia’s plugin for Pentaho in Snowflake’s platform does just that.”

The new component was built from the ground up, taking advantage of Snowflake’s native processing of diverse, structured and semi-structured data, massive parallelism, instant scalability, non-disruptive data loading, support for metadata injection, and more. The component also adds Snowflake as a native connection type in Pentaho.

“Integration of varied data sources into a comprehensive analytics view is the lifeblood of today’s analytics teams,” said Walter Aldana, Snowflake Computing’s alliance executive. “Inquidia and Snowflake share the same goal of providing simple, powerful, dynamic, and cost-effective data warehouse and analytics infrastructures to data consumers everywhere. Inquidia’s plugin for Pentaho extends the ease-of-use of the Snowflake Computing’s Elastic Data Warehouse platform to companies that want to make data available to those who need it most,”

Customers will be able to install the plugin for Snowflake operation, and take advantage of the breadth of Pentaho’s world-class data integration platform. Through Pentaho Data Integration (PDI), developers and analysts will be able to prepare and blend data to drive actionable insights. Pentaho’s visual tools eliminate coding and complexity, allowing simplified data blending data blending at the fingertips of business and IT users.

“Pentaho is a leading data integration and business analytics company that helps organizations harness value from all of their data, no matter how complex the environment,” said Chuck Yarbrough, senior director of Solutions Marketing at Pentaho, a Hitachi Group Company. “We recognize the value of an extensible architecture to accomplish this and are pleased that Inquidia’s development of the Snowflake plugin extends the Pentaho platform, helping to deliver data to high-impact analytics environments everywhere.”

The plugin is currently available on GitHub, and is expected to be available in the Pentaho Marketplace in the coming weeks.

Source: CloudStrategyMag

Microsoft's Brad Smith on Building a Cloud for Good, and How LinkedIn is Part of the Plan

Microsoft's Brad Smith on Building a Cloud for Good, and How LinkedIn is Part of the Plan

TORONTO — Microsoft has broken its silence on its acquisition of LinkedIn. Kind of.

During the keynote on the final day of Microsoft’s Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC), Microsoft president and chief legal officer Brad Smith said that one of the reasons it is excited about the LinkedIn acquisition is that it will help people advance their education and connect with their next jobs, a particularly important tool as more and more jobs are replaced with automation.

“There’s so much that technology can do,” Smith said. “We need to do more than advance the cloud; we need to build the cloud for good.”

RELATED: Facebook Hits Like Button on Office 365, and Other Microsoft Cloud News from WPC 2016

So what does he mean by building the cloud for good? Smith outlined several examples of how Microsoft cloud is used to promote good around the world. In one example, Azure data analytics and machine learning is used in Tacoma, Wash. high schools to identify at risk students to lower dropout rates.

According to Smith, the cloud for good will need to be three things: trusted, responsible, and inclusive.

Trusted cloud

Trusted cloud is something that Microsoft has been emphasizing throughout the conference, not just in terms of security but also in terms of privacy and transparency. The company has been vocal in its fight for user privacy, launching four lawsuits against the U.S. government. In April, Microsoft sued the Department of Justice

Smith enforced the idea of needing to stand up for transparency; “We need an internet that respects people’s rights, we need an internet that is governed by good law,” he said.

“We need to practice what we preach. We have to a great job of respecting people’s privacy,” he said.

Responsible cloud

In Microsoft’s view a responsible cloud is an earth-friendly one.

“We need to think about the environment,” Smith said. “We’re consuming more electricity than Vermont.”

READ MORE: Here’s How Much Energy All US Data Centers Consume

Smith said that Microsoft is committed to transparency so people will know how much it is consuming in terms of electricity. He said the company has promised to use more renewable energy each year. In two years, Microsoft will surpass 50 percent renewable energy, up from 44 percent today.

Inclusive cloud

One of the defining issues of our time, according to Smith, is what the future of the workforce will look like as more jobs are replaced with technology.

“What jobs will disappear?” Smith said. “Where are the new jobs going to come from? That’s what the world is asking.”

Smith said there is a need to make sure that every business can grow and create new jobs. Microsoft is doing his part, he said, by partnerships that are bringing coding and computer science to schools.

“We know that when we give young people these opportunities they take advantage of them,” he said.

“Diversity is strength,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons we’re excited about LinkedIn.”

Source: TheWHIR

DigitalOcean Launches Block Storage in Response to Developer Demand

DigitalOcean Launches Block Storage in Response to Developer Demand

DigitalOcean launched a storage service to its portfolio on Wednesday to add flexibility for developers building and scaling large applications. The new Block Storage service allows developers to add highly available SSD disk space to “Droplet” compute environments and scale it independently, DigitalOcean said in the announcement.

Block Storage will cost $0.10/GB per month on a provisioned capacity basis, and will store replicated data on different racks to prevent data loss. Volumes from 1GB to 16TB can be stored, moved to and from Droplets over isolated networks, and encrypted at rest.

READ MORE: DigitalOcean Names Former VMware, Akamai Engineering Lead CTO

“We set out on a mission to build a simple and robust cloud computing platform so that engineering teams can spend less time configuring and automating their infrastructure and more time focused on software development,” Ben Uretsky, co-founder and CEO, DigitalOcean said. “By adding a highly performant Block Storage offering to our platform, developers can easily deploy and manage their SaaS applications and businesses as they scale. This is one step closer to building the next generation platform.”

The launch is a response to customer requests for a storage solution from the company, and was tested by more than 15,000 beta users. It is available now in DigitalOcean’s NYC1 and SFO2 regions, and will launch in Europe “in the coming weeks.”

DigitalOcean says it is up to 700,000 registered customers with 18 million Droplets, having experienced continued growth since the company was declared the second largest cloud computing platform by customer facing websites and apps a year ago by Netcraft.

Summer 2016 has been packed with DigitalOcean announcements, including the opening of a data center in Bangalore, India, and naming former Akamai and VMware VP Julia Austin chief technology officer in June.

Source: TheWHIR

Consolidation in the Service Provider Industry: What Does it Mean to Your Business?

Consolidation in the Service Provider Industry: What Does it Mean to Your Business?

The data from the MSPmentor 501 indicates a growing disparity between many managed service providers. While the average MSP in the 501 grew 24% in 2015, seven percent of the MSPs lost revenue on a year over year basis. The strong are getting stronger and the weak are getting weaker.

The results from the first annual State of the Cloud Survey to be presented at HostingCon in July, sponsored by Structure Research and Cheval Capital showed a similar pattern. Nearly 70 percent of respondents classified themselves as either an MSP, VAR, hosting or cloud provider. Of these, nearly 57 percent saw an increase in business over the last year, but 25 percent saw at least some decrease in business.

This dynamic generally leads to market consolidation, which is something we have seen on the increase over the last 12 months in the service provider space and has certainly been going on for years in the hosting space.

If you have read some of my blogs in the past, you know I have referenced market consolidation in other industries as a predictor of what is to come for service providers. For example, if I asked you to buy a hammer, most people would immediately think to go to Home Depot or Lowes. If I asked you to buy a book, Amazon comes to mind and if I asked you to gather up some office products, Staples or Office Depot jumps into your head. But, 30 years ago, if you had asked our parents the same questions, the answers would have been the local hardware store, the corner bookstore and the stationary store on main street.

Market evolution and consolidation is inevitable, if you don’t believe me, please try and find a movie to rent from Blockbuster. However, market consolidation doesn’t have to be catastrophic, if you’re strategic and plan accordingly.

There are at least three different paths to evaluate when contemplating the future success of your service provider business. All of these are strategies you can learn more about HostingCon, the global event for the cloud and service provider ecosystem:

Companies like Mindshift and All Covered have been acquiring quality MSPs via a seemingly perpetual “roll up strategy” for several years and it seems to be paying off. Both organizations are highly ranked on the MSPmentor 501 with strong growth numbers and both are considered Tier 2 TSPs according to the Clarity TSP Index (which is very good based on their size).

However, they’re not the only ones making deals. Over the last 12-24 months we have seen other players, in some cases small and mid-sized MSPs acquiring other MSPs, as they plan for a future, where bigger could mean better.

If traditional and new acquirers are ramping up their deal making efforts, that means more companies are getting acquired. The companies being acquired generally fit two different profiles, providers who are just looking for the final payday so they can move on and those who want to team up with a larger player and be part of a bigger growth story. Both paths have their merits and it really comes down to ownership’s preference.

Traditionally, service providers have been horizontally focused. It’s very rare the find an MSP that works exclusively within a single vertical market. According to the MSPmentor 501 data most providers target a handful of vertical markets and 35% of MSPs are open to serving any and all vertical markets. The horizontal approach works fine in a fragmented marketplace, like the MSP industry has been since its inception. But as consolidation accelerates, it’s important to be either a larger provider with scale or to be focused on a niche, where the “big boys” can’t provide the same expertise and value.

All three strategies have their advantages and I am not advocating for either one of them, but I do feel strongly you can’t get caught in the middle without a plan. So, gather up your management team and talk through which path makes the most sense for your organization.

This topic and many more will be discussed at HostingCon in New Orleans next month. Join me on Tuesday July 26th at 2:30 to learn more about crafting a successful cloud strategy.

Source: TheWHIR