Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Host your Web Site in the Cloud & The Solution Selling Fieldbook

Two GREAT books to add to your reading lists!








Thursday, December 10, 2009

Symantec launches on Amazon Web Services

This is an impressive announcement by two significant companies providing and protecting the future of Utility computing and IT as a platform.

Amazon Web Services (AWS) users can now use Symantec’s Endpoint Protection and Veritas Storage Foundation™ Basic to help protect and manage their instances running Microsoft Windows Server® on the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2).

Amazon Web Services (AWS) delivers a set of services that together form a reliable, scalable, and inexpensive computing platform 'in the cloud'. These pay-as-you-use cloud computing services include Amazon S3, Amazon EC2, Amazon SimpleDB, Amazon SQS, Amazon FPS, and others .

For Details - Click Here

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Social Networking and advertising - You can make money from this?

I was reading an older article about how "Some Indie Facebook Developers Pulling In Over $700,000 A Month" and it referenced the source as SocialMedia.

Clicking over to their website and reading about how they "turn standard ad units into social experiences that resonate with friends, influencers, and community members" is impressive.

The ability to target a consumer based on their likes, hobbies, associates and multitudes of other miscellaneous facts that they may publish about themselves begs the question "Are we creating our own experiences?"

If what we are surrounded with is created from our own visions of what we like how do we experience life beyond what we know we like?

An interesting conundrum.

-Todd

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Did Microsoft Just Kill the Cloud?

I've been reading all the news about the sidekick and it's lost data and how it's somehow "The Clouds Fault" Such nonsense. Reading through the article posted here by the folks at The Motley Fool points to more "Cloud FUD". Or is it the users fault? Blindly trusting their data to a dark and murky "Cloud"? Or is it the fault of the owner of the server that crashed? It depends. But it's NOT "The Clouds" fault. This vague notion that things we don't understand must be "in the cloud" is rampant these days. Yet, at the end of the day, it is really "A Utility" and needs to be thought of as such. The biggest difference between your power or water as a utility is that with "The Cloud" you have many providers to choose from depending on the type of "Power" or "Water" you need and the level of service you require.

Utility providers are fallible. How many times have you lost a power transformer in your neighborhood? Or a water main line burst somewhere in the city?

Cloud Computing/Utility Computing - It is up to the owner of the server to make the service they provide to their customer as Highly Available as possible or at least to the level of the Service Level Agreement (SLA) they present to their customers. It's not some magical "Cloud" floating somewhere beyond physical reach. It is physical servers and storage and switches and routers owned and operated my your third party of choice depending on the application you wish to use.

Don't blindly put your faith in any one provider without fully understanding your risks. It's NOT "The Clouds Fault". It is a persons fault for not designing and implementing a highly available architecture that included data replication and backup services with full recovery scenarios documented and properly tested.

How often do you test YOUR System and Data recovery process?

-Todd

Friday, October 9, 2009

Friday, October 2, 2009

With RIO winning the bid for the 2016 Olympics

What does this mean to the South American economy? Between now and 2016, many things can happen. Yet, there will also be a new spot light placed on Rio in the coming years...

Thursday, August 20, 2009

The Cloud Computing Tsunami Gartner Predictions

The Cloud Computing Tsunami Gartner Predictions
- Efficiency and Cost Control Will Transform the IT Industry.

It's amazing that it has taken this long for "Utility Computing" to gain the hold that it has. Who builds and operates their own generator so that the lights come on at the flick of a switch? I know of a few folks in the hills of Hawaii who still capture rain water in huge black plastic tubs and use gravity feeds plumbed into their homes for their water, but it's so much easier to pay a small monthly fee to my water district and turn on my tap when I want a glass of water and it is the way computing infrastructure will be made available to us. Turn it on when you need it at the flick of a switch.

Take a look at these key predictions and you may agree:
- Key Gartner predictions for the data center for the next 5 years:

-Todd

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Amazon CloudFront High Performance Content Delivery Network

Amazon CloudFront delivers your web content to your audience by routing them to the closest Point of Presence (POP) - for details, click here =>> http://aws.amazon.com/cloudfront/


View Amazon CloudFront in a larger map