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Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Unpanel Questions from Armada Group Enterprise Cloud Computing Exec Panel

These jars of marshmallows were out on tables. This is more than about delaying gratification; it's probably a good way to catch hand-to-mouth diseases...

Photo de la conférence First du 24 mars 2011 organisée par Rezonance à la FER Genève sur le thème du Cloud Computing.

 

Photo réalisée par Xavier Pfister

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Jeff Keltner gave Google's talk and here he talked about how enterprise computing has been, well, a failed enterprise biz model.

 

Instead of spending 80% on core business practices and products, which would different one's company and best position it, companies' IT is stuck spending approx. 80% of their IT budget on the essential, basic needs (providing the core "context") instead of the other way around.

Datenschutz und Informationssicherheit im Cloud Computing – worauf kann der Anwender vertrauen? –

Paneldiskussion

Moderation: Christoph Witte, Wittcomm. Agentur für IT, Publishing, Kommunikation

Teilnehmer:

Michael Hange, Präsident, Bundesamt für Sicherheit in der Informationstechnik, Bonn

Dr. Hans-Joachim Popp, Chief Information Officer, Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e. V. (DLR),

Köln-Porz, CIO-Circle

Peter Schaar, Bundesbeauftragter für den Datenschutz und Informationsfreiheit, Bonn

Carlo Wolf, Vice President Europe und Geschäftsführer Deutschland, Cisco Systems GmbH, Hallbergmoos

Photo de la conférence First du 24 mars 2011 organisée par Rezonance à la FER Genève sur le thème du Cloud Computing.

 

Photo réalisée par Xavier Pfister

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

A recent survey conducted by the Aberdeen Group uncovered the IT disaster recovery trends of a range of companies using cloud computing for data storage, backup and recovery. Comparing cloud users and non-cloud users, they found that mid-sized companies ($50 million to $1 billion of yearly revenue) were the largest group to adopt the cloud for data storage, accounting for 48 percent of the cloud users surveyed. Small companies (under $50 million of yearly revenue) were next at 38 percent and large companies (above $1 billion of yearly revenue) came in last at only 26 percent.

 

Read more about 2011 Cloud & IT Disaster Recovery Statistics: resource.onlinetech.com/2011-cloud-it-disaster-recovery-s...

Nicholas Carr at IDC Directions 2009 in San Jose, talking about the cloud computing evolution.

 

www.nicholasgcarr.com/bigswitch/

ProfitBricks at Cloud-Connect #ccevent

Nice display at the IBM Cloud Computing booth

Panel:

From Databases to Dataspaces

 

Panelists:

Tasso Argyros, Aster Data Systems

Jeff Hammerbacher, Cloudera

Doug Judd, Zvents

Avinash Lakshman, Facebook

Geir Magnusson, Jr., Gilt Groupe

Took this photo when I had my SD Card replaced at PC World

 

Apologies to the guy who was in charge there, as I think I may have made him spend £450 for the camera (Panasonic DMC-G3). Hope you get a buyer for your LX3 soon. :-)

Jeff were focusing on enterprise computing but might have been talking about US failed economic policy with this slide, "On average $8 out of $10 is spent on "dead money" -- not contributing to business change and growth.

 

SADA Systems provides a "holistic" approach and utilizes Google Apps and others depending on client needs.

Luis Gervaso, CTO de Stackops

From the business perspective, there are numerous reasons to use cloud computing, some of the most common being payment for only what you use (and not wasting resources) and easy/fast deployments to end-users.

 

Thanks to :http://wikibon.org/blog/cloud-computing/

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Watch the skies. Apple cloud vs Microsoft cloud

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Eurocloud · SIMO · 05/10/2011

 

www.eurocloudspain.org/area-de-prensa/videos/

 

Participantes:

- Emilio Aced Félez, Subdirector General de Registro de Ficheros y Consultoría Agencia de Protección de Datos de la Comunidad de Madrid

- Tiscar Lara, Vicedecana de cultura digital de la EOI

- Mara Canela, Directora de Comunicación Centro Cultural Dos de Mayo

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

NetIQ BrainShare keynote - product demo still. Watch the vid at: youtu.be/PneBgYWB058

At VMworld 2014 in San Francisco, we asked Dennis Duckert how he would explain the private cloud to his mom.

 

Check out his response, and those of his fellow conference attendees in the video at:

 

juni.pr/mom

 

#VMworld

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

Iomega Virtualization Solutions

Regardless of the size of your business, you require an IT infrastructure that is continuously available. You rely on your network servers to share your business-critical files, applications, and data, as well as to host your email and Web environments. Any problem with server hardware or a critical application means unplanned downtime and a loss of productivity—costing you time and money.

 

“Five nines” availability (99.999% uptime) indicates a maximum annual downtime of just 5 minutes and 35 seconds. Large companies spend hundreds of thousands of dollars—even millions—on systems that ensure this kind of availability. Achieving high availability (HA) requires multiple redundant servers, which are configured in such a way that a secondary server takes over all functionality in the event that the primary server fails.

 

While small businesses face many of the same challenges as larger businesses, the cost of HA is prohibitive. As a result, most small- and medium-sized businesses simply “make do” with what they have, and deal reactively with outages when they occur— putting their network assets at risk for a catastrophic failure.

 

INCREASING AVAILABILITY FOR SMBS

 

Iomega® and VMware® have partnered to develop the ideal solution to this quandary, making it easy and affordable for small- and medium-sized businesses to build and manage a highly available* IT environment. Unlike a traditional HA infrastructure, which requires a duplicate of each server in the environment and enterprise-grade routers and switches to effectively manage all network traffic, Iomega and VMware’s solution, called Unstoppable ComputingTM, provides the same type of functionality for a small business environment, using as few as two servers. With Unstoppable Computing, a small business can:

 

Have a highly available infrastructure, for increased server and application uptime

Employ leading virtualization technology, which enables your entire network infrastructure to be run on one physical server

Protect its business-critical data with proven storage technology

Benefit from automatic failover, for a “no touch” solution to get itself back up and running

UNSTOPPABLE COMPUTING

 

Unstoppable Computing provides the ideal solution for small- and medium-sized businesses to ensure business continuity and increased availability of their business-critical infrastructure, at an affordable price. Combining their best-of-breed solutions for small- and medium-sized businesses, VMware and Iomega can help small businesses minimize their downtime and recover quickly from unplanned outages. Comprised of two physical servers, virtualization software, and a network storage device, Unstoppable Computing completely automates network failover in the event of an outage.

Photograph from Business Technology Summit 2009 held in Bangalore and Mumbai, India, November 3-6 2009, produced by Saltmarch Media. Photograph ©Copyright Saltmarch Media. Non-commercial use permitted with attribution and linkback to this page on Saltmarch's Flickr photostream. All other rights reserved.

Foto: EuroCloud/photoetage | henning granitza

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