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Clash of the clouds | The Economist 11/02/2009

Posted by thaadsma in Linux, broadband, ibm, infrastructure, managed services, microsoft, security, web, web services.
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Cloud computing generates a lot of heated discussion, and through all the technical arguments, issues of security and trust,  and battles over control, one topic keeps getting overlooked: cost

Reducing business cost is what’s really driving us toward cloud computing.  

We will all eventually adopt cloud computing, simply because the current model of scaling servers up and down is very expensive. IT departments try to buy as many servers as they think they’ll need for computing power during estimated peak capacity. But we don’t need that capacity most of the time– so lots of servers sit idle.

Cloud computing can reduce costs, becauses it provides more capacity during the peak times, so we simply pay for it on-demand. When the peaks are over and less capacity is needed, the cost then goes down. From a business perspective, this allows a company to move much of its infrastructure costs from being a capital expenditure (CAPEX) to an operating expenditure (OPEX).

The Economist published an excellent overview of how industry giants are reacting to this massive trend:

Clash of the Titans

“The rise of cloud computing is not just shifting Microsoft’s centre of gravity. It is changing the nature of competition within the computer industry. Technological developments have hitherto pushed computing power away from central hubs: first from mainframes to minicomputers, and then to PCs. Now a combination of ever cheaper and more powerful processors, and ever faster and more ubiquitous networks, is pushing power back to the centre in some respects, and even further away in others. The cloud’s data centres are, in effect, outsize public mainframes. At the same time, the PC is being pushed aside by a host of smaller, often wireless devices, such as smart-phones, netbooks (small laptops) and, perhaps soon, tablets (touch-screen computers the size of books).

Although Windows still runs 90% of PCs, the fading importance of the PC means that Microsoft is no longer an all-powerful monopolist. Others are also building big clouds, including Google, a giant of the internet, and Apple, renowned as a maker of hardware, with a market capitalisation that now exceeds those of both Google and IBM, its original arch-rival (see chart above).

Granted, there are hundreds if not thousands of firms offering cloud services—web-based applications living in data centres, such as music sites or social networks. But Microsoft, Google and Apple play in a different league. Each has its own global network of data centres. They intend to offer not just one or two services, but whole suites of them, with services including e-mail, address books, storage, collaboration tools and business applications. They are also vying to dominate the periphery, either by developing software for smart-phones and other small devices or by making such devices themselves.”

Read the whole thing, of course… Cloud computing: Clash of the clouds | The Economist.

Businesses move to Enterprise 2.0 tools 06/04/2009

Posted by thaadsma in Amazon, SaaS, google, ibm, microsoft, sharepoint, social web, web, web services.
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Businesses: Start Revving Your Enterprise 2.0 Engines

I ran into this piece after bookmarking it a couple of months back, while working on a SharePoint project here at i3. Nice to see SharePoint steamrolling away:

“To date, acquisitions of Web or enterprise 2.0 technologies and vendors by businesses have been modest at best. Forrester expects this trend to continue.

Specifically, Young said power vendors such as IBM, Microsoft, Oracle and SAP will grow organically. However, he allowed that nouveau wildcards such as Google and Salesforce.com could acquire Web 2.0 vendors in the SAAS (software as a service) market. That story could change three years out, when maturing vendors struggle to flourish amid the steep competition.

Coke and Pepsi. Crest and Colgate. It’s hard to unseat an entrenched incumbent in any market and Young said Microsoft’s SharePoint “will continue to steamroll the market.”

He said that while challengers will be quick to denigrate the quality of SharePoint’s wiki, blog and social networking functionality, Microsoft will still get a lot of traction with its collaboration suite in 2008. Another thing: Because so many knowledge workers already use SharePoint, it is likely smaller Web 2.0 vendors will look to partner with Microsoft.”

via Businesses: Start Revving Your Enterprise 2.0 Engines

Several Dozen of the Stupidest Things Ever Said 06/03/2009

Posted by thaadsma in development, government, healthcare, ibm, tangents.
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A wonderful list of some of the most bone-headed things that people have said over the years about technology, and especially information technology: Stupid Things to Say.

Here’s just a sample:

“I have traveled the length and breadth of this country and talked with the best people, and I can assure you that data processing is a fad that won’t last out the year.”
–The editor in charge of business books for Prentice Hall, 1957

The rest are even better. Enjoy!

via Stupid Things to Say.

10 reasons to purchase new hardware during a recession | 10 Things | TechRepublic.com 04/30/2009

Posted by thaadsma in business intelligence, government, healthcare, ibm, infrastructure, managed services, microsoft, security.
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In tough times like these, it’s tempting to put off urgent IT hardware purchases. But you can shoot yourself in the foot by doing so, for a number of reasons–
10 reasons, to be precise.

I really think one of the most important is that your best people may be less productive, and productivity and results are the name for the game right now. Reason #2 from the list at TR:

“When PCs, displays, or network switches fail, it may be tempting to visit an old parts closet to dig out replacements. Old, entry-level Celeron- or Pentium-powered PCs with 256MB of RAM and rattling power supplies won’t help managers (now often responsible for production tasks, too, due to departmental layoffs) efficiently complete expanded task lists. Nor will such machines enable overworked colleagues to run QuickBooks, CRM applications, or proprietary programs smoothly. Nor will a 15″ CRT enable productivity gains when replacing a 22″ widescreen monitor used to display customer information alongside order entry software.

The same is true for network equipment. Outdated hubs and routers were decommissioned for a reason. They were either too slow, failed to operate properly, or didn’t meet the organization’s needs. They certainly won’t improve productivity now, when staff sizes are smaller, remaining employees must absorb the workload of laid-off staff, and stress levels climb ever higher. The subsequent delays and inefficiencies translate to lost opportunities, poor customer experiences, and less revenue.”

We’re working with our i3 Business Soultions customers every day who realize the only way to recovery and success is making good deals now for critical business systems.

Read all 10 business reasons at the TechRepublic blog:

via 10 reasons to purchase new hardware during a recession | 10 Things | TechRepublic.com.

The New India: Michigan? | BusinessWeek 01/26/2009

Posted by thaadsma in development, government, healthcare, ibm.
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In what may be an invigorating trend for US information technology providers, IBM recently announced it plans to open an IBM ’Global Delivery Center’ on the campus of Michigan State University in East Lansing. The goal for the center is to modernize legacy applications used by state and local governments, as well as colleges and universities.

In addition, IBM and MSU are planning to expand out to help modernize IT systems at companies based in the U.S. in the healthcare, telecommunication, and other industries.

IBM mainframes and AS/400 systems still have a healthy user base in the government, university and healthcare sectors– and the software applications that run on these platforms are long overdue for an overhaul (not to mention all those greenscreen terminals). Here at i3 Business Solutions, we work with these customers all over Michigan.

Here’s an interesting take on this development from Steve Hamm at BusinessWeek:

“While the Indian outsourcing community is flipping out about the Satyam scandal, IBM, which has a major presence in India, is opening its newest service delivery center in….East Lansing, Michigan. IBM is setting up an unusual sort of delivery center on the campus of Michigan State University. The company plans to hire MSU students and graduates, plus others, to develop software applications and modernize computing systems for government agencies and universities. It plans on hiring 100 people by June and 1,500 eventually. An IBM spokesman said this isn’t a low-cost labor play; it’s about the talent. But I’m betting salaries for software programmers are a lot cheaper in East Lansing than they are in Somers, New York; Boston; or Silicon Valley—where IBM employs a lot of programmers.”

All I can say is: Go Spartans! 

via The New India: Michigan? – BusinessWeek (see the reader comment as well)

related articles: http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/jan2009/tc20090115_770577.htm?chan=top+news_top+news+index+-+temp_technology 

http://www.itjungle.com/tfh/tfh012609-story08.html

Palmisano: ‘Stimulate’ with Broadband and the Power Grid – WSJ.com 01/23/2009

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“Smarter infrastructure is by far our best path to creating new jobs and stimulating growth. We at IBM were asked to map this out by President-elect Barack Obama’s transition team, and our research shows that a $30 billion stimulus investment in just three areas — smart grids, health-care IT and broadband — could yield almost one million new jobs within one year. That’s possible because these kinds of infrastructure have significantly greater economic and societal multiplier effects than traditional infrastructure like bridges and highways.”

via Samuel J. Palmisano: Let’s Spend on Broadband and the Power Grid – WSJ.com.

High Performance Computing is Flying High | eWeek 05/23/2008

Posted by thaadsma in Linux, SUN, SaaS, development, ibm, microsoft, web.
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Why HPC Is Flying High

“The swift rise of cloud computing—applications made available as on-demand services for enterprises and consumers over the Web—is now requiring HPC and “super” storage at all levels, Platform Computing founder and CEO Songnian Zhou told an audience of several hundred IT managers and developers here at Platform Global Conference, held May 19-21.

Platform Computing makes specialized management software for HPC data centers serving sectors such as the financial market, earth science, oil and gas exploration, health care, and government and military installations.

“Current data centers, most of them built more than 10 years ago, are costly to run and not very efficient in using power resources,” Zhou said. “What IT managers and CIOs need when they are looking to upgrade are agile, scalable, more powerful, more cost-effective servers and storage systems that use more automation, share resources, use less power and run on commodity hardware.

“Yet these new systems must be able to deliver powerful Web services 24/7. This is what HPC brings to the table.”"

Lots more stats and numbers at the origianl article: Why HPC Is Flying High

McKinsey surveys software landscape | Rough Type: Nicholas Carrs Blog 05/01/2008

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, development, google, ibm, web services.
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Rough Type: Nicholas Carrs Blog: McKinsey surveys the new software landscape
Softwares new battle lines are now becoming visible, report the consultants: “These trends – the growing acceptance of SaaS and SaaS platforms – are likely to create a tremendous battle between the largest software vendors and the newer SaaS providers. While each of these players has an advantage at one end of the spectrum large vendors such as IBM, Oracle, SAP and Microsoft do best in large enterprises, while SaaS “incumbents” such as Salesforce, NetSuite and RightNow are more in favor with small businesses, the real battle is in the mid-market space.

System i Morphs Into Power and ‘i’ | Maxed Out | 04/28/2008

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Maxed Out

System i Morphs Into Power and ‘i’

“In a bold consolidation move, IBM has removed and replaced the identity of the System i by turning it into an “i” operating system that runs on IBM’s hottest POWER6-based hardware. Gone is the old identity of the integrated system, and along with it, presumably, the associations of a legacy system. The company has replaced System i and System p with a new line of unified servers with simplified pricing. The line is now officially IBM Power Systems, known as the IBM Power platform, with hardware server models branded with Power, as in, the Power 520, which will run AIX, Linux, or i5/OS. And i5/OS, by the way, really is simply “i.” IBM is essentially shedding the old, keeping the best, and embracing the new.

The plan to mainstream i5/OS is well under way.

Groundbreaking News

Mark Shearer, IBM’s vice president of marketing and offerings for the IBM Business Systems group, along with Ross Mauri, general manager of the IBM Power Systems group, jointly unveiled the massive change at a special town hall meeting today at the COMMON user group conference in Nashville. Due to a personal scheduling issue, I wasn’t able to be at the town hall meeting, but I — and several of my colleagues — were pre-briefed at COMMON by Shearer and Ian Jarman, who is now the manager of Power Systems Software. Look for additional coverage of the town hall meeting itself here tomorrow. “

Head in the Clouds | CIO Insight 03/26/2008

Posted by thaadsma in Amazon, Linux, SaaS, google, ibm, microsoft, security, web, web services.
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The Forecast for Cloud Computing

A couple of good takeaways from a solid article:

“Like all technological advances, cloud computing isn’t without risk. For instance, there are security risks related to commingling your data with that of other companies. And reliability concerns arise whenever you depend on a third party’s systems to be up and running 24/7, as companies that rely on Amazon.com’s fledgling Simple Storage Service, or S3, learned when the service went down for two hours last month.

“Still, IT folks seem willing to put up with the glitches in exchange for the potential benefits, as indicated by one online poster who chimed in on the Wall Street Journal Web site after reading of the Amazon outage. “Cloud computing may be new and may not be at telephone reliability,” wrote the S3 user, “but Internet hosting as a utility is a trend that’s well on its way.” “

… and of course:

“Marc Benioff, the CEO of Salesforce.com who built his company on the slogan “No software,” says the distress over the perceived lack of security of the “multitenant” model—in which multiple companies’ application instances are stored on the same servers—is overblown. Granted, Benioff has reason to promote such a mindset, but the analogy he uses, comparing cloud computing service providers to the banking industry, has merit.

“If you met a CFO who insisted on keeping the company treasury in a safe in the basement, you’d think that he or she were nuts.”

Real-Time Events in Three Dimensions… at last? | MC Press Online 02/25/2008

Posted by thaadsma in development, games, ibm, multimedia, user interfaces, web, web services.
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Software That Depicts Real-Time Events in Three Dimensions May Offer Distinct Advantages |
MC Press Online

After years–decades!– of fits and starts, the latest 3D technologies coming to market offer real promise for real-world applications. Look for more information at this blog in the coming months as we focus on 3D technologies for market leaders.

One lively post to read right now at MC Press Online (HT to Mike Sansoterra):

“For some reason, which may date back to the Spanish Inquisition and threats of expressing our deeper beliefs, we have told ourselves that two-dimensional images are just fine and, if we could just see them in color, or just see them a little sharper, then we would feel quite happy-perhaps even blessed. Well, as the has-been news anchor Howard Beale says in the 1976 movie Network (directed by Sidney Lumet), “I’m mad as hell, and I’m not going to take it anymore.” Two-dimensional imagery simply isn’t good enough! I want my 3-D! “

Java: A Retrospective 10/23/2007

Posted by thaadsma in SUN, development, ibm, microsoft.
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Java: A Retrospective

Read it all, and read the comments, and leave some comments of your own. Where do you think Java is heading?

IBM to Consolidate 3,900 Servers onto 33 Mainframes 08/01/2007

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Centralization vs. decentralization, aka the glass room vs. distributed computing using servers and workstations, is a long-running argument in the IT world.

Well, the pendulum is taking a full swing again in 2007, this time to “lean and green” virtualization of servers — onto IBM System z mainframes!  Click here for the full story:
 IBM to Consolidate 3,900 Servers onto 33 Mainframes

“In what it touts as “the most significant transformation” of its worldwide data centers in a generation, IBM announced Aug. 1 that it will consolidate about 3,900 of its own servers onto 33 virtualized System z mainframes running Linux to save electrical energy and cut back on its carbon footprint. “

Linux developers considering move to Eclipse 07/09/2007

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Linux developers considering move to Eclipse

From outside the Linux development world, it would seem that this choice is a no-brainer. However, Eclipse is still largely seen as a Java IDE, rather than an IDE for any language. Eclipse can, and has been, turned into an IDE for everything from Java and JavaScript to C, C++ and C# and scripting languages like PHP, Perl, Python and COBOL.”

Second Life open-sources its viewer application 01/12/2007

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Second Life open-sources its viewer application: “Linden Lab, creator of the ‘Second Life’ online virtual world, is open-sourcing the code of the site’s Viewer application, enabling developers to make modifications, enhancements, or add new features to the Second Life Viewer. The third-party support libraries and open-source code are available for Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X.”

Ken Kutaragi, Cell and Playstation 3 | www.japaninc.com 01/05/2005

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http://www.japaninc.com/newsletters/index.html?list=jin&issue=275:

“Ken Kutaragi, the brains behind the PlayStation games consoles, believes that the chip — codenamed ‘cell’ — will give future video games machines the power to animate figures as realistically and smoothly as Golem in the Lord of the Rings, or the CGI hero in the recent film version of The Hulk.

The chip, he said, means that within a few years the genres of film and video games will ‘fused and become indistinguishable.’”

IBM’s ‘Marvel’ to scour Net for video, audio | CNET 09/29/2004

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IBM’s ‘Marvel’ to scour Net for video, audio | CNET News.com:

“Researchers at Big Blue are attempting to create a search engine, code-named Marvel, that will retrieve video and/or audio clips that for the most part can’t easily be retrieved today on the Internet.

Ideally, a person in the future will be able to click on a sample shot of, say, a presidential debate, or describe a scene (‘two guys, podiums’), and get back relevant clips from the thousands of hours of audio and video that gets generated by broadcasters, film studios and, conceivably, individuals every year”

SilverLake/i3 merger: SilverLake Resources and IBM 08/17/2004

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SilverLake/i3 merger: “SilverLake Resources is an authorized IBM Business Partner and Microsoft Certified Business Solutions Partner. The merger will further extend the new company%92s broad portfolio of enterprise-class integration and application solutions. It also will enhance its ability to deliver industry-specific ERP solutions and integration services and assist customers with mission critical support capabilities. Both companies have core competencies in IT products and services that bring together a wide range of expertise in configuration%2C implementation and installation.

Kathy Labozzetta%2C Executive Managing Partner%2C says%2C %93%85this merger will allow our customers to have a single source supplier for enterprise-class hardware%2C software and integration services from the industry%92s leading manufacturers%94.”

Next-generation search tools to refine results | CNET News 08/09/2004

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Next-generation search tools to refine results | CNET News.com:

“Other tools, such as Inxight and GeoFusion, produce graphical representations of data obtained through searches. GeoFusion, which makes software that can extrapolate from geographic data, was able to render a map of the movements of a tagged tuna.

By contrast, Inxight’s software creates a map of relationships between names and topics. A search on the White House and business showed that Haliburton is the corporation linked most often to the White House. In a similar fashion, IBM’s own WebFountain project is used to test how cohesive certain blogging communities are by how quickly and in unison they react to news events.”