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In Case Of Disaster, Turn To Cloud | bMighty.com: Blogs For Small Business and Mid-Sized Business 11/03/2009

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, infrastructure, managed services, security.
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Still using tapes for backup? There’s a far better way to protect your data assets. At i3 Business Solutions we’ve been working with customers over the last 12 months to move away from unreliable tape to the the reliability of offsite backup and disaster recovery.

The bMighty blog has a nice summary of a Forrester report and what this means for you:

 ”How The Cloud Will Transform Disaster Recovery Services identifies a gap between old-school recovery from tape, which is affordable but doesn’t offer much in the way of continuity protection because it takes so long to restore; and very expensive, enterprise-targeted high-end recovery services.

Forrester foresees existing online backup providers plus new entrants into the market starting to leverage cloud storage to offer reasonably priced options with reasonably quick recovery times that might entice SMBs away from their tape backups.”

via In Case Of Disaster, Turn To Cloud | bMighty.com: Blogs For Small Business and Mid-Sized Business.

Social Media: Rolling with the changes | Lunch & Learn at i3 Business Solutions 10/28/2009

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, microsoft, social web, web, web services.
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Thanks to the great group who attended our Lunch & Learn session today. (And it was a beautiful fall day to get out of the office wasn’t it?)

i3’s Mike Ritsema introduced the session with the theme that  ”Things are changing” and that we all need to change and starting using this stuff to thrive and compete.

art_of_community

Mike introduced the main presenter Bill Chamberlin,  Principal Consultant – Social Insights Practice and HorizonWatching Community Leader at IBM. As of 2009, Bill is part of IBM’s Social Media Insights practice. This new practice for extracting business insights and value from social media marketing and online communities. Bill covered a point of view on how IBM approaches the social media ‘communities space’, which tools and platforms that are of business use, and what strategic decisions have to be made to use social media tools for customer support, marketing & promotions, and product development.

Brian Dokter of Thinkbox Creative  then pulled all these concepts together by demonstrating how ThinkBox has linked (or ‘federated’) all their firms’ social media tools so they can make one update and feed the update out throughout their website, blog, Blog, Facebook page, and more.

Setting it all up correctly is critical. Doing this takes time, experience and expertise, so we look forward to working with our customers and ThinkBox Creative to assist people interested in pursuing this in business.

Once again, thanks to all presenters and attendees.

Are you ready to get busy with it? 

LinkedIn seems to be a clear winner for businesses interested in networking and marketing themselves online– without spending a lot of time and money. For those of you ready to jump in, I found this great introduction on how to set up a compnay profile: HOW TO: Build Your Company’s Profile on LinkedIn.

via HOW TO: Build Your Company’s Profile on LinkedIn.

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

Have we now entered the post-OS era? | Tech Sanity Check | TechRepublic.com 05/31/2009

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, development, web, web services.
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Jason Hiner makes many astute observations in his “Sanity Check” blog at Tech Republic. Some of his best are wrapped into this excellent April post about how we are beyond the ‘OS wars” that the PC technology world gets so fixated on. And I agree with him 100% when he goes on to say that the Web browser is the standard interface for software applications. Here at i3 Business Solutions, our team is focused on web applications that integratre the best of classic IT systems with the new ecosystem opening oup on the web: Read Jason’s entire post for more perspective:

“It’s possible that a combination of voice and touch could revolutionize the user interface (and thus the OS), or that another major innovation could make it faster and simpler for humans to work with computers, but for now the keyboard and mouse are as efficient as it gets. And, as a result, the computer OS has stagnated.

And, of course, the other thing that’s going on is that the Web browser is finally usurping the OS as the universal platform that was envisioned back in the mid-1990s. Please note that I’m not talking about cloud computing or software-as-a-service (SaaS). While applications and services delivered over the Internet are certainly part of the ascendency of the Web browser, they still have not reached critical mass in the business world and the trend is bigger than that.

What we’re seeing is that many businesses are using the Web browser as the front-end application to access private, back-end systems, from databases to CRM to ERP to payroll to corporate portals. And, why not? Since most users are very familiar and comfortable with Web navigation and Web forms, these corporate systems can tap into that experience to provide applications that have an easier learning curve than Windows-based business apps with their unique menus and interfaces.”

via Sanity check: Have we now entered the post-OS era? | Tech Sanity Check | TechRepublic.com.

Six ways to make Web 2.0 work | McKinsey Quarterly 05/30/2009

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, development, multimedia, sharepoint, social web, user interfaces, web services.
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Interesting stuff going on the the web world, and this summer promises a whole new round of innovation from startups to new releases from the big guys Google (see Wave) and Microsoft (see Bing)

The McKinsey report Six ways to make Web 2.0 work  excerpt here can help keep things in context. It’s worth clicking through to read the whole thing:

“What distinguishes them from previous technologies is the high degree of participation they require to be effective. Unlike ERP and CRM, where most users either simply process information in the form of reports or use the technology to execute transactions such as issuing payments or entering customer orders, Web 2.0 technologies are interactive and require users to generate new information and content or to edit the work of other participants.”

via Six ways to make Web 2.0 work – The McKinsey Quarterly – Six ways Web 2.0 work – Business Technology – Application Management.

Top 10 Tech Investments For Your Business | bMighty.com 04/26/2009

Posted by thaadsma in SOA, SaaS, business intelligence, development, security, social web, virtualization, web, web services.
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“Although times are lean, many companies are finding that they can’t afford to postpone IT investments that lead to increased security, efficiencies or revenues. Organizations also are trying to make sure they are prepared for growth when conditions improve, and enhancing their IT infrastructure is part of that process.”

Here are the top 10 tech investment areas identified by CIOs in the survey findings:

  1. Information security (Identified by 43% of CIOs)
  2. Virtualization (28%)
  3. Data center efficiency (27%)
  4. Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) (26%):
  5. Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) (26%)
  6. Green IT (20%)
  7. Business intelligence (19%)
  8. Social networking (18%)
  9. Web 2.0 (17%)
  10. Outsourcing (16%)

via Top 10 Tech Investments For Your Business | bMighty.com: Blogs For Small Business and Mid-Sized Business.

Integration x 3: People, Process & Technology are the answer! 09/02/2008

Posted by mritsema in SaaS, development, web, web services.
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Here’s a good read from Tech Republic.  I think they’ve got it right.  The future of I.T. looks like:

  1. Infrastructure Management (Reliability)
  2. Solutions & Project Management
  3. End user management.

People, process & technology.  That’s the what technology looks like today.  More & more i3 Business Solutions is delivering the right solutions integrated to disparate technologies.  The ‘Cloud’, hosted & onsite applications are blending into a combination of hybrid business productivity solutions.  More & more i3’s skill requirements are moving to people, project & process management.

Sanity check: Is IT no longer about technology?
  • Date: July 7th, 2008
  • Author: Jason Hiner

Gartner researcher Tom Austin believes that the future of IT is much more about people than technology. While he makes a compelling and visionary argument, there are aspects of IT that will remain tied to a keyboard and screen.

—————————————————————————

It’s become horribly cliche to talk about the importance of IT-business alignment and the need for IT professionals to become much more business-savvy, but Gartner’s Tom Austin (right) takes it to the next level. He believes that the IT professional of the future will be less of an engineer and more of a social scientist.

What? Yes, you heard that right — the word “social” will become a key part of the IT professional’s job description. It flies in the face of most of the stereotypes about techies and it sounds a little corny, but Austin does draw some interesting conclusions that are worth a look, if only because they are so unconventional.

Here are some of the most salient quotes from Austin on this subject (from an interview in Fast Company):

  • “The problem with IT today is there are too many engineers and not enough social scientists.”
  • “Too often, we have measurement and reward systems that are focused on how many transactions did you process, how many orders did you ship, and how many deals did you close — rather than who helped these other people succeed.”
  • “There’s a recognition that if you relax some controls — not all — you’re probably going to get more creative behavior out of the individuals than if everything is locked down.”
  • “There are still people in IT who’ll have to worry about keeping the systems running, but now we’re going to think more about how to exploit the things we can do with social networking, expertise location, and all of the other higher-level social ordered phenomenon we can facilitate using technology.”
  • “It’s not the technology that counts. It’s the people.”

The fact that IT keeps running into these issues about being more business-savvy and people-savvy may simply be a natural part of the evolution of the profession. My TechRepublic colleague Mark Kaelin said that when he was in business school studying accounting, his professors constantly drilled home the fact that too many accountants were just number crunchers and that what the field needed was accountants who were more focused on understanding the business and how they could best serve it. Sound familiar?

In order to evaluate Austin’s arguments, let’s take a look at the three segments that IT is going to be divided into over the next decade:

1.) Operations and infrastructure management

We’re primarily talking about server rooms, data centers, and network operations centers here. IT pros in this realm will manage the backend infrastructure that powers businesses large and small. In the years ahead, this category of IT is going to become highly centralized and highly commoditized. The increase of virtualization and cloud computing will hasten this development.

As a result, managed services companies will grow and take over the data center for many companies. It simply won’t be cost-efficient to have your own data center, in many cases. As such, the administrators and engineers who run these uber-NOCs will be highly trained and highly versatile. They will be the blue collar workers of the IT industry, focused on maintenance and process work.

Although many of these IT pros will need to have strong communications skills because they will deal with multiple customers and multiple accounts on a daily basis, there will also be plenty of IT workers chained to keyboard and monitor and tasked solely for monitoring the infrastructure and keeping it running. Austin’s argument doesn’t hold up very well in this category.

2.) Solutions and project management

Today’s developers and software engineers will morph into this category, which will have a greater focus on delivering end-to-end solutions to businesses, whether in pre-packaged software or custom applications. Just as it happens in many organizations right now, project managers will gather business requirements and build out the plans for solutions that software engineers can deliver.

This is primarily where Austin’s ideas apply. He sees these solutions makers evolving from technology-focused engineers to people-focused scientists and business associates. And, he’s correct that IT needs to build better solutions that are more customer-centric and get the technology out of the way so that users can collaborate and work more effectively.

3.) End user management

From help desk to training to PC provisioning, IT is also responsible for deploying, managing, and supporting the systems that employees use every day. This isn’t going away anytime soon — although some companies have tried to outsource pieces of this — because it almost always involves some form of physical access to the machines. Managed services could take over some of this, but there’s always still a need for at least some physical access.

In the future, the role of this part of the IT department will diminish, although not entirely disappear. Many companies will move toward a self-provisioning model and will support user-owned systems and devices. Plus, the bar for usability and ease-of-use will continue to to be pushed higher and higher.

Nevertheless, even a diminished support department will likely need to change many of its attitudes and policies, as Austin notes, in order to help the company stay competitive. IT will need to relax some of its standards in order to allow more users to easily collaborate and share data and documents.

Bottom line

So, yes, IT is becoming more about people than technology, and IT professionals will need to become more business- and people-savvy. Part of the change is a natural evolution of the profession, and part of it has to do with some of the big technology shifts happening in the back office. Still, there are a lot of IT jobs and roles that won’t be directly affected by these changes, especially in operations and infrastructure. Those jobs will become the blue collar jobs of IT, focused heavily on processes and maintenance, and employed by managed services companies in many cases.

 

 

 

Interview: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos | GigaOM 06/17/2008

Posted by thaadsma in Amazon, SOA, SaaS, development, web, web services.
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GigaOM Interview: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos – GigaOM

Nick Carr contends that for Amazon, running a cloud computing service is core to its business in a way that it isn’t for, say, IBM, Sun, or HP. In a brief but illuminating video interview with Om Malik, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos underscores this point in describing the origins of Amazon Web Services. “Four years ago is when it started,” he says, “and we had enough complexity inside Amazon that we were finding we were spending too much time on fine-grained coordination between our network engineering groups and our applications programming groups. Basically what we decided to do is build a [set of APIs] between those two layers so that you could just do coarse-grained coordination between those two groups. Amazon is, you know, just a web-scale application.”

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

Smarter electric grid key to saving power | Fox News 05/04/2008

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, broadband, web services.
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FOXNews.com – Smarter electric grid could be key to saving power – Science News | Science & Technology | Technology News

These little tweaks add up nicely for another person testing the Milton system, Marian Rakusan. He’s saved at least $300 on utility bills since the program began in September. Tsapoitis and his wife, Lisa, aren’t certain of their savings but say their 2,400-square-foot home has lower energy bills than a friend’s 1,800-square-footer.

This alone is not revolutionary, because programmable thermostats and other “smart home” controls let people craft similar resource-saving plans. The big change here is the combination of these controls with that blinking amber light on the switch _ where the grid talks back.

Milton’s local gas and electricity retailer, Direct Energy, will set those amber dots blinking in an emergency. It might happen a few times in a summer month. Maybe there will be congestion in Ontario’s overtaxed transmission network. Perhaps a power plant will be down for maintenance. Or rapacious air conditioners will overwhelm electric capacity.

Whatever the cause, at that moment, this section of the grid needs a reduction in demand, fast, or else outages loom.”

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.

Google’s 650,000-core computer | Storage Bits | ZDNet.com 04/28/2008

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, google, web, web services.
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Google’s 650,000-core warehouse-size computer | Storage Bits | ZDNet.com

“What does it take to power the world’s most popular search engine? Lots of CPU cycles. Which is just what Google’s new data centers provide. No one is talking, thanks to Google’s tight NDA policy, but with satellite imagery and some deft estimation we can figure it out.”

Here’s the shot of the cooling towers:

googledallescooling towers

Cloud Control to Major Tom | ReadWriteWeb 04/18/2008

Posted by thaadsma in Amazon, SaaS, development, google, microsoft, security, social web, web, web services.
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Google App Engine: Cloud Control to Major Tom – ReadWriteWeb

“Google has just launched Google App Engine, “a developer tool that enables you to run your web applications on Google’s infrastructure.” This will allow startups to use Google’s web servers, APIs, and other developer tools to build a web app on top of. Google clearly has the scale and smarts to provide this platform service to developers. However, it begs the question: why would a startup want to hand over that much control and dependence to a big Internet company?

Let’s firstly review what this is – and what it is not. Google App Engine is similar to the Amazon Web Services stack, which rolled out at the end of 2006 and has since gone on to be utilised by many startups for their infrastructure needs. But it is not a set of standalone services like Amazon’s – which includes S3 for storage, EC2 for hosting and the SimpleDB database. Google App Engine is an end-to-end service and bundles everything into one package.”

More Details On The Google-Salesforce Alliance | TechCrunch 04/14/2008

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, google, microsoft, web services.
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More Details On The Google-Salesforce “Enemy Of My Enemy Is My Friend” Alliance

“Google is in effect becoming Salesforce’s productivity suite. Google documents, spreadsheets, and presentation can be created from within Salesforce’s CRM application. GTalk works as the de facto instant messenger within Salesforce. With one click, sales people who use Gmail can send any email correspondence with potential or existing customers to Salesforce, where it becomes recorded as part of the sales cycle. Sales events and marketing campaigns can be overlayed onto a Google Calendar (see screen shot below), as well as colleague’s schedules for figuring out convenient meeting times”

A revolution is taking shape | FT.com 04/03/2008

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, broadband, google, microsoft, web, web services.
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FT.com – A revolution is taking shape | Financial Times

Nicholas Carr’s latest book ‘The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Google,’ has some great insights into the shift toward a utility IT model, aka cloud computing.  For those not inclined to plough through the whole book, this short adaptation on the Finanical Times site gives anyone involved in the IT industry plenty of material to discuss and debate. Here’s a sample:

“By supplying business computing as a set of simple services, Google, and other utility providers such as Salesforce.com and Amazon Web Services, threaten to render large parts of the IT industry obsolete.

No corporate computing system, not even those operated by big companies, can match the efficiency, speed, and flexibility of plants such as Google’s. One analyst estimates that Google can carry out a computing task for one-tenth of what it costs a typical company.”

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.”

Happy New Year! JPMorgan Predicts 2008 Will Be “Nothing But Net” 01/03/2008

Posted by thaadsma in SOA, SaaS, advertising, broadband, social web, web, web services.
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JPMorgan Predicts 2008 Will Be “Nothing But Net”

Some great stats and graphs for us all to use and get off to bright start.

 ”JPMorgan’s Internet analyst Imran Khan and his team released a massive 312-page report this morning titled Nothing But Net that paints a bullish picture for the major Internet stocks (Google, Amazon, Yahoo, eBay, Expedia, Salesforce.com, Ominiture, ValueClick, Monster.com, Orbitz, Priceline, CNET, etc.).”

Amazon SimpleDB 101 & Why It Matters | GigaOM 12/15/2007

Posted by thaadsma in Amazon, SaaS, broadband, development, games, web, web services.
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Amazon SimpleDB 101 & Why It Matters – GigaOM

“If you are in the business of managing massive amounts of distributed data, you cannot gloss over the Amazon WS trifecta — data-in-the-cloud is the future and with WS, Amazon is way ahead of the pack. What about the offerings of other vendors?”

Google Has Even Bigger Plans for Mobile Phones – WSJ.com 12/02/2007

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, google, mobile web.
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Google Has Even Bigger Plans for Mobile Phones – WSJ.com

“The company is gearing up to make a serious run at buying wireless spectrum, a chunk of the airwaves that can be used to provide mobile phone and Internet services, in a Federal Communications Commission auction in January. Google is prepared to bid on its own without any partners, say people familiar with the matter. It is working out a plan to finance its bid, which could run $4.6 billion or higher, that would rely on its own cash and possibly some borrowed money.”

Could Google’s Android Be the Cell Phone Savior? 11/08/2007

Posted by thaadsma in SaaS, advertising, google, mobile web, web.
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Could Google’s Android Be the Cell Phone Savior?

And now for a completely different opinion:

“The U.S. mobile market today gives companies two less-than-ideal alternatives when trying to create mobile functionality. It can either go the app approach or the browser approach.

The app approach forces the consumer to download—or to have pre-installed—a small applet onto the phone. The chief pro: The final result should look exactly as the designers intended. The chief con: It limits the audience size to those whose OS and platform are compatible with the applet.

The browser approach is almost the opposite….”