Cloud Computing Management Options Starting to Solidify

26 October 2009 Categories: Information

www.serverwatch.com/article.php/3844816

Cloud Computing Management Options Starting to Solidify

October 21, 2009

The general consensus about cloud computing is that it’s not quite ready for prime time. Nimsoft CEO Gary Reed describes it as being “where virtualization was two or three years ago” — chiefly in test and dev environments and nonmission-critical environments.

Reed admitted that cloud computing as been “hyped to death,” and thus, “what surprised me when I talked to customers is that it’s real and it’s coming fast.”

Some organizations are still watching and waiting, of course, but many are at least getting their feet wet. Reed told ServerWatch that of the 40 or 50 customer briefings he’s conducted in the past month, “one-third [of companies] are actively doing things today, one-third are in some sort of ‘test,’ and the final third are thinking they’ll do it in the future, but are not doing it today.” Not surprisingly, he found that most of the large investment firms have real deployment plans in place.

This is far from the “everybody’s talking about it, but nobody’s doing anything” some analysts have been rumbling off.

A big reason for the wait and see approach is that the management and security tools, which are now in place for virtual environments, are the bellwhether of maturity for any market segment, and they simply haven’t been there for cloud computing environments.

The key functionality everybody is waiting on, according to Reed, is the capability to to mange internal and external clouds seamlessly.

This week, that came closer to becoming reality. Two companies, Nimsoft and LineSider Technologies, unveiled products to make managing the cloud easier.

On Monday, LineSider took the wraps off OverDrive 3.0, software for enterprises and managed service providers that automates provisioning and deployment of network services in cloud computing environments.

John Donnelly, LineSider’s executive vice president of sales and marketing, described it as a “network services virtualization platform.”

It is very much a policy-driven product. Business users define the policies, and OverDrive automates them across the network and data center. This is different than the policies set at command-line level. In most computing environments, every time an application, computer or storage resource changes on a virtual server, manual intervention is needed to provision network services or repair broken security and access models.

Donnelly told ServerWatch, “OverDrive interprets the policy, identifies devices and services that need to be modified in order to satisfy the defined relationship and dynamically pushes configuration updates to the selected devices.”

OverDrive, Donnelly explained, consists of three main components that facilitate this: Control Center, which defines, controls and manages all services; Network Virtualization Engine, which transforms policies into actionable service directives; and Device Service Controllers, which manage the device-level configurations across the deployed network.

Nimsoft, meanwhile, on Tuesday announced new features for its Nimsoft Monitoring Solution (NMS) that extend real-time monitoring and historical reporting beyond the data center to hosted, cloud- and SaaS-based resources and applications.

This allows organizations to see the entire IT infrastructure available to them, not just what is physically in their data centers. NMS is purely a monitoring solution. It hooks into management tools and leaves that work to them, Reed pointed out.

New in this version are cloud and SaaS probes that hook into Google Apps for Business, Rackspace Cloud, Amazon Web Services and EC2, Salesforce.com, and other services; Nimsoft Unified Monitoring APIs, which are now available to both customers and third-party developers; Nimsoft Unified Reporter; virtualization probes; and RCA (root cause analysis) and Topology Manager.

If these products are any indication, cloud computing is rapidly approaching maturity.

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IBM Takes on Google

05 October 2009 Categories: Products

Original Article: http://www.internetnews.com/software/article.php/3842131

IBM Takes on Google in Corporate Cloud

LotusLive iNotes launch puts Big Blue in direct competition with Gmail and Google Apps Premier for cloud-based enterprise apps.

October 2, 2009
By Larry Barrett

IBM and Google Gmail in the enterprise

With its launch next week of LotusLive iNotes, IBM clearly believes it will become a legitimate threat to Google and its popular Apps Premier suite for enterprise customers that need low-cost, cloud-based business applications that — above all else — are reliable.

LotusLive iNotes, detailed on a relatively new IBM Web site, will cost $36 per user, compared to $50 a year for Google Apps Premier. However, it will only offer 1GB of storage per user versus 25GB for the Google application suite.

Analysts said IBM’s foray into the lightweight, cloud-based e-mail service doesn’t offer as many features and functions as Google’s offering, but the company could eventually pose a significant threat if it ever delivers the bells and whistles to match its reputation as the gold standard for computing services.”On the one hand, IBM is finally delivering something in this space and it should be applauded,” Gartner analyst Tom Austin told InternetNews.com. “But the way I view it, it’s just an early down payment on a strategy that’s too late.”

Austin said that both Google and Microsoft, which will soon offer cloud-based version of its ubiquitous Office suite, have weaknesses that IBM could exploit to its advantage to maintain its installed Lotus Notes and Domino customer base. However, IBM’s sluggish reaction to the explosion in cloud-based applications may have left to big of a gap for it to close.

“It’s feature deficient,” Austin said. “The user interface is different from what [IBM] said it would look like. They said it would look like Notes and it sure as heck doesn’t. And where’s the meeting scheduling feature? It’s a personal calendar.”

Features aside, it’s clear IBM hopes to take advantage of the recent Gmail service outages that have inconvenienced users and raised questions as to whether Google is trying to do too much, too soon.For Fortune 500 companies looking to get their feet wet with cloud-based applications, IBM offers a familiar option. IBM hammers this home on its LotusLive iNotes, highlighting the service’s security, offline capability and cloud centralized calendar and contracts.

“This is a positive development for IBM and will keep the faithful happy,” Austin said. “But none of its competitors are going to run scared from this.”

October 2, 2009
By Larry Barrett: More stories by this author:

IBM and Google Gmail in the enterprise

With its launch next week of LotusLive iNotes, IBM clearly believes it will become a legitimate threat to Google and its popular Apps Premier suite for enterprise customers that need low-cost, cloud-based business applications that — above all else — are reliable.

LotusLive iNotes, detailed on a relatively new IBM Web site, will cost $36 per user, compared to $50 a year for Google Apps Premier. However, it will only offer 1GB of storage per user versus 25GB for the Google application suite.

Analysts said IBM’s foray into the lightweight, cloud-based e-mail service doesn’t offer as many features and functions as Google’s offering, but the company could eventually pose a significant threat if it ever delivers the bells and whistles to match its reputation as the gold standard for computing services.

“On the one hand, IBM is finally delivering something in this space and it should be applauded,” Gartner analyst Tom Austin toldInternetNews.com. “But the way I view it, it’s just an early down payment on a strategy that’s too late.”

Austin said that both Google and Microsoft, which will soon offer cloud-based version of its ubiquitous Office suite, have weaknesses that IBM could exploit to its advantage to maintain its installed Lotus Notes and Domino customer base. However, IBM’s sluggish reaction to the explosion in cloud-based applications may have left to big of a gap for it to close.

“It’s feature deficient,” Austin said. “The user interface is different from what [IBM] said it would look like. They said it would look like Notes and it sure as heck doesn’t. And where’s the meeting scheduling feature? It’s a personal calendar.”

Features aside, it’s clear IBM hopes to take advantage of the recent Gmail service outages that have inconvenienced users and raised questions as to whether Google is trying to do too much, too soon.

For Fortune 500 companies looking to get their feet wet with cloud-based applications, IBM offers a familiar option. IBM hammers this home on its LotusLive iNotes, highlighting the service’s security, offline capability and cloud centralized calendar and contracts.

“This is a positive development for IBM and will keep the faithful happy,” Austin said. “But none of its competitors are going to run scared from this.

October 2, 2009
By Larry Barrett: More stories by this author:

IBM and Google Gmail in the enterprise

With its launch next week of LotusLive iNotes, IBM clearly believes it will become a legitimate threat to Google and its popular Apps Premier suite for enterprise customers that need low-cost, cloud-based business applications that — above all else — are reliable.

LotusLive iNotes, detailed on a relatively new IBM Web site, will cost $36 per user, compared to $50 a year for Google Apps Premier. However, it will only offer 1GB of storage per user versus 25GB for the Google application suite.

Analysts said IBM’s foray into the lightweight, cloud-based e-mail service doesn’t offer as many features and functions as Google’s offering, but the company could eventually pose a significant threat if it ever delivers the bells and whistles to match its reputation as the gold standard for computing services.

“On the one hand, IBM is finally delivering something in this space and it should be applauded,” Gartner analyst Tom Austin toldInternetNews.com. “But the way I view it, it’s just an early down payment on a strategy that’s too late.”

Austin said that both Google and Microsoft, which will soon offer cloud-based version of its ubiquitous Office suite, have weaknesses that IBM could exploit to its advantage to maintain its installed Lotus Notes and Domino customer base. However, IBM’s sluggish reaction to the explosion in cloud-based applications may have left to big of a gap for it to close.

“It’s feature deficient,” Austin said. “The user interface is different from what [IBM] said it would look like. They said it would look like Notes and it sure as heck doesn’t. And where’s the meeting scheduling feature? It’s a personal calendar.”

Features aside, it’s clear IBM hopes to take advantage of the recent Gmail service outages that have inconvenienced users and raised questions as to whether Google is trying to do too much, too soon.

For Fortune 500 companies looking to get their feet wet with cloud-based applications, IBM offers a familiar option. IBM hammers this home on its LotusLive iNotes, highlighting the service’s security, offline capability and cloud centralized calendar and contracts.

“This is a positive development for IBM and will keep the faithful happy,” Austin said. “But none of its competitors are going to run scared from this.”


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