Archive for the ‘Cloud Hosting’ Category

Microsoft Azure Wins Patent Lawsuit

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

Microsoft and Salesforce.com have agreed to settle their patent suits against each other. The two cloud hosting giants can move on, get along, and enter into a license sharing agreement for the competing cloud technologies.

A Microsoft press release states “The cases have been settled through a patent agreement in which Salesforce.com will receive broad coverage under Microsoft’s patent portfolio for its products and services as well as its back-end server infrastructure during the term. Also as part of the agreement, Microsoft receives coverage under Salesforce.com’s patent portfolio for Microsoft’s products and services.”

Horacio Gutierrez, corporate vice president and deputy general counsel of Intellectual Property and Licensing at Microsoft declared “Microsoft’s patent portfolio is the strongest in the software industry and is the result of decades of software innovation. Today’s agreement is an example of how companies can compete vigorously in the marketplace while respecting each other’s intellectual property rights.”

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VMware Announces Hyperic 4.4

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

VMware announced earlier today SpringSource Hyperic 4.4, an award-winning solution for managing and monitoring custom applications. Through enhanced integration with VMware vCenter Server, Hyperic 4.4 now maintains a continually updated inventory of VMware vSphere ESXi and ESX hosts, enabling IT Administrators to more rapidly pinpoint, correct and prevent application performance problems wherever they occur across physical, virtual and private cloud infrastructures.

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Cloud Computing Is Helping Drive Hardware Growth

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Private cloud hardware spending will draw public cloud hardware spending, IDC predicts. IDC also forecasts that server hardware revenue for public cloud computing will grow from $582 million in 2009 to $718 million in 2014, and server hardware revenue for the larger private cloud market will grow from $2.6 billion to $5.7 billion in the same period.

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There have been tons of surveys out there that show that enterprise companies are moving to cloud computing and are looking to move to private clouds first, which means many new boxes of servers are showing up in the lobby to build these private clouds. That said, I believe that some of these so-called private clouds are just relabeled traditional data center and won’t have many built-in cloud computing features beyond simple virtualization.  Since there is no standard in cloud computing, you can’t know if they are true cloud servers or not.

Another point to bring up is VC funding behind cloud computing has significantly gone up.  There isn’t a week that goes by that you don’t hear about a VC fund investing in the cloud computing arena. This causes a significant spike in the number of machines being purchased in the tech sector.  Cloud servers aren’t cheap either. Basically what I’m saying with this whole thing is cloud computing isn’t going anywhere, and cloud server costs aren’t going to go down, I only see them going up!

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