Archive for the ‘Cloud Hosting’ Category

Zynga Goes For $1 Billion IPO

Friday, July 1st, 2011

Zynga earlier today filed an S-1 with the SEC.  What this means to you and me is the company plans to go public. According to the filing, Zynga aims to raise as much as $1 billion, but this could be a place holder amount.  According to the filing Zynga has 60 million daily active users in 138 countries. 38,000 virtual items are created every second. The company had $100 million in revenue in 2010, and grew revenue to $235 million in the first quarter of 2011.

Zynga is profitable, posting $27.9 million in net income in 2010, which is a a 28% net margin

For those of you that are interested in Zynga and how fast they can scale their cloud servers. You should check out NetHosting and their case studies on these types of companies.  It’s amazing how cloud hosting has changed the world that we live in.  Cloud servers make it possible for companies like Zynga, Dropbox, and several other companies to scale overnight.

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Cloudera Launches Quick Apache Hadoop

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

Cloudera is a wonderful cloud service that developed Apache Hadoop based data management software and services, is unveiling a new version of its service, Cloudera Enterprise 3.5.

Cloudera also released Cloudera SCM Express.  The new cloud offering makes it fast and easy for anyone to install and configure a complete Apache Hadoop-based stack on your cloud server.

Hadoop is a Java software framework born out of an open-source implementation of Google’s published computing infrastructure which is fostered within the Apache Software Foundation. Hadoop supports distributed applications running on large clusters of commodity computers processing enormous amounts of data. Cloudera helps distribute Hadoop, and provides practical services around the technology, similar to what Red Hat does for the Linux framework.

 

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Microsoft’s Office 365 vs Google Docs War

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Both Microsoft and Google are boasting about large customers they’ve won. Last week, Google said that McClatchy, which owns The Sacramento Bee and other newspapers, is switching 8,500 workers to Google Apps. Microsoft held news conferences with San Francisco and New York officials when those cities chose Microsoft reports the Seattle Times.

While word processing on the Web may seem mundane, the competition between Google and Microsoft over Web-based applications is the stuff of high drama. Google protested in federal court when a U.S. cabinet department favored Microsoft. Steve Ballmer has personally visited department officials to court its business. Google’s marketing slogan is that companies have “gone Google.” Microsoft’s retort, “Google gone.”

The competition is hot because email services on Google Apps and Office 365 are a gateway to cloud computing. Instead of getting installed on desktop PCs or corporate servers, software and data in cloud computing will be stored on servers run by a cloud company and accessed via the Internet with smartphones, tablets, laptops, PCs and televisions.

The cloud hosting world for apps is becoming a huge factor in who will be leading the global market for these types of things.  I wonder who will win.  Who do you think controls the global app market for cloud computing?  I’m talking specifically about companies that host the apps in the cloud.

 

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