Archive for the ‘Cloud Hosting’ Category

Microsoft Cloud Server Predictions

Monday, October 25th, 2010

What is going to happen with Microsoft cloud servers with the recent loss of Ray Ozzie leaving?  So Motley Fool looked up all the numbers and did a lot of this article so I really have to give them credit.  I still put up my own spin on the article thought!    I think it’s a very fair question to put up.  What will happen with Microsoft with him gone?  He headed up the cloud server dept and this will surly hurt Microsoft.

Business Segment Fiscal 2010 Revenue* Fiscal 2009 Revenue* Fiscal 2008 Revenue*
Windows & Windows Live Division $17,800 $14,690 $16,815
Server and Tools Division $14,878 $14,276 $13,217
Online Services $2,198 $2,110 $2,164
Microsoft Business $18,909 $18,864 $18,904
Entertainment and Devices $8,114 $8,035 $8,502
Corporate and Other $597 $462 $818
TOTAL $62,484 $58,437 $60,420

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor’s.
* Numbers in millions.

The only consistent growth part of this by revenue is cloud server and cloud hosting tools, which includes Windows Server and Microsoft’s cloud server program, Windows Azure.

The numbers don’t change much when you head further down the income statement:

Business Segment

Fiscal 2010 Operating Income* Fiscal 2009 Operating Income* Fiscal 2008 Operating Income*
Windows & Windows Live Division $12,089 $9,569 $11,876
Server and Tools Division $4,990 $4,638 $3,845
Online Services ($2,436) ($1,760) ($619)
Microsoft Business $11,664 $11,454 $11,681
Entertainment and Devices $589 ($3) $314
Corporate and Other ($2,798) ($3,535) ($4,826)
TOTAL $24,098 $20,363 $22,271

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor’s.
* Numbers in millions.

What does this mean for Microsoft?  Well, the cloud server division, the one that is earning the most money and potential to deliver the huge growth in the coming months for Microsoft is the group Ray Ozzie has been most closely associated with.  I don’t know a ton about stocks but I would say that this is a huge blow for Microsoft and all investors.

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Federal Cloud Infrastructure-As-A-Service Award

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

The GSA has awarded eleven vendor spots in the first Federal cloud infrastructure-as-a-service award.

The winners are:

  1. Apptis Inc. partnered with Amazon Web Services
  2. AT&T
  3. Autonomic Resources partnered with Carpathia, Enomaly and Dell
  4. CGI Federal
  5. Computer Literacy World partnered with Electrosoft, XO Communications and Secure Networks
  6. Computer Technology Consultants partnered with Softlayer, Inc.
  7. Eyak Tech LLC
  8. General Dynamics Information Technology partnered with Carpathia
  9. Insight Public Sector partnered with Microsoft
  10. Savvis Federal Systems
  11. Verizon Federal Inc.

Under the BPA, each of the vendors will have to go through the certification and accreditation (C&A) process at the moderate level under the Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA). GSA will run the C&A process through the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP)

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The Positive Impact of Cloud Hosting on the Environment

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

One need not look further than Google, the search engine giant, to understand the ratifications cloud hosting has on the environment. Financial considerations apart, by using ordinary machines for building their cloud infrastructure, they are also saving the environment from unnecessary pollution. Only 15-20% of the e-waste generated by dumped computers can be recycled. The remainder, consisting mostly of electronic components, release toxic chemicals that leech into the land, or into the atmosphere, causing immense dangers to the environment.

This problem can be easily resolved by reusing those computers in a proper cloud-hosting environment. One can easily create powerful computing resources through old and used servers. We can reduce failure risks, associated with employing old machines, by spreading the computing over a number of machines. Many EU states do not permit plastic from e-wastes to be recycled because of the harmful dioxins and brominated furans released into the atmosphere during the recycling process. There are two solutions to this problem… store those plastic wastes in such a manner so that they cannot pollute the atmosphere.

The other option is to re-use those machines in a cloud-computing environment instead of discarding them. Webhosts generally pull off servers off the shelf after their customers have left them. After a period, these unused servers find their way into the dumping ground, paving way for further pollution in the future. The cloud-computing environment permits those webhosts to reuse those servers. Various factors like virtualization have helped conserve power in the cloud-computing environment. This decrease in the use of energy indirectly reduces the carbon footprint on the environment.

On a smaller level, one can network the unused computer, lying around in their home, with millions of similar computers throughout the world. Just try to think of the positive difference this can make to the environment.

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