Yearly Archives: 2013

Managed Dedicated Servers: The Best Value for Your Business

Posted on February 24, 2013 at 6:33 pm

    Read the Digital Edition – This issue dives into the topic of startups and their varied roles within the web hosting industry. I’ve heard over and over again how valuable mentorship is for first-time entrepreneurs, and mentorship and coaching is really at the heart of the hosting community.

    Read The Digital Edition

  • Read the Digital Edition – Identifying, building, launching and delivering new products around their web hosting services is one of the key challenges facing hosting companies, and – along with actually assembling, operating and supporting the underlying infrastructure – one of the fundamental tasks involved in operating a hosting business.

    Read The Digital Edition

Posted in Web Hosting

How Hosting Companies Can Increase Revenue

Posted on February 22, 2013 at 4:16 pm

    Read the Digital Edition – This issue dives into the topic of startups and their varied roles within the web hosting industry. I’ve heard over and over again how valuable mentorship is for first-time entrepreneurs, and mentorship and coaching is really at the heart of the hosting community.

    Read The Digital Edition

  • Read the Digital Edition – Identifying, building, launching and delivering new products around their web hosting services is one of the key challenges facing hosting companies, and – along with actually assembling, operating and supporting the underlying infrastructure – one of the fundamental tasks involved in operating a hosting business.

    Read The Digital Edition

Posted in Web Hosting

HP launches Agile Manager and Performance Anywhere as SaaS offerings

Posted on February 22, 2013 at 11:53 am

HP is launching a two cloud services designed to help companies improve the development and maintenance of enterprise applications.

The HP Agile Manager and Performance Anywhere services will be offered to firms via a monthly software-as-a-service plan and are targeting developers, administrators and project leaders.

Designed for team developer projects, the Agile Manager will aim to help groups plan and track application development schedules. The management tool will allow team leaders to delegate tasks and monitor the progress of application development projects and timelines.

Subbu Iyer, vice president of products and strategy for HP software applications, told V3 the aim of the service was to give enterprises a system to help cope with the accelerated development schedules many modern applications require.

“Agile is being used as a development method across the board,” he explained.

“We see a lot of organisations that are starting off any process the do with agility as the driver.”

Additionally, HP said that demand on flexibility and agility is stretching over into the application management space. To help firms better manage agile applications after their deployment, the company is rolling out the Performance Anywhere service.

Designed for administrators and developer teams alike, the service will allow users to remotely monitor and manage the performance of applications in both the public and private cloud environments.

“Once you build your application and deploy it on the cloud or private datacentre you can use Performance Anywhere to monitor its performance and manage the health of the application,” Iyer explained.

Iyer said that the tool could prove particularly useful for enterprises and services who operate in multiple regions around the globe.

A central administrator could monitor and analyse a device, then deliver instructions and advisories to a regional or branch office to maintain application performance and reliability.

HP said that the Agile Manager will be available immediately as a three-month subscription service, while Performance Anywhere is slated to go live in March.

Posted in Cloud Hosting

Weighing Your Options: Comparing Dedicated Servers, Cloud Servers and VPS

Posted on February 20, 2013 at 5:11 pm

    Read the Digital Edition – This issue is the best tangible representation of the partner ecosystem and the channel relationship model that underpins the hosting business in general. Throughout these pages are representations of the hosting providers and the many suppliers who support them.

    Read The Digital Edition

  • Read the Digital Edition – Taken as a whole, my hope is that this set of partnership profiles will inspire you to pursue new opportunities for partnership in your business – to better appreciate not just the fact that partnership can be a powerful factor in your success, but the great variety of ways in which that is true.

    Read The Digital Edition

Posted in Web Hosting

Ravello beta platform to offer firms simplified cloud testing

Posted on February 20, 2013 at 9:23 am

Ravello, a startup with ties to the Red Hat KVM platform, has released a platform for firms looking to simplify the way they build and test applications.

Executives from Ravello claimed that their service will allow firms to test applications in the cloud in an environment which mirrors their on-premise deployments.

In doing so the company hopes to remove the processing limitations of on-premise testing without the development hurdles of a cloud migration.

Ravello senior vice president of products Navin Thadani told V3 firms previously had to choose between limiting the workload of application tests or migrating to a cloud infrastructure which requires an application to be adjusted.

“If you want to use the public cloud you have to recode and rebuild your application,” Thadani explained.

“At that point it does not make sense, it is something completely different.”

To overcome those hurdles, Ravello created a layer which sits between the traditional virtual machine and the cloud environment. The Ravello service offers users a cloud front-end in which an administrator can create a virtual “blueprint” of the on-premise testing structure and systems.

The blueprint is then combined with a software-defined network architecture and the company’s HVX virtual server hypervisor platform to create a fully functional test environment which can be then run on a cloud service as a single compute instance.

The result, said Thadani, is a test environment which mirrors the customer’s own on-premise structure but allows the compute and storage flexibility of a cloud instance.

Currently, the service supports the Amazon, Rackspace and HP cloud environments, though further partnerships are planned.

Based out of offices in Israel and Silicon Valley, Ravello has its roots in the virtualisation space. Prior to striking out on their own, the company’s founders worked on the Qumranet KVM virtualisation project which was later acquired by Red Hat.

Under their new banner, the company hopes to bridge gaps which previously existed between on-premise deployments and cloud environments.

Ravello is now offering its service as a free public beta. The company hopes to take the paid service live with general availability later this year.

Posted in Cloud Hosting

Learn How the Best Web Hosting Providers Make Getting Help Easy

Posted on February 18, 2013 at 8:07 pm

Posted in Web Hosting

IBM aims to bring cloud computing and big data to mass markets

Posted on February 18, 2013 at 9:43 am

IBM has announced an update to its Power Systems offerings which is says will bring big data analytics capabilities to smaller firms and emerging markets and tackle rivals HP and Oracle.

The new Power Express entry-level and midrange offerings are based on Power7+ processors that have been optimised for use with the firm’s own analytics technologies such as Cognos and SPSS, IBM said.

The new products are listed as the Power Express 710, 720, 730 and 740, will start from $5,947 and begin shipping from 20 February. IBM said this will enable it compete with similar technology from rivals Oracle and HP.

Rod Adkins, senior vice president for IBM Systems and Technology Group, said the new offerings would help firms with smaller balance sheets utilise the benefits of big data.

“Big data and cloud systems that were once only affordable to large enterprises are now available to the masses,” he said.

“With these new systems, IBM is forging an aggressive expansion of its Power and Storage Systems business into SMB and growth markets.”

As well as the new entry-level offerings, IBM also unveiled new Power Systems for midsized and large enterprises, the 750 and 760, that it said are ideal for these firms looking to consolidate their big data analytics and cloud workload platforms.

Meanwhile, on the software side, IBM has unveiled new Pure System offerings designed to make it easier for firms to interrogate and understand the data they want to use.

The launch includes PureData System for Analytics powered by Netezza technology, that can offer 40 percent great data capacity and three-times faster data-analysing than previous offerings, to both boost efficiencies and reduce datacentre costs.

In conjunction with its push to bring big data to the masses, IBM has also moved to boost its cloud computing storage offerings to help make the storage of data simpler and more cost-effective.

Chief among the updates include SmartCloud Storage Access. This is designed to allow companies to create their own internal cloud portals for the storing and accessing of data and this can be managed through a web-based portal with the need for IT admin support.

Another notable update sees the firm’s XIV Storage System upgraded with a new system of design for big data that supports 12 10GB Ethernet Ports and up to 6TB of solid state cache, which IBM said can improve workload performance five-fold.

The announcements underline IBM’s rich heritage of innovations, with the firm confirmed as securing the most patents in 2012, an achievement it has secured for 20 years in a row.

Posted in Cloud Hosting

Domino’s Pizza cloud computing use offers food for thought

Posted on February 16, 2013 at 7:10 pm

The lure of a takeaway pizza is well-known and thanks to technology it’s becoming ever easier to order whenever the mood takes you.

Smartphones and tablets let us place orders from any location via dedicated apps and one firm that’s seen the rise perhaps better than any other is Domino’s Pizza.

It now sees over 50 percent of its orders placed online, and 20 percent are coming from mobile applications on Android and iOS devices, according to the firm’s chief information officer Colin Rees.

Rees was speaking at Cloud Expo in London last week and explained how the firm has embraced the benefits of cloud computing to ensure it can cope with the growing demand placed on its ordering systems.

Domino’s, understandably, has fairly predictable demand windows, that revolve around a peak between 5pm and 9pm and particularly on Fridays, Saturday and Tuesdays – when it runs its two for £10 deal.

As a result, the firm has increased its capacity during these periods to ensure it meets demands, but it can also ask for even more from its provider whenever necessary.

This means during the quiet periods it’s not paying for unnecessary extra capacity. However, this doesn’t mean it can’t react to events and boost capacity as necessary.

“Before Christmas when the weather was bad we knew sales would increase and we would need more capacity,” Rees explained.

“So we doubled the processors we were utilising in the servers overnight and could prove that the increase was necessary given the sales we processed, which would have proven too great if we’d left the capacity levels as they were the day before.”

The firm’s experiences are likely to mirror many similar-sized firms considering whether or not their business could operate in a similar manner.

Posted in Cloud Hosting

Learn The Four Ways to Be a Better Web Hosting Affiliate

Posted on February 16, 2013 at 12:06 pm

Posted in Web Hosting

HP hops on the Chromebook bandwagon

Posted on February 14, 2013 at 5:31 pm

HP has become the latest PC maker to unveil a Chromebook – the low-cost, cloud-reliant laptops that run on Google’s Chrome operating system.

HP’s Pavilion 14 features a 14in screen, is powered by an Intel Celeron processor and includes a 16GB solid-state drive, and will weigh roughly 1.8kg.

The Pavilion 14 includes HDMI, USB 2.0 and Ethernet ports, along with a removable battery.

The release is significant for HP, marking its first laptop to be built using Google’s cloud-based OS. 

“Google’s Chrome OS is showing great appeal to a growing customer base,” said Kevin Frost, general manager of consumer PCs, printing and personal systems.

The Pavilion 14 is available now in the US starting at $330, via HP’s online store. There is no word yet on a UK release.

Buyers will also be given 100GB free storage for two years on Google Drive, the cloud-based storage offering.

HP’s moves comes amid turbulent times for PC makers, which have seen revenues shrink in the face of competition from tablets, such as Apple’s iPad. Meanwhile, the introduction of Windows 8, the Microsoft operating system that was supposed to revitalise the PC market, has done little to win over users.

The first batch of Chromebooks were met with general indifference on launch, with users unswayed by the underpowered machines. But lately, the newer model of Chromebooks suggest there may be a bright future for Google’s Chrome OS.

Last week, Jim Wong president at rival PC maker Acer predicted more hardware vendors would embrace Chromebooks, amid disappointing sales of Windows 8 systems.

According to analyst firm Gartner, sales of PCs slumped in the fourth quarter of 2012, despite the introduction of Windows 8. Gartner said buying behaviour had undergone a sea change, with many users now favouring tablets over PCs.

Posted in Cloud Hosting

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