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Archive for the ‘Cloud Computing’ Category

Cloud Computing- An Innovation in the Computing Industry

Friday, November 23rd, 2012

The shift from traditional software models to the Internet has steadily gained momentum, particularly in the last decade. Today, almost every task can be performed on internet, thereby, eliminating the need of handling and managing complicated hardware and software. This emerged role of Internet is what cloud computing is all about.

To define, cloud computing is, basically, the use of the Internet for the tasks one performs on a computer. More and more applications that were once the province of desktop computers are being converted into web applications these days. For instance, office suites like Google Docs are gradually becoming more functional and can easily eliminate the need of having Microsoft Office in the near future.

Cloud computing has various essential features, which include,

  • Easy Access: Cloud computing allows the user to access computing capabilities as and when they are needed and without any interaction from the cloud-service provider.
  • Quick Scalability: Upgrades and changes to the services are done instantaneously and easily enabling the cloud computing service to be resilient.
  • Cost: The costing of cloud computing depends on its usage by the user. The user is billed based on the amount of resources they use. This helps the user to track their usage and ultimately help to reduce cost.

Seeing its development, cloud computing is acclaimed as one of the big business innovation. It is considered a very important development in the business world. The various reasons include:

  • Time: With cloud computing you simply need access to a computer, which has Internet connection to view the information you need. This saves a lot of time as compared to the time needed to get new programs to operate at functional levels.
  • Productivity: These days many companies have started using social networking sites, such as, Facebook and Twitter to increase their productivity levels. Also, blogs are used to communicate with customers about improvements that need to be made within companies.
  • Security: With cloud computing you get more security in terms of storing your data safely. Whether it is a hurricane or an earthquake you can get back to work quickly as long as you have an Internet connection.

To conclude, cloud computing is changing the face of the entire computing industry with passing of every single day and many companies have already started embracing the cloud computing revolution.

 

 

Microsoft Azure Outage in Europe on Thursday July 26th 2012 11:09am GMT

Friday, July 27th, 2012

The Microsoft Windows Azure cloud compute service was unavailable to many users in Europe for 2.5 hours on Thursday, starting at 11:09 a.m. Greenwich Mean Time. The cloud compute service in the West Europe region is provided by Azure servers in Microsoft’s Dublin, Ireland, data center and in an Amsterdam facility.

Azure storage services continued to be available and running workloads stayed up, regardless of whether users could access them or not, making the cause of loss of availability a different case from the Feb. 29 outage where a security certificate entered Azure’s infrastructure without the ability to recognize it was a unique leap year date.

India Will Be Highly Benefitted with Cloud Computing Creating 2 million jobs by 2015 – says Microsoft

Friday, April 20th, 2012

A study conducted by research firm IDC for Microsoft said, “The cloud technology is also projected to generate 14 million new jobs worldwide in the same time.” It has been due to the rising number of companies adopting cloud computing that there are anticipations about creation of more than 2 million jobs in India by the year 2015.

 

Cloud Computing, being internet based, alleviates sharing of technological resources, both digital and software information. This emerging field operates on a pay-per-use model, assisting technology companies to minimize cost.

 

According to the study conducted by IDC, “A common misperception is that cloud computing is a job eliminator, but in truth, it will be a job creator, a major one.”

 

Job growth is expected to occur across continents and throughout multiple-sized organizations, since emerging markets, small businesses as well as cities are as accessible to cloud benefits as developed nations or large enterprises.

 

It has been estimated that in 2011, IT cloud services assisted businesses across the globe to generate revenues over USD 600 billion and 1.5 million new jobs. In the small and medium businesses, more than 50% of the 14 million jobs would be created. Moreover, over 2 million jobs each will be generated in the “communications and media” and manufacturing sectors, pursued by banking at more than 1.4 million. India is uniquely placed to gain advantage of this opportunity, if we say that cloud computing posed a convincing opportunity for governments and businesses around the world.

 

The study also indicated that countries having invested in major cloud infrastructure will experience higher job growth. The factors ascertaining the number of jobs that might be generated in a specific country consist of projected level of spending on IT, degree of workforce size, automation, and so on.

 

Revenues from cloud innovation are forecasted to reach USD 1.1 trillion per year by 2015. Integrated with cloud efficiencies, this will repel significant job growth and organizational reinvestment.

 

Microsoft has been offering services across a wide span of all three service layers encompassing the cloud, infrastructure, platform and software services.

 

About ISHIR

ISHIR helps companies navigate through the cloud hype. ISHIR is a Cloud Computing solutions provider based in Dallas Texas and with regional offices in Portland Oregon, New Delhi India and London UK. ISHIR has been assisting companies from small business to large enterprises plan or initiate to make decisions to move or not to move to the cloud since 2008. ISHIR services include planning, cloud readiness assessment workshops, cloud monitoring, Microsoft Office 365 deployments and migration or, supplementing IT infrastructure using Microsoft Azure cloud solutions. ISHIR also assists clients to set up Private Cloud solutions at its own Data Center in Portland Oregon or any other third party provider based on the unique needs and requirements of the business and its objectives. To learn more about ISHIR cloud computing practice, please visit our website (http://www.ishir.com/cloud-computing-services.htm)

Microsoft slashes Office 365 prices by 20% (20 percent)

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

This is a great news for everyone who is using Microsoft Office 365, the price of the Microsoft cloud services are dropping! Microsoft has slashes the prices for the Enterprise Suite of Microsoft Office 365.

 

The E1 plan which was $10 per user per month is now $8 per user; the E3 plan which was $24 per user and now is $20 per user.  

 

Microsoft attributed this price reduction to the cost efficiencies of having more customers on Microsoft Office 365 resulting in lower costs to run the cloud system and thus they are passing the savings onto the business customers.  The reduced prices take effect immediately for new and renewing customers. This is great news and it shows that Cloud computing works and that adding capacity and customers results in cost drops while increasing services offered, as Microsoft has been continuing to improve and add new features to the Office 365 stack.

 

You can read more about the announcement at Microsoft Office 365 Blog.

 

Microsoft  is also talking about the A2 plan being free for students and teachers and faculty in the Education space!

 

ISHIR is the go to partner with Microsoft to promote and evangelize the adoption of Microsoft Cloud Computing services (Office 365 and Microsoft Azure).  ISHIR provides Cloud Assessment and Readiness services to help you chart your path to the cloud.

ISHIR Managed Web Hosting provider will be launching their cloud web hosting services at SXSW 2012 in Austin Texas

Monday, February 20th, 2012

ISHIR.net, Managed Web Hosting provider and division of ISHIR.com, is the preferred managed hosting provider to digital marketing agencies and interactive agencies.  We will be at Austin Convention Center at SXSW 2012 and look forward to engaging with representatives of digital agencies, system integrators and cloud service providers

We would like to invite you to our launch party.  If you wish to get invitation to this “by invitation only” event.  Please drop us a note at rkhanna at ishir.com, tweet us at @ishir or visit us at www.ishir.net

Zappos Hack Exposes Passwords

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Zappos was hacked recently and has requested the users to change their passwords.  But if you are a user accessing the site from out of the country, it shows you a splash screen that the site is under construction.  How must a user change password if he or she cannot access the site.   I heard the site is hosted by Amazon WS.  Can this site be trusted and the provider that owns the business.  What are your thoughts?

SalesForce.com Purposesly Makes It Difficult For Its Clients To Move to Its Competitors like Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

We have been using SalesForce.com for over 6 years.  We decided to move to Microsoft CRM Online 2011 recently but SalesForce.com makes it difficult for companies to switch providers.  Microsoft also does not provide good tools to make this migration possible.  The competition between them is just making it tough for companies to maintain control over the sales data.  I feel we should move to SugarCRM.  :)

Microsoft COO Turner bashes competitors in WPC keynote

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

 

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For his annual keynote at the Microsoft Wordwide Partner Conference, taking place this week in Los Angeles, Microsoft Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner wasted little time challenging Microsoft’s many competitors. He flouted the supposed weaknesses of Cisco, IBM, Google, Oracle and others, letting attendees know that Microsoft is gunning for these companies’ business.

“I am grateful for those competitors. It is fun going after them in a big way,” he said.

Turner even took the opportunity to criticize some of Microsoft’s old technologies, such as Windows XP and Office 2003.

As the COO, Turner oversees Microsoft’s worldwide sales, marketing, and services. And at the WPC conference, his role is to rally Microsoft partners to march into battle against competing companies. This year, however, Turner seemed even more eager than usual to call out competitors by name and list their putative deficiencies.

Google was one of the first companies Turner savaged, particularly in regards to its online office suite, Google Docs. “Two years ago, all of the headlines said Microsoft was in big trouble,” he said. “Guess what? It hasn’t happened.”

He criticized Google for hidden fees in Google Docs, which Microsoft competes against with its own recently launched Office365. Turner claimed that Google’s annual fee of $50 per user per year is “only the tip of the iceberg.” Customers may incur additional fees, the nature of which Turner did not specify.

He also touted Office365, taking the time to quote an article from a trade magazine, stating that “Office 365, frankly, is to Google Apps as XBOX 360 Live is to Pong.”

“Office365, ladies and gentlemen, is nothing but a Google butt-kicker,” he said, adding that Office365 had already gained 5 million licensed users. He also mocked Google Talk as an “inferior messaging system.”

Discussing Cisco, Turner extolled the audience to go after that company’s profitable teleconference business. “Think about all the years that Cisco has been milking those high margins — 75, 80 percent margins — on its unified communications product,” he said, adding that Microsoft’s partners could offer a lower-cost alternative through Microsoft’s Lync unified communications offering.

Another target was IBM. Turner notes that Microsoft has migrated 4.5 million users off of IBM’s Lotus Notes, and expects to migrate another 5 million this year, all in favor of Microsoft Exchange.

Taking aim at Oracle, Tuner rhetorically asked: “How many happy Oracle customers are you talking to?”

“There is a tremendous opportunity for us to really go after the Oracle customer right now,” he said. He posited that SQL Server was a lower-cost and more secure alternative to the Oracle database.

With VMware, he referred to something he called the “VMware tax,” noting that Microsoft’s Hyper-V virtualization software offers the ability to run more virtual machines, after the first six, at no additional cost. “We caught VMware flat-footed because of the economics of the cloud,” he said. “The more VMs you add, the more you save.”

This is not the first year that Turner has bashed competitors. Last year at WPC, Turner mocked Apple for its problems with the then recently released iPhone 4, calling it Apple’s Vista, referring to Microsoft’s own less-than-enthusiastically received operating system.

Apple was not spared Turner ‘s mockery this year either. Comparing Apple’s approach to its operating systems with Microsoft’s, Turned mused that “your guess is as good as mine as to when [Apple will merge] the iOS and MacOS.” Windows 8, in contrast, will be a single OS that will bridge a wide range of different devices, he noted.

Turner also took apparent delight in displaying photos of an unnamed authorized Apple reseller store in Latin America that was selling Apple desktops and Apple laptops running Windows 7. “That should tell you a lot about having a great OS.”

Some of Turner’s jibes were more enthusiastic than coherent. “It is so good to have something to compete with Salesforce.com head-to-head,” Turner trumpeted, referring to Microsoft’s Dynamics CRM Online, which has gone live in direct competition with Salesforce.com’s offerings. “Now, we have this humongous pacifier to stick in the mouth of [Salesforce.com CEO] Marc Benioff.”

Not all of Turner’s talk was bluster. He also took the opportunity to provide a eulogy for Microsoft products that the company hopes its users will upgrade, namely Windows XP, Office 2003 and Internet Explorer 6. “Those products deserve a standing ovation. They have been so good to so many people. But you know what? They are dead. End-of-life is 2014,” Turner said.

These widely used products define what Microsoft is for far too many people, he added. “The reality is that is not what we are at all. You can’t even begin to get someone’s mind around Lync and SharePoint and the cloud until we get these old applications remediated and moved forward,” he said.

Turner also outlined the strategy partners should take to help get their customers onto the Microsoft Azure cloud. Microsoft’s Azure service has already collected 40,000 customers across 41 countries, although this is a small percentage of the customers Microsoft would like to have using this service. He explained that the two vital pieces of software that every organizations should have to get cloud ready is Microsoft System Center and Microsoft Active Directory.

“When they want they want to go to the cloud, these two assets will make that possible,” he said. “If they are not quite ready to go to cloud, it doesn’t matter. We’ll take them when they are ready.”

Microsoft’s Hyper-V Cloud Fast Track Accelerates Private Cloud Deployment

Monday, May 30th, 2011

What an exciting week at Tech Ed for Private Cloud solutions from Microsoft and our great partners! It started with the announcement of NetApp and Cisco joining the Hyper-V Cloud Fast Track program and bringing their solution to market immediately. We had a session where Alex Jauch from NetApp did a very cool demo. He showed provisioning of Cisco UCS blades via an Opalis workflow and PowerShell. He followed that with a Disaster Recovery scenario – bringing down a private cloud in Seattle and bringing the infrastructure back up in Tacoma without losing connectivity to the hosted applications.

Next, HP’s private cloud offering in the Fast Track program provided an incredible display of power – supporting thousands of VM’s on just a 16-node configuration. It was amazing to see this system in action, specifically the quick provisioning and de-provisioning of virtual machines, automating the process of workload balancing and the ability to keep the infrastructure available through advanced monitoring and automation. This live Fast Track implementation clearly demonstrates the benefit of shared resources pools with advanced automation and management.

And to top it all off, Fujitsu announced on Wednesday that their Fast Track offering is coming to market. Fujitsu’s is based on their Fujitsu PRIMERGY BX900 blade server system and ETERNUS storage systems.

Keep looking here for updates on how to implement private clouds in your organization – today – with Hyper-V Cloud Fast Track offerings from partners around the globe.

Source: Microsoft – Virtualization Team Blog

The Role of the Windows Azure VM Role

Sunday, May 15th, 2011

Moving applications to the cloud is all about creating the right image. Server image, that is. The Windows Azure VM role lets you run a virtual hard disk image, store that image in the cloud and load and run it on demand.

You understand benefits of cloud computing, the efficiencies to be gained, the ability to scale your infrastructure based on immediate need and make more strategic use of IT staff. But what’s the best way to move your applications to cloud? The last thing you really want to do is start recoding applications and make changes to their deployment process.

Enter the Windows Azure Virtual Machine (VM) Role, which allows you to run a customized instance of Windows Server 2008 R2 in Windows Azure, making it easier to move applications to the cloud. The quick explanation is that a VM role runs an image, a virtual hard disk (VHD) of a Windows Server 2008 R2 virtual machine. This VHD is created using an on-premise Windows Server machine, and then uploaded to Windows Azure. You can configure and maintain the operating system and use Windows Services, scheduled tasks, etc. in the VM role. Once it’s stored in the cloud, the VHD can be loaded on demand into a VM role and executed. There’s no need to re-code to use Windows Azure, your existing applications can start to work for you in the cloud immediately.

IT Professionals can use Hyper-V or the Automated Installation Kit for Windows Server to build and upload their Windows Server 2008 R2 applications to the Windows Azure VM role. For packaging an application so that it runs in Windows Azure in the VM role, the Windows Azure SDK also includes command line tools. For more detail, see the Overview of the Windows Azure VM Role.

Our focus in this edition of TechNet ON is two-fold: to understand why you’d want to use the VM role and how to create VMs for Windows Azure.

In his TechNet Magazine article Taking Your Virtual Machines to the Cloud [[need URL]], Joshua Hoffman explains that the VM role lets you build virtual machines for Windows Azure to leverage the scalable infrastructure and cost savings that come with cloud computing.

Is the VM role a platform-as-a-service (PaaS), since it runs on Windows Azure, or is this Microsoft’s Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) play, as some speculated when the VM role was first announced. As explained in Windows Azure VM Role: Looking at it a different way, the VM role is a PaaS application that runs on Windows Azure, subject to the service model and all the other benefits and constraints, just like the Web and Worker Roles. The fact that it spins up a VM to house the application doesn’t change the fact that it is still a Windows Azure application.

Next you should understand why you would want to use the VM role to configure the operating system for a virtual machine, and how to create a hosted service for Windows Azure. A VM role is the same as the other Windows Azure roles in needing the service definition and service configuration files to be hosted as a service in Windows Azure. To begin, get a quick Overview of Creating a Hosted Service for Windows Azure.

Getting Started

In Your Virtual Machines to the Cloud [[need URL]], Hoffman walks through the steps of building your VMs for Windows Azure. Here are some key things to understand:

An image of the Windows Server 2008 R2 operating system is needed for a VM role in Windows Azure. To see what is involved in creating that VHD image, read Getting Started with Developing a Server Image for a VM Role. To create instances of a VM role, you must deploy a service model package to Windows Azure. Check out the TechNet Library article How to Create and Deploy the VM Role Service Model for details on deploying a service model package to Windows Azure, including how to how to create the base VHD for a VM role in Windows Azure, upload a VHD to Windows Azure and define the service model files.

Since Windows Azure Integration Components are required in a VM role that is hosted as a service in Windows Azure, you’ll also need to learn how to install the Windows Azure Integration Components. The Windows Azure Integration Components install the service runtime APIs to the image, so that the VM role instance may gather dynamic information from the Windows Azure environment.

When you are ready to deploy your VM role(s), check out Avkash Chauhan’s Expert Tips on VM Role Deployment with Windows Azure SDK 1.4

Last but not least, get some hands-on time with the Windows Azure VM role.