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Oracle Throws Sun’s Wonderland Down the Rabbit Hole

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 Oracle, sensibly enough from Oracle’s point-of-view, has turned off the tap of development resources on Sun’s Project Wonderland, the 100% Java open source toolkit for creating collaborative 3D virtual worlds. However, a core group of diehard Wonderlanders means to keep the project going and is scouting out for-project and non-profit options for becoming self-sustaining.

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R1Soft to Exhibit at World’s Largest Cloud Computing Event

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 SYS-CON Events announced today that R1Soft, a leading developer of Continuous Data Protection (CDP) Software, will exhibit at SYS-CON's 5th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on April 19-21, 2010, at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in New York City. Cloud Expo is the world's leading Cloud-focused event since 2007, and is held five times a year, in New York City, Silicon Valley, Prague, Tokyo and Hong Kong. Offering scalable and high-performance CDP products, R1Soft has quickly been recognized by data center industry leaders as the standard for Windows and Linux server data protection. R1Soft's low-cost, next-generation backup technology was developed to replicate and synchronize servers on a near-continuous basis, all while significantly reducing the performance impact of backup operations on busy servers. More than 180,000 mission-critical Windows and Linux servers use R1Soft's disk to disk backup software around the world.

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Emulex Announces VMware vSphere 4 Certification of OneConnect 10Gb/s Ethernet Network Adapters

Posted by David Marshall on Feb 3, 2010 in Silver Light, Virtualization  | View Original Article
 Emulex Corporation today announced that its OneConnect™ 10Gb/s Ethernet Network Adapters are certified and fully supported with VMware vSphere™ 4.... Read more at VMblog.com.

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Six marine energy technologies to share £22m of funding

Posted by Green Wise - The Bottom Line for Business on Feb 3, 2010 in Green Computing, Silver Light  | View Original Article
 Six of the UK’s most promising wave and tidal energy technologies have been chosen to receive a share of £22 million of Government funding, with the aim of securing mass scale deployment of marine energy technology by 2020.

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Ping Identity to Exhibit at Cloud Expo 2010 East

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 SYS-CON Events announced today that Ping Identity, the leader in Internet Identity Security, will exhibit at SYS-CON's 5th International Cloud Expo, which will take place on April 19-21, 2010, at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in New York City. Cloud Expo is the world's leading Cloud-focused event since 2007, and is held five times a year, in New York City, Silicon Valley, Prague, Tokyo and Hong Kong. Ping Identity is the leader in Internet Identity Security, delivering Internet Single Sign-On (SSO), Identity-Enabled Web Services and Internet User Account Management. More than 400 enterprises, SaaS vendors and online service providers worldwide rely on Ping Identity to streamline application access, reduce administrative costs, generate additional revenue and improve security.

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No Plans for Sun to Build Compute Cloud Like EC2

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 Edward Screven, Oracle's chief corporate architect, mentioned that Oracle would not be offering Sun's long-planned and highly-vaunted compute resource service.

They

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Alice in Wondercloud: The Bidirectional Rabbit Hole

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 

Emerging architectures are conflating responsibilities up and down the application stack. Who is responsible for integration when services reside in the network?

While preparing for an upcoming panel I’m moderating at Cloud Connect (in the “New Infrastructure” track), the panelists and I had a great discussion on the topics we wanted to discuss in the session. During that discussion it became increasingly clear that an interesting phenomenon has been occurring: the conflation of network and application image responsibilities in the traditional “stack.”

Much of this inversion is absolutely necessary for emerging models of networking and computing to be successful. Traditional methods of handling QoS (Quality of Service) and identity management, for example, are no longer adequate in the inherently volatile world of cloud computing and dynamic networks. Interestingly, the driver behind the inversion appears to be based largely on the ability of specific layers access to context, which is necessarily replacing IP addresses as a method of client – and server – identification.


CLIMBING UP the RABBIT HOLE

Back in the day, QoS was a class of problem unto itself, with an entire market of products and solutions developed specifically to address the challenge of prioritizing traffic. Initially it was thought that the ToS (Terms of Service) bits in the IP header would suffice, but it quickly became obvious that this required every organization and provider to honor those bits as traffic flowed through and across the Internet.

Didn’t happen.

A market emerged that moved QoS “up the stack” to Layer 4 (transport protocol). A class of devices were deployed that employed either TCP rate shaping or packet queuing technologies to control the amount of bandwidth a given “application” could consume. It quickly became apparent that this method was not robust enough as more and more “applications” began to use the same protocol: TCP. The devices again moved “up the stack” to Layer 7 (application) and began to apply QoS policies based on actually identifying applications based on layer 7 protocols and data characteristics.

In recent years even this has become inadequate because these techniques were all focused on limiting, in some way, total bandwidth for an application. While these solutions were also able to, albeit rudimentarily, accomplish rate shaping on a per-user basis, they still focused on bandwidth as their metric of choice to control. Hence a single user could be limited to X Kbps for all HTTP traffic, and further limited to Y percent for application A and Z percent for application B, but bandwidth as a meter of usage for applications today is not an appropriate measurement.

Hence, QoS has again moved up the stack and is more granular than ever. Rather than worrying about bandwidth, which has grown increasingly cheap and available for both organizations and users, QoS now concerns itself with limiting requests on a per-user basis and, in some cases, a per-client-type basis. Consider Twitter’s rate limiting implementation for its API. This is a modern implementation of QoS that attempts to equalize access to its services for all users, effectively ensuring a consistent quality of service for everyone. Bandwidth is not a factor, because the amount of bandwidth consumed by any given client is highly variable and based on what data is being requested.

Similarly we often see requests for ways in which application usage can be limited based on application layer variables, with nary a mention of bandwidth. It’s always about users and usage patterns of a specific application.

What was once a “network” function, QoS, has moved “up the stack” and is now primarily the responsibility of the “application.”


SLIDING DOWN the RABBIT HOLE

It wouldn’t be an inversion of responsibility if traditionally “application” layer responsibilities weren’t being similarly pushed “down the stack.” A good example of how this is occurring today is in the area of “identity”, which traditionally includes authentication and authorization.

In the early days of web applications, identification was based on a user name and password (sometimes IP address, sometimes a combination thereof) and was expected to be handled by the application. After all, the application knew what users should be allowed and thus is was the demesne of the application to provide those mechanisms. The use of .htaccess files was widespread as a means to achieve this functionality.

But as technology began to merge the world of the web with the internal world of IT, it became increasingly common to leverage external applications as an identity store and the means by which users were authenticated and authorized to access applications. LDAP, Active Directory, RADIUS, DIAMETER. These protocols resided somewhere between the application layer and the transport layer and provide the data necessary for applications to make access decisions.

But again, this method has run into obstacles in adapting to volatile and large environments. Scalability and the need to execute complementary access policies the network layer in authentication and authorization decisions has continued to drive identity and authentication and authorization “down the stack” and into the “network”. In a highly scaled environment, for example, it is often preferable that an intermediary Load balancer authenticate users to an application because it is increasingly painful for developers to tightly integrate application access and security policies into the application. Traditional methods are brittle, static designs that are increasingly tossed out in favor of more policy-based access that resides somewhere “in the network” rather than tightly-coupled with the application.

What was once an “application” function has moved “down the stack” and is now increasingly the responsibility of the “network.”


WHAT DOES IT PORTEND?

The conflation of responsibilities up and down the “stack” point to either an increasingly flattened application architecture comprised of services; services that may reside in the  application layer or the network layer, but are leveraged by both in approximately the same way.

This is actually much of the brouhaha behind Infrastructure 2.0; behind the evolution of the network to become “smarter” and more “integrated” with the rest of the infrastructure. As the network takes on more and more responsibility from the applications, especially as is the case in an increasingly cloudy environment, the components in the network must be able to consume services provided by other components and collaborate as a means to ensure the fast and secure delivery of applications to their ultimate consumers.

One of the side-effects is that it will cause some amount of confusion in the organization, at “layer 9”, as it were, regarding what role is responsible for developing and ultimately deploying those policies. Will developers become more network-aware? Will administrators and operators begin to take on a more development-oriented role in order to integrate and orchestrate the data center using the collaborative capabilities of Infrastructure 2.0 services?

Maybe the answer to that depends on where you are, who you are, and whether you’ve drank from the bottle or not.

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Google-China Tiff: A Clash of Cyber Civilizations?

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 This ongoing tiff between Google and the Internet control authorities in China’s Communist Party-dominated government have uncorked a Pandora’s Box of security, free speech and corporate espionage issues. There are human rights issues and free speech issues, questions on China’s actual role, trade and fairness issues, and the point about Google’s policy of initially enabling Internet censorship and now apparently backtracking. But there are also larger issues around security and Internet governance in general. Those are the issues we’ll be focusing on today. So, even as the U.S. State Department and others in the U.S. federal government seek answers on China’s purported role or complicity in the attacks, the repercussions on cloud computing and enterprise security are profound and may be long-term.

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Savvis Reports Improvement in Revenue for 2009

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 Savvis, a provider of outsourced internet infrastructure services for enterprises, today reported its fourth quarter 2009 financial results, with revenue of US$219.8 million, compared to US$222.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2008. Adjusted EBITDA was US$54.9 million, compared to US$52.0 million of adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter of 2008.

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eSalesTrack to Exhibit at Cloud Expo 2010 East

Posted by Latest News from Cloud Computing Journal on Feb 3, 2010 in CLoud Computing, General, Silver Light, Technology News  | View Original Article
 SYS-CON Events announced today that eSalesTrack, a provider of on-demand CRM, will exhibit at SYS-CON's 5th International Cloud Expo (www.CloudComputingExpo.com), which will take place on April 19-21, 2010, at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in New York City. Cloud Expo is the world's leading Cloud-focused event since 2007, and is held five times a year, in New York City, Silicon Valley, Prague, Tokyo and Hong Kong.

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