Headlines – Issue No. 914 (December 19-23, 2011)

Microsoft Tries Hadoop on Azure
Intel Reorgs Search for Mobile Holy Grail
ITC Delays Android Import Ban Decision Again
Industry Bigwigs Back Anti-VMware League
Virtustream Buys Enomaly
Intel Cuts Q4 Projections Because of HDD Shortages
Apple Reportedly Wants To Buy Flash Memory Maker
SOASTA Gets $12 Million More in Funding
Rackspace Names Moorman President
Court Says Motorola Mobility Can Stop Apple Widgets from Getting to Germany
StorSimple Supports OpenStack
Jury Gets Novell Antitrust Case against Microsoft
Huddle Integrates with Zimbra
IBM & the EC Settle
HP Expands its HANA Alliance with SAP
EC Delays Decision on Google Acquisition of MMI
Amazon To Fix Some Kindle Fire Problems
Ex-SUSE GM’s Got His Own Start-up
EC Reportedly Working on Massive SO against Google
Apple App Store Clears 18 Billion Downloads
HP’s General Counsel Leaving
Microsoft Replace Phone Leader
New iPad 3 Rumor
Beijing’s Thinking BIG Cloud
Three HLDS Execs To Spend Time in American Jail
Microsoft’s SkyDrive To Service iPhone
Google Back in the Market for More Patents?
That Snap was HP’s Change Purse
Google Starts Building First Asian Data Center
Correction
HTTP Status Cats

Cisco Packages the Cloud

Cisco needs to sell a lot of products.

Well, everybody needs to sell a lot of products, but Cisco is particularly needy or else it wouldn’t be in the middle of a restructuring now would it.

So to move a lot of products it’s come with CloudVerse, which isn’t a product, it’s a framework, a “framework that combines the foundational elements – unified data center, cloud-intelligent network and cloud applications – needed to build, manage and connect public, private and hybrid clouds.”

What that means is that it’s stitching existing products together so they can be sold for more money as a package and to sex it up a bit it’s throwing in some new automation, management and collaboration widgetry like a perspective “Cloud-to-Cloud Connect” capability that will allow a data center nearing capacity to push service fulfillment seamlessly to a sister data center.

Such a Networking Positioning System will depend on new Cisco routers due next year.

Anyway, CTO Padmasree Warrior said, “For a long time we’ve provided individual components. What we are doing now is bringing these sets of products together.” Naturally all the moving parts in the CloudVerse vision will work together a whole lot better if customers oblige Cisco and buy the whole infrastructure kit and caboodle from Cisco, particularly its Unified Computing Systems, which aren’t even bringing in a billion dollars a year yet, and of course Cisco’s signature networking.

It’s particularly important to Cisco since the cloud could be 20% of total IT spending next year and, based on Cisco’s recently released Cloud Index, its study of cloud network traffic, the private cloud could account for 50% of enterprise data center computing by 2014.

Cisco is appealing to both folks who want to resell cloud services and those who want a private cloud. It doesn’t want to use CloudVerse itself and go into competition with Amazon.

Apparently it’s been keeping CloudVerse up its sleeve for a while because it says that 70% of leading cloud providers is using CloudVerse and ticks off Fujitsu, Orange Business Services, Silicon Valley Bank, Telecom Italia, Telefónica Spain, Telstra and Verizon Terremark as customers.

The CloudVerse pool of resources won’t limit Cisco to its VCE partner VMware’s virtualization either. Instead, for broader appeal it’ll also include Microsoft’s Hyper-V and Red Hat’s KVM as well as IBM or HP hypervisors for their AIX or HP-UX environments, according to InformationWeek, complements of Intelligent Automation for the Cloud (IAC).

That’s a new software management system assembled from components contributed by Cisco acquisitions Tidal Software and newScale to automate operations environment for virtual servers.

IAC provides a self-service portal, service catalog, orchestration, automated provisioning, lifecycle management and pay-per-use tracking. Meanwhile, Cisco’s new policy-based Network Services Manager can configure and modify both virtualized network components in a cloud environment. \

Cisco claims that moving from a traditional virtualized data center to a CloudVerse cloud can reduce IT total cost of ownership (opex and capex) by up to 50% and reduce the time to offer new cloud services from weeks to minutes.

Headlines – Issue No. 913 (December 12-16, 2011)

Cisco Packages the Cloud
Greenplum Delivers Unified Analytics Platform for Big Data
Microsoft & HP Turn Cloud Buddies
Last Call for TouchPads
Windows 8 to Go into Public Beta in February
Gee, And Google Thought Microsoft was the Evil Empire
SAP Buys SuccessFactors for $3.4 Billion
IBM Buys DemandTec for its Cloud-ified Analytics
MapR Pushes the Hadoop Envelop
Court Order Forces RIM To Change Name of New OS
Proview, Not Apple, Owns iPad Name in China, Court Says
IBM To Settle with EC To End Mainframe Probe
Apple Loses US Bid To Enjoin Samsung
EC2 GM Dies in Plane Crash
Dell Quits Selling Tablets in America
WikiLeaks Founder Get Last Chance To Defeat Swedish Arrest Warrant
Former HP Chairman Patricia Dunn Dies
Cloud Player Drops IPO Plans
HP Buys German Cloud Printing Outfit
SuccessFactors Makes its Own Cloud Acquisition
SAP Opens Lab in Russia
Oracle Amends Itanium Countersuit
Bill Gates, Nuclear Reactors & China
Samsung Denied iPhone 4S Ban in France
EC Investigating Apple & Publishers for Antitrust
$99 Android Tablet Surfaces
IBM Buys Cúram Software
Rackspace Gets New EMEA Boss
Google Buying a Company a Week on the QT
Android Market Hits 10 Billion Downloads
McAfee To Lay Off 3% of Workers
Dell Adds Salesforce Service Cloud
Android Starts Move to x86

Egnyte Says You Can Dump Your FTP Servers Now

Egnyte wants you to bury your file servers – their day is over – and now it claims you can throw your FTP servers into the hole too like they were grave goods to be discovered and wondered over by some next-century archeologist.

In their place Egnyte (given the silly way we spell things you’re supposed to say ignite) proposes its HybridCloud, a next-generation storage, file-sharing and backup scheme originally targeted at SMBs that lately – at least in the last three quarters – has been attracting large accounts, including 30 departments in the Fortune 1000.

It’s thought to resolve a psychological barrier to cloud adoption by reassuringly keeping copies of what’s in the cloud on-premise. That’s obviously why they call it HybridCloud. Companies aren’t supposed to feel they’re losing control of their data.

Large accounts are also comfortable using FTP, which can move large amounts of data up and down. That’s why Egnyte has come up with the unified FTP and single sign-on capabilities that are supposed make separate FTP servers obsolete.

The start-up has 5,000 active trials going on all the time and says a third of them are FTP-related. According to CEO Vineet Jain “We know that two major pain points for IT are FTP and the ability to allow users to have a single sign-on when accessing services.”

With an FTP (or FTPES) transfer option integrated into the HybridCloud file server, users have a familiar way to securely upload large files directly into shared and private folders that are accessible from any device.

IT managers can set up and administer users directly from their Egnyte admin panel, using existing permission structures and eliminating those infernal special passwords.

For more complex or batch processes, scripting is supported, and all the files are accessible online or offline via Egnyte’s Office Local Cloud or Personal Local Cloud – the widgetry that keeps copies of files back in the office.

To streamline the process of using and maintaining user accounts while preserving security, Egnyte now supports the SAML protocol. End users can sign into their network once and automatically use Egnyte’s services without multiple passwords. They can also use Citrix Netscaler Cloud Gateway and OneLogin to go directly to Egnyte. IT managers can ensure Active Directory credentials are maintained within the firewall and integrate with existing SAML implementations, maintaining the critical extra security levels required in today’s cloud-infused world.

The start-up also argues – somewhat undeniably – that with cloud computing file server complexity and maintenance issues have increased dramatically and there are security issues galore.

It hired Forrester which did a study and found that 41% of employees at SMBs are using unauthorized cloud services in the workplace.

It says that means IT managers have to contend with a variety of consumer-grade products (presumably from its cloud storage competitors like Mozy and Box) that erode security, block IT from understanding what users are doing with critical company data and where they are storing it, ultimately impeding their company’s ability to collaborate and work effectively.

This time through Egnyte has expanded its syncing capabilities to include granular sub-folder level controls. The company, which figures nobody else has this kind of granularity – well, it did take nine months to develop – says serious cloud file-sharing means going beyond an easy-to-use interface and requires enterprise-grade security, IT administration tools, full auditing capabilities and syncing beyond a PC and Mac to include mobile devices, network attached storage (NAS) devices, storage area networks (SANs) and virtual servers.

Allowing cross-platform sync across a spectrum of devices is supposed to be the only way to make all employees, regardless of where they are, feel like they’re working from a single location.

So the widgetry now includes object-level integration with salesforce.com so users can collaborate with others regardless of whether or not they’re salesforce users, avoiding salesforce license fees. Access to salesforce files includes using iPad, iPhone, Android or some other mobile device. Salesforce.com users can work with files of any size, access virtually unlimited storage and share files directly within the salesforce.com interface. Team members who don’t have salesforce.com licenses can access the shared folders associated with salesforce objects through Egnyte.

Egnyte’s corporate plan covers 30 power users and 600 standard users and costs $228 a month when paid annually. That works out to $7.60 a power user a month.

Egnyte currently has a half-million users at what it says are thousands of companies representing over a billion shared files, taking advantage of a technology that offers the speed and security of local storage with the flexible accessibility of the cloud.

Egnyte is backed by $17 million from Kleiner Perkins, Floodgate Fund and Polaris Venture Partners.

The company has three data centers rented from Equinox in California, North Carolina and Amsterdam.

Headlines – Issue No. 912 (December 5-9, 2011)

Egnyte Says You Can Dump Your FTP Servers Now
RIM Enters the Once Unthinkable MDM Market
HP Mates Autonomy & Vertica
HP Wants Third Parties Selling its Cloudware
Apple Reportedly Broadens its Samsung Injunction Horizons
Cisco, Google & VMware Back Puppet Labs
Microsoft Reportedly Moving Office to the iPad
Injunction May Lock HTC Smartphones Out of Germany
Microsoft Updates Office 365
Evidently Somebody’s Going to Buy Cotendo
Massive Facebook IPO Apparently on the Runway
Cisco Says Cloud Traffic Will Be Up 12x by 2015
Yahoo Reportedly Entertaining Offers
Samsung Gets Australian Tablet Injunction Overturned
Boies Swings Both Ways on Android
Amazon Claims Kindle Fire is a Hot Property
Samsung Reported Dropping Netbooks
Google Asks EC To OK MMI Buy
Red Hat’s Sales Chief Leaving
Chrome Browser Close To Displacing Firefox
Foxconn To Put $63m into R&D
Microsoft’s Losing Market Share It Never Had: Forrester
HP Denies Millions of Printers Can Be Hacked
High-Tech No Unemployment Cure

HP’s Putting a Back Door in the Itanium Alamo

Goosed by Oracle – which has refused to port any more of its software to the Itanium chip signally used by HP – HP Tuesday announced an oddly named Odyssey Project that’s supposed to unify Unix and x86 server architectures.

Oracle claims Itanium has reached the end of its life – although Intel and HP haven’t told customers that – and in fact deny it – and says HP should move to the x86. HP is suing Oracle to force it support Itanium to protect its Itanium revenues, which are now shrinking in part because of the uncertainty Oracle has injected into the market, down ~23% last quarter.

HP CFO Cathie Lesjak said just the other day that Oracle’s position has made it hard for HP to close Itanium deals.

Evidently caught out by Oracle, HP is now suddenly saying that customers “need the availability and resilience of Unix-based platforms along with the familiarity and cost-efficiency of industry-standard platforms.”

So it’s going to harvest key HP-UX and Itanium technologies and transplant them to Xeon, Windows and Linux.

It means to build a common, modular HP BladeSystem architecture for Itanium and the x86, a sort of a half-way house where “clients investing in a mission-critical Converged Infrastructure today with Integrity and HP-UX, if desired, can evolve to a mission-critical Linux/Windows environment in the future.”

It claims the new development roadmap will involve innovations to its Itanium-based Integrity servers and NonStop systems and their proprietary HP-UX and OpenVMS operating systems although how much effort it puts into its Tandem and DEC inheritances remains to be seen.

It will mean delivering Xeon-based blades for its Superdome 2 enclosure, a project code named DragonHawk, and for its Integrity c-Class blade enclosures, a project code named HydraLynx.

The scheme envisions “fortifying Windows and Linux environments with innovations from HP-UX within the next two years” and will take the co-operation of Microsoft, the Linux community and the hypervisor folks. It may mean applications have to be rewritten.

Business Critical Systems (BCS) general manager Martin Fink said in a statement, “Clients have been asking us to expand the mission-critical experience that is delivered today with HP-UX on Integrity to an x86-based infrastructure. HP plans to transform the server landscape for mission-critical computing by using the flexibility of HP BladeSystem and bringing key HP technology innovations from Integrity and HP-UX to the x86 ecosystem.”

Fink told the Wall Street Journal HP has been planning this move “for a long time.” Evidently the idea of simply porting HP-UX to the x86 doesn’t have much traction with the market.

DragonHawk is supposed to let users run HP-UX workloads on Itanium blades while simultaneously running the same or equally mission-critical workloads on Windows or Red Hat on Xeon blades in the same Superdome 2 enclosure. The object, HP said, is to “deliver the full mission-critical experience on x86.”

It’s talking BladeSystems with 32-socket x86 symmetrical multiprocessing systems that scale to hundreds of cores.

HydraLynx is supposed to put two-, four- and eight-socket x86 server blades in BladeSystem’s c-Class enclosures along with mission-critical virtualization and availability.

Intel will have to do some tinkering with its future Xeons and firmware to accommodate HP’s intentions.

Linux applications are supposed to get their availability tickled complements of a reprise of HP’s Serviceguard widgetry. HP-UX uses it to automatically move application workloads between servers in a cluster in the event of a failure or an on-demand request. Microsoft’s got its own clustering so that one less thing for HP to worry about.

The flexibility and availability of x86 systems are supposed to be boosted with HP’s nPartitions (nPars) mojo for partitioning system resources across multiple or variable workloads. Used on Integrity and Superdome machines, nPars is electrically isolated to eliminate failure points so users can “scale out” in a single system.

HP says it will also embed its Analysis Engine for x86 in system firmware to automatically repair complex system errors and use its fault-tolerant Crossbar Fabric to boost the reliability and resilience of the x86 systems. HP’s Crossbar Fabric intelligently routes data in the system for redundancy and high availability.

HP claims it’s not forcing customers and their mission-critical workloads to adopt Xeon-based Integrity and Superdome blade servers.

However, Meg Whitman Monday in her first conference call with Wall Street seemed to paint a different picture. “The BCS business is a declining business. It is a slow decline, but I don’t think you’re going to see an accelerating growth rate in that business,” she said. “And so we just have to manage that as best we can and invest in R&D so we get to a new platform as fast as we possibly can that allows us to service the clients that need this kind of power.” Apparently she’s expecting remaining customers to bolt for the x86 door.

Odd that HP would call the project Odyssey considering how long it took Odysseus to reach safe harbor and what labors he had to go through to get there.

Headlines – Issue No. 911 (November 28 – December 2, 2011)

HP’s Putting a Back Door in the Itanium Alamo
HP Trying To Sic EC on Oracle
Microsoft Signs Yahoo NDA: NYT
Meg Lowers HP Expectations
ITC Throws Out S3 Complaint against Apple
Wyse Buys Trellia Networks for its Cloud Smarts
Apple Wants Motorola Mobility To Post $2.7 Billion Bond
HDD Crisis To Screw Things Up for the Next Two Years
DHL Makes Special Box for High-Tech Shipments
Gates Defends Microsoft against Antique Novell Charges
Adobe Promising Flash for Ice Cream Sandwich Android
Court Block Release on HP Report on Hurd Resignation
Google, Facebook Server-Building Stymied by HDD Shortage: Meg
Chromebook Prices Drop
Apple Getting’ Paid in Yuan
Kindle Fire To Get Bigger Brothers: DigiTimes
Icahn Dumps Some MMI Shares
No Anxiety Separation with Lenovo Tablet
EC Probe Broader than Thought
iPad 3 Watch
If iPads are PCs…

Adobe Sends Flex to the Apache Foundation

After casting a pall on the future of Flash by canceling any further development of Flash on mobile devices last week, Abode has abandoned its Flash-based Flex application SDK to the tender mercies of the Apache Software Foundation (ASF), reinforcing the idea that Flash is ultimately toast, burned by rival HTML 5, a posthumous victory for Steve Jobs who openly loathed Adobe’s stuff.

Flash’s future looks bleaker still considering Flex can build both desktop and mobile apps.

The Apache Foundation will have to vote on whether it will take Flex and its roadmap under its wing. Flex has been open source since 2008 but will have to shift out from under Adobe’s control and be managed as an independent project.

Adobe says it’s working on proposals for ASF to incubate both the core Flex SDK and BlazeDS, the messaging system for pushing data from a back-end Java EE server to a Flex application, as so-called “podlings.”

Adobe also means to contribute complete, but yet-to-be-released, Spark components, including ViewStack, Accordion, DateField, DateChooser and an enhanced DataGrid; Falcon, the next-generation MXML and ActionScript compiler currently under development; Falcon JS, an experimental cross-compiler from MXML and ActionScript to HTML and JavaScript; and Flex testing tools.

Apparently nothing will happen before November 29 when Flex 4.6 SDK is released.

Meanwhile, Flash might be hounded to an early grave by an upstart “Occupy Flash” movement bent on “ridding the world of the Flash Player plug-in.”

Headlines – Issue No. 910 (November 21-25, 2011)

Adobe Sends Flex to the Apache Foundation
Big Data Bug Bites GE
HP Puts Activist Shareholder on Board
Samsung Modifies Galaxy Tab To Frustrate Apple Ban
Warren Buffet Buys 5.5% of IBM
Buffet Buys Intel Too
Amazon To Rent Out Supercomputers
Apprenda Upgrades its .NET Private PaaS
Rambus Loses $12 Billion Private Antitrust Suit
AMD Delivers 16-Core Chip
AMD To Chase the High-Volume 1U Market
Steve Jobs’ Two Empires Meet in Apple’s Boardroom
Dell’s Lack of Fanbois Hits its Numbers
Amazon Émigré Starts Network Monitoring Firm
Zuora Raises $36 Million To Push into Europe
Skytap Fleshes Out its Cloud Widgetry
HP Goes into the Ultrabook Biz
Amazon’s Kindle Fire Tablet Ships Early
Birst Intros Cloud-Based Mobile BI SDK for iPad
ScrumWorks Agile Widgetry Goes SaaS
Fancy That, an ARM Supercomputer
HTC Reportedly Working on Quad-Core ARM Tablet
Nokia Win 8 Tablet Due in June
Globalfoundries Scraps Middle East Expansion Plans
Savvis Hires AWS Vet To Run its Cloud
Google Reported Setting Up Israeli Incubator
SAP To Invest in China
A Run for the Tablet Door?
Rackspace Settles on CFO

Amazon Tipped To Buy webOS

Hewlett-Packard is negotiating the sale of its webOS platform to Amazon according to a source who claims to know what’s going on.

Amazon is reportedly now examining the patents that HP acquired when it bought webOS last year as part of its $1.2 billion purchase of Palm.

HP CEO Meg Whitman told staff Tuesday that no decision would be made about the fate of webOS for another three or four weeks. Amazon’s patent examination would explain the delay. It might also suggests that Amazon could walk away if it doesn’t like what it finds or if financial terms can’t be reached. webOS isn’t expected to fetch more than a few hundred million dollars.

Whitman has been playing a coy “will she or won’t she” game about webOS, publicly toying with the idea of HP fielding new webOS devices while last week HP PC chief and erstwhile head of Palm Todd Bradley labeled tales of webOS being sold “rumors.” If they can’t get the deal done they may actually have to do something with it.

Earlier this week Reuters reported being told by four people “close to the matter” that HP was looking to sell the mobile software platform and one of its sources reportedly said Oracle might be interested, a claim that sounds as fishy as a red herring. Oracle and HP aren’t exactly on the best of terms these days and Oracle is utterly unlikely to do anything to extricate HP from the pickle it’s in trying to recoup its spoiled investment in Palm.

Based on industry speculation the wire service said Amazon as well as RIM, IBM and Intel might be interested in webOS and remembered that former Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein, now in a vague product innovation role at HP, is on Amazon’s board.

It is believed that Amazon wants webOS as an alternative to Android, despite the fact that Amazon runs its Android Appstore stocked with thousands of apps and that Android – well, a highly customized version of Android – runs its highly promising dirt-cheap Kindle Fire, the $199 tablet could give the $499 iPad its first really serious competition when it ships November 15.

According DigiTimes Amazon has upped the number of money-losing Kindle Fires it wants delivered before the end of the year to five million units. That’s supposed to be its second increase. It reportedly went from 3.5 million units to four million before. It’s supposedly got 100,000 pre-orders for the thing the first day and had a total of 220,000 in a week. Reportedly Apple iPads and iPhones are experiencing production cuts, sending its stock down.

Amazon Thursday updated its Appstore interface and features, including support for in-app purchases, parental controls and faster downloads, in time for Fire to take advantage of it. webOS has few apps to speak of.

Interestingly Reuters reported being told that HP really bought Palm for its patents. Maybe that’s what Amazon’s after too lest even a highly customized Android paint a big fat patent infringement bull’s eye on its back.

Back in September Byte thought that Samsung was likely to want the webOS patent portfolio to ward off Apple. It said the patents were broad and deep with fundamental claims that go back to the mid-90s and “reach far into the guts of most mobile tech in use today or on the horizon” including mobile multitasking, distributed networking, cloud computing, mobile user interface controls, telephony, visual search, 4G and touch.

Byte said the portfolio was valued at $1.4 billion last year but Reuters was told by one of its sources that webOS wouldn’t fetch a high price at auction.

In August HP pulled its poorly selling webOS-based TouchPad tablet after six weeks on the market, firing its hardware people in the process.

Meanwhile, Barnes & Noble Monday unveiled another low-end device: a $249 8.1-inch Android-based Nook Tablet that’s 50 buck more than Amazon’s Kindle Fire but half of the iPad’s starting price. It’s a little bigger than the Kindle Fire, with double the memory at 16GB – expandable further with a removable memory card – and is supposed to run for up to 11.5 hours to Amazon’s eight. It should be available next week.