• Home
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact
CloudAve
Software in Business. The Business of Software.
  • Business
    • Analysis
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Marketing
    • Strategy
    • Small business
  • Technology
    • Application Software
    • Infrastructure
    • Open Source
    • Mobile
    • Platforms
    • Product reviews
    • Security
  • Misc
    • Design
    • Just for fun
    • Trends & Concepts
  • Sponsors
Browse: Home / azure

azure

Reality Distortion Field : 17 Companies’ Sitrep

Reality Distortion Field : 17 Companies’ Sitrep

By Adron Hall on December 12, 2011

I’m sitting on the bus this morning. As happens almost every day of the week. I’m flipping pages, sort of, it’s an eBook on my Kindle App. I’m reading about Steve Jobs taking over the Macintosh Program at Apple. How things started to fall into place for Apple, for the Macintosh, and how Jobs saw what could be a pushed for it. Everybody else; Microsoft, Xerox, Canon, and practically every single other company was missing it. Xerox Parc had it right in front of them, the GUI, Mouse, Object Oriented Language, and about every single thing we assume for computer use and development today but wasn’t doing anything with it. They were all missing it, except Jobs. The eccentric, crazed, reality distortion field generating Jobs pushed forward and found those that agreed, this was absolutely the future. Today’s computers owe so much to Jobs efforts to pull these people together, to what he saw as the future, and our modern computing world will forever be indebted to Steve Jobs.

Howard Hues had done this 50 years earlier. He simply stated, “nobody wants to fly on a plane at 10k feet and get shaken to pieces, planes need to fly at 30,000 feet or more were the air is smooth!” He then went about working to get a plane built that could do this! The Government was in his way, the industry was fighting him, everybody said this wasn’t the way to go. Nobody could build a plane that would do that right now! It’s absurd. He did it, and bought every single one of them he could putting the airline (TWA) in hock at the same time! But it paid off, and his airline had the nicest planes, best flight in the world, easily. Today’s airlines are all modeled after this ideal, our modern travel owes a huge debt to what Howard Hughes pushed forward.

The competition, the fighting pushed the envelope, but in both cases a visionary could see the future. To them it was plain as an image on a clear sunny day. To them, the future didn’t need to be tomorrow, it was ready right now. The future just needed dragged kicking and screaming directly into today! They did this, they pulled people together who could make these changes, and they with their teams yanked the future right into humanity’s grasp.

…read more, click through…

Read More

Posted in Entrepreneurship, Featured Posts, Open Source, Platforms, Strategy, Technology | Tagged Amazon Web Services, appfog, appharbor, Apple, aws, azure, cloud, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, cloudability, Cloudbees, Cloudfoundry, engineyard, heroku, howard hughes, Joyent, Macintosh, mongohq, mongolabs, nodejitsu, nodester, opscode, phpfog, Puppet Labs, steve jobs, The Future, utility computing | 3 Responses

PaaS Is The Future Of Cloud Services: Apprenda And Redhat Update Their Platforms

PaaS Is The Future Of Cloud Services: Apprenda And Redhat Update Their Platforms

By Krishnan Subramanian on November 15, 2011

As we march towards a future dominated by PaaS, we are seeing companies ramping up their offerings. Today Apprenda (previous CloudAve coverage), the .NET PaaS provider, and Redhat (previous CloudAve Coverage), with their Openshift PaaS (previous CloudAve coverage) offering, made announcements about updates to their respective platforms. Apprenda announced the release of Apprenda 3.0, newer [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Platforms | Tagged .NET, .net paas, apprenda, azure, Cloudbees, Cumulogic, insights, java, java paas, microsoft, openshift, paas, paasfuture, platform, platform as a service, platform services, redhat

High Availability From Non-High Availability: OpenStack, Dell, Crowbar, Private Clouds, and Moving the Enterprise Forward…

High Availability From Non-High Availability: OpenStack, Dell, Crowbar, Private Clouds, and Moving the Enterprise Forward…

By Adron Hall on November 1, 2011

The Environment Recently a conversation came up about high availability in a traditional Enterprise Environment. Let me paint the picture for this environment; “This environment has several hundred servers, and several hundred applications. These application range in simple client server applications to n-tier applications strung across multiple services and machines. Some are resilient, some are [...]

Posted in Infrastructure, Open Source | Tagged architecture, aws, azure, Cloud Speak

Following Good Practice, The Negative Bits About Windows Azure First, But Gems Included! :D

Following Good Practice, The Negative Bits About Windows Azure First, But Gems Included! :D

By Adron Hall on September 7, 2011

Ok, I’ve used Windows Azure steadily over the last year and a half.  I’ve fought with the SDK so much that I stopped using it. I decided I’d put together this recap of what has driven me crazy and then put together something about the parts that I really like, the awesome bits, the parts [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged access control, azure, cloud, cloud compute, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, cloud storage, microsoft, rants, reviews, service bus, windows azure | 1 Response

Citrix Acquires Cloud.com: An Analysis

Citrix Acquires Cloud.com: An Analysis

By Krishnan Subramanian on July 12, 2011

Citrix (previous CloudAve coverage), the virtualization player who is gaining some decent traction recently, today announced the acquisition of Cloud.com (previous CloudAve coverage), the open source cloud platform player with considerable traction on the side of Telcos, Service providers and even enterprises. Initially, Citrix will push the Cloud.com product lines and Citrix branded versions will [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged abiquo, acquisition, azure, azure appliance, citrix, cloud platform, cloud.com, cloupia, federated clouds, iaas, insights, m&a, microsoft, nimbula, open source, opensource, openstack, System center 5, vcloud director, vmops, vmware | 13 Responses

Big News on Day #3 of OS Bridge

Big News on Day #3 of OS Bridge

By Adron Hall on June 23, 2011

Microsoft announced today that they’ll be supporting an effort to get Node.js working on Windows. Mary Foley picked it up quick, but also so did Node creator Ryan Dhal. This, being the explosion of support for Node.js, is excellent news. This further enables JavaScript for the whole stack, on any operating system stack. Getting a [...]

Posted in Infrastructure | Tagged azure, CYGWIN, Google Chrome, Javascript, microsoft, Microsoft Windows, My Updates, node, node.js, operating systems, windows, windows azure

Fujitsu Launches Their Platform Using Windows Azure Appliance

Fujitsu Launches Their Platform Using Windows Azure Appliance

By Krishnan Subramanian on June 8, 2011

Fujitsu (previous CloudAve coverage), the Asian giant starting to focus on cloud computing, yesterday announced the launch of Global Cloud Platform powered by Windows Azure (previous CloudAve coverage). This is important not just from the Fujitsu point of view but also from Microsoft’s point of view. This is the first official production release of the [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged azure, azure appliance, briefs, fujitsu, microsoft, windows azure, windowsazure

Cloud Failure, FUD, and The Whole AWS Oatage…

Cloud Failure, FUD, and The Whole AWS Oatage…

By Adron Hall on April 25, 2011

Ok.  First a few facts. AWS has had a data center problem that has been ongoing for a couple of days. AWS has NOT been forthcoming with much useful information. AWS still has many data centers and cloud regions/etc up and live, able to keep their customers up and live. Many people have NOT built [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged Amazon Web Services, architecture, aws, azure, Bob Warfield, cloud, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, Frédéric Bastiat, PSA, rants | 2 Responses

Microsoft Showcases Toyota As A Big Azure Win

Microsoft Showcases Toyota As A Big Azure Win

By Krishnan Subramanian on April 6, 2011

Ever since Azure was released to public, Microsoft has been trying hard to showcase adoption trends. In spite of their best efforts, they couldn’t slow down the momentum Amazon Web Services has in the cloud services space. Even though they highlighted some customers during last PDC, pundits are skeptical about the kind of impact Azure [...]

Posted in Trends & Concepts | Tagged azure, briefs, microsoft, microsoft SQL Azure, telematics, toyota, windows azure | 2 Responses

Git Rid of Windows Azure and Amazon Web Services (AWS) SDKs with .NET + Git + AppHarbor Deployment Revolution

Git Rid of Windows Azure and Amazon Web Services (AWS) SDKs with .NET + Git + AppHarbor Deployment Revolution

By Adron Hall on March 14, 2011

I’ve been wanting to do a quick write up on the state of cloud apps from my perspective.  What’s my perspective?  Well I’m keeping up with  the SDKs from the big players; AWS and Windows Azure.  I’m also working on several cloud applications and providing consulting for some people and companies when approached related to [...]

Posted in Infrastructure | Tagged .NET, .NET Bits, Amazon Web Services, appharbor, asp.net, asp.net mvc, aws, azure, cloud, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, engineyard, git, heroku, mercurial, microsoft, paas, Ruby on Rails, Ruby on Rails Bits, Software Development, software project, windows azure

Windows Azure SDK Unit Testing Dilemma — F5DD Plz K Thx Bye

Windows Azure SDK Unit Testing Dilemma — F5DD Plz K Thx Bye

By Adron Hall on January 19, 2011

I’m a huge advocate for high quality code. I will admit I don’t always get to write, or am always able to write high quality code. But day in and out I make my best effort at figuring out the best way to write solid, high quality, easy to maintain, easy to read code. Over [...]

Posted in General | Tagged azure, bdd, behavior driven development, F5DD, rants, rest web services, restful, Software Development, tdd, test driven development, unit test, unit testing, web services, windows azure

Gritty Technical Info on Windows Azure Web Roles

Gritty Technical Info on Windows Azure Web Roles

By Adron Hall on January 14, 2011

This is a follow up to the previous blog entry I wrote pertaining to Windows Azure Roles.  I wanted to cover the bases on the various technical aspects of creating a Windows Azure Web Role & Worker Role in Visual Studio 2010.  Without interruption let’s just dive right in.  Start Visual Studio 2010 and initiate a new [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged azure, cloud, cloud computing, how-to, microsoft, web role, web services, windows azure, worker role

Windows Azure Web, Worker, and CGI Roles – How They Work

Windows Azure Web, Worker, and CGI Roles – How They Work

By Adron Hall on January 12, 2011

This is a write up I’ve put together of how the roles in Windows Azure work.  As far as I know, this is all correct – but if there are any Windows Azure Team Members out there that wouldn’t mind providing some feedback about specifics or adding to the details I have here – please [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged Amazon Web Services, architecture, azure, cloud, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, cloud storage, paas, web role, web services, windows azure | 1 Response

Windows Azure and the PaaS Context

Windows Azure and the PaaS Context

By Adron Hall on January 11, 2011

PaaS stands for Platform as a Service.  The new concept around Devops* (Developer + Operations) has allowed cloud computing to reach an apex of agility for business.  For developers PaaS provides an ultimately clean and agile experience around staging and deployment.  PaaS is also the highest level of cost savings for most prospective enterprise and [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged azure, cloud, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, microsoft, paas, platform as a service

Windows Azure and the IaaS Context (or lack thereof)

Windows Azure and the IaaS Context (or lack thereof)

By Adron Hall on January 10, 2011

Windows Azure has several primary competitors in the IaaS Realm, even though they aren’t technically an IaaS Cloud Provider at all.  Some of these competitors in this space are Amazon Web Services (AWS), Rackspace, GoGrid and VMWare.  Each of these providers offer virtual machines with either Windows or Linux Operating Systems, multiple data centers for [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged azure, cloud, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, iaas, Infrastructure as a service, microsoft, vm role

Next »
feed mail facebook twitter linkedin
  • Tags
  • Calendar
  • Comments

accy2 amazon android Apple aws briefs cloud cloud computing collaboration conferences defragcon Enterprise enterprise 2.0 Entrepreneurship facebook google humor iaas IBM innovation insights integration ipad iphone marketing microsoft netsuite open source paas saas salesforce.com sap Security smb Social Business Social CRM social media Start-up Advice Startup Advice startups Tech Market Analysis twitter vc funding venture capital xero

February 2012
M T W T F S S
« Jan    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829  
  • Jennifer Bulotti: LinkSource’s IronTrap™ offers...
  • Adron: I’ve been in this industry a solid...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: Well, I am open to...
  • Mathew Lodge: Thanks for the clarification. You...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: Mathew, Thanks for your...
  • Mathew Lodge: Krish, I run the vCloud team at...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: It doesn’t have any...
  • Clark Updike: Can you elaborate on the tie-in...
  • Owen: Guess I’m more cynical than that....
  • Krishnan Subramanian: Thatz exactly what I told...
  • Aswath Rao: Scoble is misframing his arguments...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: I never said DevOps goes...
  • Adron: I’m late on this article…...
  • Chirag Mehta: I agree that iMessage exists, but...
  • Can OpenSocial Be Resurrected In The Enterprise?: ...

Sponsored Content

Cloud Computing Beyond the Enterprise: Livecasting the Consumer Cloud
Cloud Computing Beyond the Enterprise: Livecasting the Consumer Cloud
Digital Nibbles: The Consumer Cloud & HighTechDad - That’s a Wrap!
Digital Nibbles: The Consumer Cloud & HighTechDad - That’s a Wrap!
Introducing Zoho Support Express Plans complemented with a brand New UI
Introducing Zoho Support Express Plans complemented with a brand New UI
HR Technology Prediction for 2012: Year of the Tablet
HR Technology Prediction for 2012: Year of the Tablet
Why Finance Gets Strategic HR
Why Finance Gets Strategic HR
Zoho Books says ‘Don’t fret while paying multiple bills’
Zoho Books says ‘Don’t fret while paying multiple bills’

Archives

Authors

  • Adron Hall
  • Ben Kepes
  • Chirag Mehta
  • Chris Yeh
  • Christian Reilly
  • Dan Morrill
  • Dave Michels
  • David Terrar
  • Hutch Carpenter
  • Jacob Morgan
  • Jarret Pazahanick
  • Joel York
  • John Taschek
  • Krishnan Subramanian
  • Maksim Ovsyannikov
  • Mark Fidelman
  • Mark Suster
  • Martijn Linssen
  • Paul Miller
  • Raju Vegesna
  • Randy Bias
  • Sadagopan
  • Zoli Erdos

  Sponsored by Intel,  Workday and Zoho