Friday 4 September 2015

Structure News: The ABCs of SLAs, cloudy skies for the FAA, and VMware's world

STRUCTURE EVENTS Newsletter
 
Where Virtualization Is Real
September 4th, 2015 / by Tom Krazit
This week, we'll talk about ways to avoid getting screwed on a cloud deal, the domination of Ubuntu Linux in the cloud, and the questions answered and unanswered by VMworld.
STRUCTURE NEWS
I HOPE YOU'RE READY FOR AN AMAZING YEAR OF STRUCTURE SHOWS

Former Gigaom writer Derrick Harris has been involved with Structure for years, orchestrating themes, planning sessions, and interviewing important guests with such aplomb that it allowed us to grow the Structure Series events each year. We're more than thrilled to announce that Derrick, now at Fortune, is also going to be involved with Structure this fall, and heavily involved with the resurrection of the Structure Data event in March 2016. Derrick is one of the primary thinkers and writers when it comes to the evolution of "big data," and we're lucky to have his talents at our disposal.
 
Remember, Structure 2015 takes place November 18th and 19th in San Francisco. Buy your tickets here.
 
INDUSTRY NEWS
AWS: WELCOME TO OUR NEW COLLEAGUES AT ELEMENTAL
Amazon Web Services said it acquired a Portland cloud startup, Elemental, Thursday afternoon for a reported $500 million in cash (according to The Information, subscription required). Elemental focuses on software for streaming video, which could help AWS attract and retain video companies as cloud customers.

CLOUD PROVIDERS SLAS: WHAT TO LOOK FOR

We spend a lot of time talking about the servers, networking, and processors that enable the public cloud, but if you're a public cloud customer you should really focus your attention on one thing: your service-level agreement. Datamation has some good pointers to consider before signing your next headache-as-a-service deal.

UBUNTU LINUX CONTINUES TO RULE THE CLOUD

The impact of Linux on the development of the public cloud can't be understated, and it turns out that Canonical's Ubuntu is the most dominant flavor of that operating system used by public cloud providers. ZDNet looks at a study by The Cloud Market that analyzed AWS instances, and that report sets up Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth's upcoming talk at Structure 2015 quite nicely.

THE FAA STARTS MOVING TO THE CLOUD

The puns almost write themselves: The Federal Aviation Administration has agreed to start putting some workloads in the cloud (AWS and Microsoft's Azure were singled out) through government contractor CSC. Techcrunch reports that it's a ten-year $109 million deal, and while the wheels of government bureaucracy turn far slower than the tech industry, it's a start when it comes to modernizing government IT infrastructure (which we pay for, after all).

ICONIQ LEADS $75 MILLION ROUND FOR NETSKOPE TO SECURE CLOUD APPS 

Looking for the next cloud gold rush? Security startup Netskope just raised another $75 million in a Series D funding round led by Iconiq Capital, according to the Wall Street Journal. Netskope helps companies secure cloud apps that employees start using on their own, which can leave sensitive data exposed.
BIG PICTURE
 
San Francisco's population decreased significantly this week thanks to Burning Man, but VMware managed to offset that somewhat by bringing in 23,000 people for its annual developer conference. However, it was likely a tumultuous week for the company behind the scenes, with two prominent tech executives leaving just last week and CEO Pat Gelsinger (above) facing more questions about the long-term survival of the EMC federation than about his company's products.
 
There certainly were products to announce: vCloud Air has some new upgraded features, according to Fortune, but CRN reported on the eve of VMworld that the company is taking its foot off the gas when it comes to future product developments, which would make some sense if a big corporate shift is in the company's future. It announced support for Docker containers inside a new version of vSphere, but VMware's core virtualization technology is precisely what is threatened by the rise of Docker and containers in general.
 
I'm looking forward to two things this fall when it comes to VMware: corporate clarity around its future, because the market for cloud services will be better off by having as many strong, focused companies as possible, and a talk from Bill Fathers, executive president and general manager of VMware's Cloud Services Business, at Structure 2015. Fathers is expected to talk about team-building during his session, and I'm particularly curious to hear about how VMware is keeping its people focused during what might be a abrupt change this fall.
 
"We're entering the professional era of the cloud, leaving the experimental era behind," Gelsinger said this week. An awful lot of VMware customers are starting to wonder how the company plans to handle the professional era.
 
 
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