As public cloud services became The IT Plan among growing Silicon Valley startups, there was a fair amount of scorn heaped on the "hybrid cloud," or a combination of public cloud and private datacenters advanced by legacy enterprise tech companies. But years later, now that cloud computing services are practically mainstream,
Fortune takes a look at the state of the hybrid cloud and wonders if this is the more practical future.
IBM PUMPS UP ITS HYBRID CLOUD MUSCLE WITH GRAVITANT BUY Speaking of hybrid clouds and legacy IT vendors, IBM continues to prop up its cloud strategy by purchasing startups left and right. The latest is Gravitant, which
according to IDG News Service makes software that helps customers manage workloads spread across multiple clouds.
TECTONIC, COREOS'S KUBERNETES-BASED CONTAINER PLATFORM, HITS GENERAL AVAILABILITY Just in time for Structure 2015, when CoreOS CEO Alex Polvi and Google's Kubernetes guru Eric Brewer will share the stage, CoreOS announced this week that Tectonic is out of beta. Tectonic is basically the CoreOS operating system plus Kubernetes in one distribution, and
Techcrunch reports that CoreOS is seeing traction with banks and telecom companies.
MICROSOFT AND RED HAT TEAM UP TO OFFER LINUX ON AZURE CLOUD Ten years ago this announcement would have blown people's minds, but in 2015, it's more like, what took you so long?
Recode notes that Azure customers will be able to specify Red Hat instances on Azure and that the partnership will also help customers with the theme of this week's newsletter, hybrid cloud.
MICROSOFT'S ONEDRIVE PRICE HIKE HAS WRECKED ITS CLOUD STRATEGY One step forward, one step back for Microsoft this week? That's what
The Register thinks after Microsoft decided to decrease the amount of free storage it makes available on its OneDrive service and raise prices, in response to a small number of customers who were apparently abusing the old system. "Changing OneDrive limits may seem a small thing, but it is a risky move for a company that is addressing declining Windows sales by investing in cloud services," author Tim Anderson writes.
DROPBOX TRIES TO BOOST ITS REP BY TAKING A SWIPE AT BOX It's been a rough year or so for Dropbox, which is facing lots of questions about its massive valuation amid greater concern about the so-called "unicorns."
Wired attended an enterprise-oriented event put on by Dropbox this week, but the event only seemed to underscore that rival Box has more of a grip on enterprise customers, a potentially huge market compared to the consumer-oriented customer base of Dropbox.