Lenovo Wows with New Tablets

Image representing Netflix as depicted in Crun...

Image via CrunchBase

July 20, 2011 | by jgaskin | channelprosmb.com

Focusing on business customers and consumers, the PC maker has introduced three models featuring Flash graphics and a Netflix streaming certification. Built-in software on the ThinkPad business model eases deployment and security woes for IT pros.
Drum roll, please: Lenovo, headquartered in Research Triangle Park, N.C., has announced a family of tablets for both business customers and consumers. The tablets not only support Flash graphics (something Apple refuses to support for the iPad), but also come with a Netflix streaming certification—the first Android-based tablets to receive this recognition.

Read more about the new IdeaPad K1 and P1 Tablets and the ThinkPad Tablet [here].

Related articles

Cloud Storage Gains Traction as Demand for Data Backup Increases: AMI Report

Fabric Application Interface Standard

Image via Wikipedia

June 30, 2011 | By Nathan Eddy | eWeek.com

Moving storage to the cloud gives companies greater storage capacity and flexibility at a lower cost, the report says.

The proliferation of hackers, natural disasters and unstable market conditions are all significant drivers for small and midsize businesses in the United States to seek backup and storage platforms for their company’s data and email in the cloud. Pressure to reduce costs, improve flexibility and maintain privacy of sensitive data also lures SMBs to invest in cloud storage. Furthermore, for mobile SMB employees, cloud storage is an attractive tool for backing-up and storing data while on the go. Nearly a third (31 percent) of the 1 million U.S. SMBs using hosted storage have mobile employees.

According to AMI-Partners’ recent report U.S. SMB Cloud Playbook, the market for hosted storage will increase by 11 percent yearly compound annual growth rate (CAGR) through 2015, to $270 million. “Many U.S. SMBs are moving to the cloud to enhance existing packaged applications, such as CRM databases. Cloud storage provides these companies with the latest storage technology realizing a significant reduction in IT overhead due to decreased investment in physical storage devices on their premises,” said Nichelle Grannum, survey research analyst at AMI.

Read more [here].

Desktop PCs: Dead as a doornail, or maybe just a fax machine

Desktop computer

Image via Wikipedia

Mobile employees are leaving the traditional desktop in the dust
June 27, 2011 | By James E. Gaskin | Network World

The corporate desktop has looked the same for decades: computer, keyboard, mouse, desk phone, maybe a printer. But do these tools dominate because they’re the perfect combination of technology needed for work today, or is the enterprise workplace due for an extreme makeover?

According to industry analysts, hardware vendors, architects and futurists, the odds that major changes will revamp the standard corporate cubicle, technology tools and even buildings, rise every day.

Of course, fundamental changes like this don’t happen at all once. “When you’ve got hardware in place, it’s tough to yank it out,” cautions Rob Enderle, principal analyst for the Enderle Group. “Some corporate PBXs are still in use from the 1980s. Faxing was declared dead in 1995, but I have two in my office.”

Read more [here].

iCloud Showdown: Apple iCloud Vs. Its Top 5 Competitors

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - JUNE 06:  Apple CEO Steve ...

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Apple iCloud Makes A Splash

Apple’s iCloud, though it won’t hit the market officially until the fall, has already made a tremendous splash. As the lynchpin of Apple’s cloud strategy, iCloud promises to allow users to automatically save content like photos, music, documents and more into the cloud so it is accessible from up to 10 devices. During the Apple iCloud Launch, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said iCloud will work on iOS, PC and Mac devices. According to Apple, iCloud users get 5 GB of storage for free for mail, documents, photos, account information, setting and other app data. Purchased music, apps, books and Photo Stream do not count against the free storage limits.

Read more [here].

Agility and innovation in delivering new apps emerging as key cloud adoption drivers

SOMF Cloud Computing Model

Image via Wikipedia

26 June, 2011 | By Mark Cox

Today, scalability and cost are seen as the primary drivers for cloud usage, while agility and innovation are quickly emerging as a key factor for adoption, as IT organizations view cloud computing as an effective means to implementing new applications quickly to keep pace with application backlogs and business demands.

Those are some of the findings of the inaugural Future of Cloud Computing Survey, conducted by North Bridge Venture Partners in partnership with GigaOM Pro and The 451 Group and supported by more than 30 industry collaborators. The 2011 survey captures current perceptions, sentiments and future expectations of cloud computing from industry experts, users and vendors of cloud software, support and services. 413 respondents participated in the survey, including representatives from both vendor and end user communities. Respondents were asked about a wide range of key issues impacting cloud computing, such as: drivers for cloud computing, inhibitors, sourcing, hiring, TCO, cloud’s effect on business sectors, and user interest for future cloud services.

Read more [here].

Is your business prepared?

A natural disaster or other serious business-disrupting event is not a question of “if,” but rather “when,” for most businesses. All businesses must periodically assess and improve the maturity of their BCM (Business Continuity Management) programs to ensure that current and future operational needs are addressed.

Joplin-F5-Tornado-4According to experts, about 42 million people were forced to flee their homes and businesses because of natural disasters around the world in 2010, more than double the number during the previous year.  42 million people is roughly the size of Argentina’s entire population.  The onslaught of natural disasters in 2011 also has been grim.  The March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan left more than 10,000 people dead, some 17,500 missing and about a half-million homeless.

It is said more than 90% of the disaster displacements in 2010 were caused by weather-related hazards such as floods and storms.  “The intensity and frequency of extreme weather events is increasing, and this trend is only set to continue.” said Elisabeth Rasmusson, the secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council.  In the United States, tornadoes have wreaked havoc from Alabama to Massachusetts, while floods have inundated states from Montana to Louisiana. In May 2011 the southwest Missouri city of Joplin was hit with the U.S.’s deadliest tornado in six decades. It killed at least 141 people and destroyed more than 8,000 homes in a city of about 50,000 people.  The EF 5 tornado that destroyed much of Joplin also destroyed medical records from St. John’s Regional Medical Center.  Pieces of medical records and even x-rays were found up to 75 miles outside of Joplin.

Joplin-F5-Tornado-2There are non-nature related scenarios that businesses should be prepared for as well.  Examples include, fire, malicious employees, theft, human error, hardware failure, software failure, computer virus and malware.  The odds of any one of these disasters impacting a business is high.  Being prepared could mean the difference between your business surviving or not.

Business Continuity Management is the activity performed by an organization to ensure that critical business functions will be available to customers, suppliers, regulators, and other entities that must have access to those functions. The two high level parameters to consider during BCM planning are the recovery time objectives (RTO) — i.e., the desired time to recover applications and recovery point objectives (RPO) — i.e., the acceptable transaction loss.

Joplin-F5-Tornado-1At Paruzia Technologies our mission is to partner with businesses to enable them to gain efficiencies and improve their capabilities. That means that being a part of a BCM strategy for our customers is core to our business. Our services are designed to be fault tolerant both locally at the place of business and at the data center(s) that hosts customer data. What that really means is that when disaster strikes our clients are covered and business keeps going. Can your current IT solution do that for you?

Learn about Cloud Computing for your businessTechnology Made Human

Enhanced by Zemanta

Desktop Virtualization Taking Off, but Physical Desktops to Stay: Survey

Citrix Headquarters in Coral Springs

Image via Wikipedia

DATE: 2011-06-16 | By Nathan Eddy

While many companies are adopting desktop virtualization, few are going completely virtual in the near-term.

Research conducted by Matrix42 at the 2011 Citrix Synergy San Francisco conference shows that desktop virtualization is finally being adopted by the mainstream market, with 59 percent of companies either in the process or planning to deploy within the next six months. Desktop virtualization initiatives are driven by a number of perceived benefits, but the biggest is reduced cost of management and support. An overwhelming number of respondents (70 percent) confirmed their desire to use a single tool for managing both physical and virtual desktops rather than having to use separate solutions.

Read more [here].

Learn about Cloud Computing for your business

What is Cloud Computing?

Geek speak
Man Relaxing At Office Desk In a Green FieldCloud Computing isn’t really new but the term caught on a few years ago. Cloud Computing simply means accessing resources and using services over the internet. Almost everyone in the West has been using cloud services for more than a decade.

Some examples of Cloud Computing are online banking, buying music from iTunes, electronic books, movie services like Netflix, Gmail and even Facebook. To be even more specific it is internet-based computing, whereby shared “resources” (servers, disk space, firewalls, backup, software and the services needed to install and support it) are provided to users’ personal computer, laptop and other devices on-demand, like a utility (electricity, water, etc.).

SaaS, or “Software as a Service” is a cloud computing service. The hardware, software and support required to host and deliver the application is the sole responsibility of the SaaS provider, not the end user. The end user only pays for the service of using the software on an as-needed subscription basis or simply uses the service.

Bringing the Cloud down to earth
The best way to illustrate what Cloud Computing is and why it’s spreading like wildfire is to compare it to the modern electric utility industry. On September 4, 1882, Thomas Edison opened the Pearl Street electricity generating station in New York city, introducing the concept of electricity as a utility. There were four key elements introduced by Edison’s concept of electricity as utility that were, previously, unheard of: 

  1. Reliable central generation, 
  2. Efficient distribution,
  3. Successful end use (in 1882, the light bulb), and
  4. Competitive price.

Up until 1882, factories or other entities requiring electrical power were required to build and maintain their own generators – a very expensive, time consuming distraction for most companies whose core business centered on producing a product or other service. The idea of being able to pay for electricity as a utility as opposed to producing it on their own was a highly-attractive proposition for businesses who didn’t want the cost and distraction of producing their own power.

Cloud Computing is essentially offering the same promise to businesses today.  Very few people or businesses generate their own electricity with generator or windmill and live off the grid.  Until recently, the cost of building and maintaining your own computer network in house has been a “necessary evil” of running a business. But now, thanks to major advancements in Internet connectivity and technology, businesses can simply pay for basic IT necessities on a “utility” basis. Of course, Cloud Computing isn’t ideal for everyone just yet and we will see a period of hybrid networks where businesses have some applications in the cloud and others on site; but it IS a much smarter, lower-cost way of meeting basic computing needs (e-mail, spreadsheets, word processing, backup, and file sharing for example).

So Cloud Computing is like trading in your generator and all the related cost and upkeep of doing it on your own and connecting to the grid for electricity. You pay a monthly fee and it just works. Cool, huh?

Why would a business owner choose cloud computing over a traditional network?

  • The cost of buying, installing and supporting a computer network goes down dramatically.
  • You gain greater flexibility in accessing your computer network (files, applications, etc.) remotely and from various devices (laptop, iPad, Blackberry, etc).
  • You gain the benefit of having built-in disaster recovery and data backup.
  • You can purchase cheaper workstations (devices) and get them to last longer since the computing “power” is in the cloud and not on the individual workstation.
  • Since you are paying for the service like a utility, it’s cheaper and easier to add and remove workers from your network.
  • You avoid hefty network upgrade costs.
  • You no longer need to pay for someone to maintain your network (server, firewall, patch management, backups, etc.)

What cloud computing is NOT
There is a lot of Cloud Computing mumbo jumbo out there. The term “Cloud Computing” gets thrown around a lot and is often used to describe the following services, which are only pieces of a Cloud Computing solution. As a business owner you shouldn’t need to deal with all the geek-Greek. You should leave that to a Cloud specialist like Paruzia.

Business Benefits Of Cloud Computing

  • Eliminates capital expenditures for hardware, software, networking equipment
  • Ensures automatic software licensing compliance
  • Eliminates the business risk associated with owning and managing computer technology
  • Reduces administrative overhead and associated costs
  • Liberates existing IT staff to refocus on strategic, business building objectives and projects
  • Maximizes business productivity with anytime, anywhere and any device availability for users
  • Built-in, state-of-the-art business continuity and disaster recovery capabilities
  • Financial flexibility and control over IT spending

Learn about Cloud Computing for your business

Technology Made Human

Apple goes on WWDC-related domain buying spree

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - JUNE 06:  Apple CEO Steve ...

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

June 9, 2011 12:09 PM PDT – by

The same day Apple kicked off its Worldwide Developers Conference, the company staked its claim on domain names that include keywords of features in iCloud, iOS 5, and Mac OS X Lion.
Whois records dug up by TechCrunch show the company purchased at least 50 domain names. Some go directly to feature pages on Apple’s Web site, while others dead end or show up as not yet being hosted.

Read more [here].

Donations, Fast Action Help Joplin VARs Get Customers Back Online

Former logo of the YMCA in the United States u...

Image via Wikipedia

By Scott Campbell, CRN
May 27, 2011    4:20 PM ET

Donations from the IT industry are pouring into Joplin, Mo., to help VARs and businesses hit by the tornado that tore through the city May 22.

Heartland Technology Solutions, a Joplin-based VAR, on Friday delivered a Mitel 5000 phone system and 12 handsets, donated by Mitel, to the Joplin Family YMCA, which had announced the previous day that it would offer free day care to families impacted by the tornado.

Home Depot donated $100,000 to the YMCA to help run the program but the YMCA has struggled to meet the demand of people calling in with requests for child care. More than 300 signed up the first day and the demand is expected to increase, said Cookie Estrada, CEO and executive director at the Joplin Family YMCA.

Read more [here].