Kansas City Gets Some Respect

UMKC Bloch School

UMKC Bloch School (Photo credit: umkcofficial)

No respect.  How come we don’t get no respect?  For mid-westerners, this question might soon be reimagined as “what are we going to do with all this respect and recognition?”  After many years of concerted effort by many people (thank you Charles Wheeler), we are finally getting some recognition.  Whether from Google, the Bloch School, or the Kauffman Foundation, people seem to be noticing us.  The community stands to benefit here.

I was speaking last week with Carlos Gomez, who has been leading the KC Hispanic Chamber for a few years.  We agreed that the border wars between Kansas and Missouri are kind of silly.  It’s a classic win-lose orientation.  With more people focused on the Midwest as a destination for animal sciences, technology innovation, and venture capital, the pie is getting larger.  We can all win.  There is enough for everyone, I promise.  This is an opportunity to jump on the goodwill train and contribute to an exciting time of growth.

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Chrome now world’s top browser

google chrome

google chrome (Photo credit: toprankonlinemarketing)

Chrome now world’s top browser, but beware the math

The browser, according to data compiled by StatCounter, topped Internet Explorer to become the world’s most popular browser last week

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There’s no debating Google Chrome continues to gain momentum and put pressure on Internet Explorer. But according to one browser-tracking firm, it’s now more popular than Microsoft’s alternative.

Analytics site StatCounter has revealed that for the first time, Google Chrome overtook Internet Explorer last week to become the world’s most popular browser. According to the data the company compiled, during the week of May 14 to May 20, Chrome secured 32.76 percent market share, compared to Microsoft’s 31.94 percent.

Read more [here].

Bold Steps Towards the Future

Image representing Google as depicted in Crunc...

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The new technology landscape can offer operating efficiencies for all sizes of business.  In the last several months, we have seen this belief reinforced by the migration of leading public and private institutions onto both the Google Apps and the Office 365 platform.

On the public sphere, we saw The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration move onto the Google for Government platform, with 25,000 seats.  UC Berkeley (50,000 seats) also migrated to Google, and told us exactly why they chose Google over Microsoft.  More recently, The All India Council for Technical Education shook hands with Microsoft executives, a deal that will move 7 million students, faculty, and staff onto the Office 365 version for education.  This is now the largest ever cloud migration.  On the private side, and from the banking industry no less, the Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, which is headquartered in Spain, recently moved 110,000 employees onto the Google Apps for Business platform.

Obviously, we are moving towards market majority who are now or will soon be leveraging the new platform for business efficiency.  Companies who are nervous about critical information will simply keep that information on their local servers.  For the day to day routine of employee collaboration and communication, the cloud based solutions are being adopted in droves.

These news items beg the question; what about the small business owner?  Can the cloud help small business operate leaner also?  My next blog post will offer an apples to apples cost analysis.

Kansas City Moves Towards the Cloud

English: Breakdown of Cloud Computing Services
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If you are a person who is responsible for your firms’ strategic technology choices, you may want to pay attention to the discussion over TCO and cloud services. Total Cost of Ownership is a metric that seeks to understand all the factors, human and otherwise, that go into owning and operating your technology.

Most managers are pretty level headed, and tend to ask really blunt, straight forward questions like “so what?” If the executive is ambitious, the first question may be “How can my firm operate at peak capacity?”  This is an important question because it assumes that the technology is there to support mission critical business functions like customer experience.  The second and third questions might be: “how much does it cost?” and, “will I have to have to learn how to work again?”

The next question might be “what’s my liability if my information security is breached”, which you can read about in other places. The question about capacity tends to trump the cost question, and here’s why. Your success, if you are in a dynamic industry, demands that you perform at a very high level. Accountants measure things like goodwill as a way to account for reputation and brand preference. If you are planning on maintaining your position as a leading firm, or on gaining a position as a leading firm, you understand completely the necessity for smooth operations and a superior customer experience. The fundamental goal of a manager who handles technology should be to improve the bottom line through streamlined process management and education. The technology needs to support your most important assets; your clients and your employees. The costs of not doing this are counted in lost market position and missed opportunities. For some businesses, even one missed opportunity can outweigh the cost of maintaining a technology system.

That being said, the cost question is a real one. Industry reports are floating around that claim to decode the costs of technology ownership. If you have time, I’m sure you will read many of them. The bottom line is that, yes, for many types of companies a cloud based solution can save money. It saves money and it works. This is why the momentum is shifting towards the cloud brokers.

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Berkeley Explains Exactly Why It Chose Google Over Microsoft

Matt Rosoff | Dec. 23, 2011, 12:36 AM

Image representing Google Apps as depicted in ...

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The University of California at Berkeley just decided to move off its old email system. It chose Gmail over Microsoft’s Office 365.

Usually, the decision-making process that goes into such a choice is shrouded in secrecy. But Berkeley decided to be transparent, and published a matrix explaining the pros and cons of both solutions.

In basic terms, Cal decided it could get Google Apps up and running faster and for less money.

Read more [here].

How Cloud Computing Will Change IT: 6 New Predictions

Fri, July 29, 2011 | By Bernard Golden

CIO — IT is in a time of disruptive transition, caused by the rise of cloud computing. CIOs are in the midst of a maelstrom, and—like Ulysses, the fabled hero from Homer’s Odyssey—are torn between the Scylla of established IT practices and the Charybdis of the future, both of which loom dangerously and portend trouble. Also like Ulysses, many CIOs must inure themselves to the din of tempting Sirens: the vendors who sing a sweet song of painless cloud transformation, made possible by the purchase of some software, or hardware, or a set of cloud services.

One can predict that, CIOs, like Ulysses, will eventually pass into calm waters—the future in which new processes and products will replace the legacy activities that make up today’s IT world. The shorthand term for these new entities is cloud computing.

It’s hard to envision that new world, of course, caught up as we are in the turmoil of today. Nevertheless, in my opinion, one can make confident predictions about how the cloud revolution will materialize. The light emanating from the cloud is strong enough that the outlines of the post-cloud future may be discerned.

Read more [here].

Cloud Computing Chops Energy Costs, Carbon Emissions: Study

Diagram showing three main types of cloud comp...

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By Andrew R Hickey, CRN
July 20, 2011

Cloud computing has the potential to save large companies a total of $12.3 billion annually on energy costs and reduce annual carbon emissions by 85.7 metric tons come 2020, according to a recent study examining the environmental impact of cloud computing published by the Carbon Disclosure Project.

The study, “Cloud Computing: The IT Solution for the 21st Century,” revealed that those dramatic energy savings and carbon emission reductions come as the amount of cloud computing spending by large U.S. enterprises increased from 10 percent to 69 percent of IT budgets. The study was conducted by independent analyst research firm Verdantix and was sponsored by AT&T (NYSE:T). It found that companies plan to accelerate their adoption of cloud computing from 10 percent to 69 percent of their IT spending by 2020.

Read more [here].

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

Fabric Application Interface Standard

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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

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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].