Cloud Based Solutions That Set Business Free
Berkeley Explains Exactly Why It Chose Google Over Microsoft
Matt Rosoff | Dec. 23, 2011, 12:36 AM
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].
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What is Cloud Computing?
Geek speak
Cloud 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:
- Reliable central generation,
- Efficient distribution,
- Successful end use (in 1882, the light bulb), and
- 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

Microsoft Hyper-V Now Supports Linux-based CentOS
By James Niccolai, IDG News May 16, 2011 2:00 pm
Microsoft has added support for another Linux server distribution with its Hyper-V virtualization software, its latest move to compete better with virtualization market leader VMware.
Customers can now run the CentOS flavor of Linux as a guest operating system in supported Windows Server 2008 R2 Hyper-V environments, Sandy Gupta, general manager for marketing in Microsoft’s Open Solutions Group, was due to announce at the Open Source Business Conference in San Francisco Monday.
Read More: http://www.pcworld.com/article/227967/microsoft_hyperv_now_supports_linuxbased_centos.html
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Can Microsoft Properly Host Its Own Cloud Applications?

- Image via Wikipedia
Consider the following scenario: You’re a managed services provider. Instead of investing big bucks to build your own hosted applications, you entrust your end-customers to Microsoft’s cloud — including Exchange Online and SharePoint Online.
Read more at http://www.mspmentor.net/2010/09/07/can-microsoft-properly-host-its-own-cloud-applications/
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6 SaaS Metrics You Should Track

- Image by Jeff Kubina via Flickr
As you work to develop your product – before and after launch, it’s important that you use more than just “gut feelings” to ascertain what’s working and what’s not. Along those lines, last week, Ryan Carson, co-founder of Carsonified offered a list of six key metrics for your web app and how to track them.
It’s a great list – with definitions, calculation methods, examples, and even a link to a Google spreadsheet (see below for link) that you can use to input your own data.
Read more at http://www.readwriteweb.com/cloud/2010/09/6-saas-metrics-you-should-trac.php.
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How mobile will kill off Microsoft Office

- Image via CrunchBase
Everyone knows they use a small fraction of Office capabilities, yet still pay $200 for the whole thing. With mobile, they don’t have to.
Microsoft Office is in the enviable position of being on practically everyone’s desktop or laptop, even though it hasn’t offered anything new since the 1997 edition (or maybe 2002/XP version, which added hyperlinks support) that 95 percent of the users need. Yet users and companies pay $200 or so per license every few years because — well, because it’s a bad habit we’ve all gotten into that provides Microsoft huge ongoing revenues in return for, frankly, nothing.
Read more at http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobilize/how-mobile-will-kill-microsoft-office-327
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Microsoft hungry to eat VMWare’s lunch

- Image via Wikipedia
As VMWare prepares for this week’s annual conference, Microsoft is looking to steal both the company’s thunder and its customers.
In an advertisement in Tuesday’s USA Today, Microsoft urges VMware customers to think twice before signing a new long-term contract with the virtualization company.
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