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Black Hats, White Hats, and Hard Hats The Need for Encryption in Mining and Resources – Australian Mining

Mineral Blue announcesFedora, a socially responsible encryption system.

Are you concerned by criminals having access to strong encryption? Youre right to be worried. Modern encryption is virtually impossible for governments to crack. That means criminals can operate in secret.

At the same time, honest people need access to cryptography. Without it, every innocent transaction is at risk.

Governments routinely ask encryption providers to provide backdoors that enable them to decrypt ciphertext. This puts providers in a difficult position. Backdoors create weaknesses that can be exploited by a different set of criminals.

This may already be happening, without your knowledge.

Fedora solves this problem by providing secure private key access to the government of your choice from the outset.

Fedora is aimed at socially responsible businesses and individuals.

Fedora isopen source, andfree.

Fedora goes live on Google Play on January 1.

Mineral Blue is an advanced, cloud-based safe work system for the mining and resources industries.www.mineral.blue

To download this whitepaper, fill in and submit the form below:

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How can enterprises secure encrypted traffic from cloud applications? – TechTarget

A recent report found that cloud-based application use is driving up the use of SSL/TLS. What is the correlation...

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between the two? Are there any drawbacks that network security teams should be aware of when it comes to increased SSL/TLS traffic?

With many applications being utilized in a SaaS model, it's important to encrypt the traffic between end users and applications. When personal and sensitive data is transferred, processed or stored off local premises, the connections between these points need to be secured.

Many large websites default to SSL/TLS, increasing the encrypted traffic on the internet. This is a plus for data security, but malicious actors can and do take advantage of this encryption with their malware, spoofing and C2 servers. With organizations like Let's Encrypt and Amazon Web Services, attackers use these flexible, well-designed and inexpensive technologies for malicious purposes. It's for this reason that enterprises need to make monitoring of encrypted traffic and decryption appliances mandatory in networks.

The recent increase in SSL/TLS traffic within networks is cause for both delight and concern. The security community has seen the need for encryption, but so have malicious actors. From a network security standpoint, it's important to be cautious when dealing with encrypted traffic. Its use is only going to grow from here, and the majority of internet traffic will move toward end-to-end encryption.

With this increased traffic, network security administrators should look for decryption methods for monitoring and visibility purposes. It's one thing to understand where the traffic is destined to go -- many companies are using this to alert them of known malicious IP addresses -- but it's a completely different thing to have the capability to review the complete packet data for risks outside the source and destination IP addresses.

Including SSL inspection hardware on encrypted traffic at choke points within a network for additional visibility should become a priority. However, doing so will increase overhead, so validate the current resources on the hardware and determine what increase in resources might occur.

Organizations rely on SaaS apps more than ever now, so there needs to be visibility into what's being sent to these third-party providers. Another step organizations can take to increase their data governance around encrypted traffic is to use tools that enable visibility into encrypted traffic, and that also include data loss prevention functions to search for sensitive or malicious data being sent to SaaS apps. Cloud access security brokers are also in a growing field that can help organizations gain insight into their traffic.

When adding SSL inspection to your arsenal of security monitoring, be aware of how your appliance is encrypting outbound data. There were issues in the past with particular proxies re-encrypting the data with lower security standards than organizations were using -- or thought they were using. Also, keep in mind that key management on the certifications being used for inspection should be handled carefully, as to not disrupt traffic during expirations.

Ask the expert:Want to ask Matt Pascucci a question about security?Submit your question nowvia email. (All questions are anonymous.)

Find out why HTTPS interception tools weaken TLS security

Learn why the lack of SSL traffic inspection poses a threat to enterprises

Check out the SSL VPN based on open source software

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Huawei Releases the New-Generation Intelligent Cloud Hardware Platform Atlas – Markets Insider

SHANGHAI, Sept. 6, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Today at HUAWEI CONNECT 2017, Huawei released the new-generation intelligent cloud hardware platform - Atlas. Positioned for scenarios such as public cloud, artificial intelligence (AI), and high-performance computing (HPC), Atlas rides on the advantages of key technologies including heterogeneous resource pooling and intelligent orchestration to deliver new levels of hardware resource utilization and adapt more flexibly to service demands. As the result of Huawei's Boundless Computing strategy, the Atlas platform makes Huawei well positioned to steer the infrastructure resource pool revolution.

With the rise of AI research and application, AI and cloud computing technologies will be integral to people's daily lives. From applications such as safe city and smart manufacturing to autonomous driving, AI and cloud technologies are spreading. Meanwhile, pivotal to intelligence is having capabilities that allow numerous systems to process in real time the massive volumes of data generated from a world of full connectivity. For example, a city with 100,000 cameras installed can produce 100 billion car plate records and 1 trillion facial recognition records a year. It has become a tremendous challenge for traditional computing systems to deliver the required capabilities in order to process, query, and analyze data of such a high order of magnitude.

Built for the public cloud, AI, and HPC scenarios, the Atlas platform released by Huawei addresses the data processing challenges in the AI era. The Atlas platform is based on Huawei's FusionServer G series heterogeneous servers. The FusionServer G series leverages technologies such as heterogeneous resource pooling and intelligent orchestration to pool resources like GPUs, HDDs, and SSDs, and provides hardware resources on demand to suit the needs of specific service models.

Atlas drives an over 50% higher resource utilization efficiency, and boosts performance by over 10x compared with the traditional x86 architecture, meanwhile slashing the hardware device types for customers. Additionally, Atlas can provision logical servers in different resource configuration ratios, and deploy the servers within seconds, significantly shortening the service rollout cycle while empowering customers with the flexibility to adapt to service changes.

"As the AI era is approaching, traditional hardware cannot meet the requirements on development of AI and cloud technologies," said Qiu Long, President, IT Server Product Line, Huawei. "Positioned as a new-generation intelligent cloud hardware platform, Huawei's Atlas pioneers heterogeneous resource pooling and intelligent orchestration technologies to bring resource utilization and performance to new high levels. Atlas is also the fruit of Huawei's Boundless Computing strategy. Huawei has been inspired by the idea of making computing simple through continuous innovation, and keeps customers' requirements in mind to build servers that are stable, reliable, and high-performing, to help customers better cope with the challenges for successful transformation in the AI and cloud era."

Huawei has strategized Boundless Computing as a major step to building a better connected world. The Boundless Computing strategy advocates innovations around computing and leverages innovative chips, heterogeneous computing, and edge computing in order to push the traditional computing boundaries that used to be confined to CPUs, servers, and data centers. At HUAWEI CONNECT 2017, Huawei has released multiple brand new public cloud services based on the Atlas hardware platform, including GPU and FPGA cloud services, empowering AI applications with cloud capabilities and enabling customers to access heterogeneous computing services with more ease and speed.

Huawei servers and the entire IT product line have emerged to the global IT mainstream. Huawei delivers leading performance, and simplified and efficient IT infrastructure to help enterprises accomplish their digital transformation. So far, 197 companies on the Fortune Global 500 list and 45 companies in the Fortune Global 100 have chosen Huawei as their digital transformation partner.

HUAWEI CONNECT, Huawei's flagship event for the global ICT industry, is taking place at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre from September 5-7, 2017 under the theme of "Grow with the Cloud". At this global platform for open collaboration, Huawei together with its customers and partners will explore new growth opportunities through digital transformation. For more information, please visit http://www.huawei.com/en/events/huaweiconnect2017/

SOURCE Huawei

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HPE Reports Q3 Gains Along With Cloud Deal – EnterpriseTech

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Hewlett Packard Enterprise reported better-than-expected earnings for its third quarter ending July 31 despite what it described as continued "commodities cost pressures" related to tighter memory supplies for servers. It also announced a cloud acquisition.

The hybrid IT specialist also reported unexpected gains in its server business as its "pivots" beyond the datacenter to greener pastures such as HPC while mapping its strategy in the emerging all-flash storage market.

CEO Meg Whitman also addressed reports she was in the running to head the ride-share service Uber, acknowledging interest in the position but declaring she would remain as head of HPE.

The company reported third quarter revenues totaling $8.21 billion, ahead of analysts' estimate of about $ $7.5 billion. The company (NYSE: HPE) also exceeded its earnings-per-share target while operating margins rose sequentially.

The results also reflect completion of the "spin-merge" of its enterprise software business to U.K. vendor Micro Focus. HPE stock jumped 5 percent in response to the quarterly results, and is up 3 percent since the beginning of the year.

As it exits the application software business to focus on systems software used in datacenters and cloud deployments, Whitman said future acquisitions in area such as storage would focus on "organic growth." To that end, the company announced earlier in the day it is acquiring the consulting firm Cloud Technology Partners.

Founded in 2010, the "cloud agnostic" consulting firm helps customers determine the appropriate environment for running specific workloads. Whitman said the acquisition strengthens HPE's "hybrid IT" approach that spans datacenters, public and private clouds as well as systems software.

Asked whether the service would draw customers away from its on-premises IT services to public clouds, Whitman replied. "We will add our expertise with [on-premises] private cloud" and the acquisition is "an opportunity to scale that practice." She added: "There are some workloads that customers probably should move to a public cloud. Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) Azure is HPE public cloud partner.

Whitman and Tim Stonesifer, HPE's chief financial officer, made frequent references to the impact of what Stonesifer called "ongoing commodities pressure" related to tight supplies of DRAMs used in servers.

"We continue to see commodities pressure," Stonesifer noted, adding that the company expects rising memory prices at least through the end of this year. HPE reportedly plans to raise its server memory prices by 20 percent in response to accelerating adoption of higher density memory modules. Tightening supplies for server memories also is being driven by increased for DDR4 memory modules as new platforms such as Intel's (NASDAQ: INTC) Skylake-SP, or "Purley" are introduced.

As DRAM supplies tighten, memory prices have risen between 5 and 10 percent. "We'll see what happens with commodity prices," Whitman said.

Meanwhile, HPE's overall server business grew during the third quarter, and its expects to gain market share in its core datacenter business while "pivoting" to higher-end markets such as HPC.

"We are cautiously optimistic about our server business," Whitman added, especially with blade and next-generation servers "with security built into servers at the chip level."

In the competitive storage business, HPE touts the introduction of all-flash arrays in its 3Par storage line along with its recent acquisition of all- and hybrid flash array provider Nimble Storage. Competitors such Dell EMC also are rolling out all-flash storage options while targeting their existing customer bases. "We have to go mine our installed base" as competitors have, Whitman said. "This is a fundamental [technology] in the datacenter."

As for her dalliance with Uber, Whitman said: "In the end, it wasn't the right thing," adding, "I actually am not going anywhere."

Related

About the author: George Leopold

George Leopold has written about science and technology for more than 25 years, focusing on electronics and aerospace technology. He previously served as Executive Editor for Electronic Engineering Times.

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Melbourne Server Hosting Renamed to iomart – Web Host Industry Review

Five years after acquiring Manchester-based Melbourne Server Hosting, iomart Group is renaming it to iomart to promote a wider range of services to businesses in the Manchester area and across northwest England, according to a Monday announcement.

Melbourne Server Hosting has billed itself as a web host for e-commerce and digital agencies, while iomarts services also include designing, building, and managing physical and virtual platforms, and hybrid and cloud-based environments.

As of the announcement, Melbournes websitedirects visitors to iomart.com to find out more about the wide range of managed hosting and cloud services we offer.

We believe the time is right to change the name to iomart to reflect the increased capabilities we can offer in all areas of digital transformation, said iomart Manchester Sales Director Rob Grimshaw. iomart doesnt sell one type of hosting, we offer a vast range of products and services backed by industry-leading technical expertise to help with whatever IT challenges you are facing. By focusing on the iomart brand we can take this clear message to the whole of the north west.

The 2012 deal brought iomart to the Northern England market for a reported $11 million. That was the first in a series of acquisitions by the Glasgow-based iomart, which culminated in an 11 million deal for United Hosting in late 2015.

iomart also announced Tuesday it has been named a finalist for Mid-Market Business of the Year by Lloyds Bank National Business Awards.

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Cloud ERP: The rising alternative to hosting your own – CIO Australia

One of the first tasks Tom Doria was charged with when he was brought on board as CIO of SeneGence International late last year was to evaluate cloud services for ERP. The global manufacturer and multilevel marketing company for womens cosmetics is experiencing tremendous growth and its platform couldnt match the pace needed for the company to remain competitive, says Doria.

We have been using an ERP package that was designed more for a small or medium business market and didnt have the extensibility and scalability capabilities that we were looking for to run a Fortune 500 company, he says.

Doria is in the throes of evaluating all the major players in the ERP space, but has no doubt the cloud is the future home for SeneGences core business apps.

In fact, while he continues his research, as an interim step, Doria has already moved all the companys Acumatica ERP processes into Microsoft Azure to take advantage of what he calls scalability and survivability.

[ Check out our guide to enterprise resource planning (ERP) and learn the 10 early warning signs of ERP disaster. | Get weekly insights by signing up for our CIO Leader newsletter. ]

He has no illusions that a full-blown migration will be a quick or easy process. Implementing an ERP package is not an instantaneous journey; it takes 12 months or potentially longer. But Doria is convinced it will be well worth it and be a panacea for helping SeneGence address the needs of a high-volume business that operates 24/7/365.

SeneGence is by no means alone. By 2020, the organizational norm will be hybrid ERP environments, where a combination of on-premises and cloud-based models will be deployed, according to PwC.

Gartner projects at least half of large enterprises will successfully implement a software-as-a-service strategy by 2025 and run their core ERP systems in the cloud. The reasons mirror why other workloads and apps are steadily being moved to the cloud: scalability, reliability, elasticity and cost savings, to name a few. IT leaders also say maintaining hardware, software and infrastructure is no longer a core part of their business, and freeing up IT resources enables staff to play a more strategic role in helping their organizations be innovative and competitive.

Businesses need to think differently than they did 20 years ago, explains Michael Guay, research director of ERP strategy at Gartner. When it comes to deciding whether to move an ERP system to the cloud or keep it on-premises, Guay tells clients they need to strike a balance between the functionality I get and how much of a good fit is it, versus going with best of breed, which will make my life more complicated because it means more vendors and more products in the mix.

Its not an either-or proposition, he adds. The reason a lot of people were dissatisfied with their ERP system [was because] the decision was not Should I buy from one or two vendors if you were an Oracle shop you bought from Oracle. Often, that meant you had a functional app that didnt suit the needs of the business, so you had to customize a solution and that leads you down a very bad path.

By contrast, most cloud vendors allow you to extend a suite without having to modify the code, Guay adds.

Human resources systems, for example, are a natural fit for the cloud because there is not a tremendous amount of integration required for them to work with other systems, he says. In that case, an organization might opt to buy its financials and HR systems from the same vendor. Its important to look at the functionality the systems provide and determine whether they have so much data flowing between the two that it makes sense to get the components from the same vendor, or if they can buy standalone systems, he says.

The decision to migrate off-premises was clear-cut for the San Diego Tourism Authority, which had been using Oracles basic ERP system for about 10 years. By 2016, the system needed upgrading, but the non-profit organization didnt have the money, says Isabel Sauerbrey, vice president of information technology and operations at the tourism authority.

At the same time, Sauerbrey was tasked with eliminating $200,000 from her operating budget. After looking at systems from a few vendors, the tourism authority opted to migrate to Oracle Cloud. Between servers and hosting, it was much cheaper [to go to the cloud] than what I had, she says. So it really was a financial benefit to us.

The tourism authority was using Sitecore for its website, which was integrated with its Simpleview CRM system, and IT had also done some customizations. The system was hosted by a third-party managed services provider because they didnt have the infrastructure to manage it internally, she says.

We decided everything finance-related wed move to the cloud and integrate data between the website or the CRM system with the Oracle ERP system, using Oracle APIs, she says. At the same time, IT did a major cleanup. After 10 years you have a lot of stuff you think you need but dont, and we were able to simplify a lot of processes, says Sauerbrey. It was a big project. The [move to the] cloud was probably the easiest part.

The hard part was figuring out what data to get rid of and dismantling a massive website in an effort to simplify it by keeping only the most important components, she says. We cut a lot of the customizations we do that were on the website, and CRM features.

The migration process took between five and six months, and Sauerbrey says there were no surprises along the way. I didnt know what to expect, but to be honest, it went better than I expected. I was concerned about Oracle Financials for the cloud being a pretty new product for us.

But Sauerbrey soon found the system to be user-friendly and says it was easy to get staff transitioned. I spent a lot of time with the users to make sure they were comfortable and listened to them and made sure all their requirements were met, so by the time we went live they were pretty familiar with the product.

The ability to eliminate some of the licenses and outside services IT was using helped Sauerbrey reach her $200,000 in budget cuts. System upgrades are free, she says, which is something the tourism authority couldnt do before. Its a big thing for us because now I have faster access to new features, she says.

Access to the latest and greatest technology also held appeal for Wellesley College, which is using Workday Financial Management, Workday HCM, and Workday Student.

When Ravi Ravishanker, CIO and associate provost, came to the college over six years ago, the technology landscape was not up to snuff, he recalls. One of major recurring themes from constituents was the need for something new. Wellesley College was using Ellucian Banners student information system, which was perceived as not serving the community. Getting access to data was cumbersome because of the way the system was originally configured some 25 years ago. It wasnt the fault of the software, he notes.

Consequently, various departments were going out and purchasing new systems on their own and not thinking about the data security implications, Ravishanker says.

When the time came to upgrade, The choices you have in ERP are limited whether in the cloud or on-premises for higher ed, he notes. The major players, he says, are PeopleSoft, Jenzabar, Banner and Workday. Ravishanker felt the first three were not able to satisfy Wellesleys needs when he started looking, because one of his main strategic goals was to move to the cloud as aggressively as we can.

The reason, he says, was simple. I believe that [ITs] contribution to the institution is in educating my clientele on how to use the technology to improve teaching, learning and research and the administrative functions and not run a small technology company. I dont see value in running a data center and servers.

Wellesley College chose Workday in January 2016. If you take Banner or PeopleSoft, their origins are 30 years ago or slightly more recent than that, and its hard to take old, humongous software and radically change it to adapt to the cloud, he explains. By contrast, Workday evolved in the cloud.

Migrating meant offloading the responsibility of upgrades, maintaining infrastructure, uptime and network security. I dont have to offer that high-level of babysitting that these systems require, he says. We have a small staff and keeping up with all the changes in terms of data security is becoming harder and harder.

That sentiment is echoed by Rodney Nobles, chief information officer and chief security officer at Waukesha County Technical College, who has migrated the schools Banner ERP system. We no longer have to worry about our staff keeping the colleges most critical systems up and running, backups, problems or downtime. While Nobles still worries about outages, its in a different way. Now I have a wealth of talent at my fingertips who possess a wide range of knowledge that I do not have to keep inhouse, nor do I have the financial resources to hire.

Wellesley Colleges HR, payroll and benefits systems went live in Workday on Jan. 1, 2017, and the finance system went live on July 1. The third stage, the student module, will be migrated soon.

Between six and eight IT staff and a consultant have been involved in this very big, once in a lifetime undertaking, he says. So far there is high satisfaction among faculty, staff and students.

There havent been any issues with the migration; in fact, Ravishanker says users have been pleasantly surprised by what they could do now, such as submitting expense reports from a mobile device.

For those contemplating whether to move keep their ERP systems on-premises or move them to the cloud, the IT leaders all suggest figuring out what youre looking to accomplish, understand your processes and listen to users.

Goals vary from organization to organization, and far more important than technology is the notion of change management ... because no matter what you do, not everyone in the institution is going to be happy, says Ravishanker. So you have to really understand your culture and work with the people who are excited about the migration, but dont forget about people who are worried and anxious.

CIOs need to do their homework and take the time to really understand what the vendors offer, adds Doria. Many of the large providers that have been strong players in the enterprise space are still not fully mature in their cloud service offers, he says. Often, there is not full-feature parity between their legacy enterprise solutions and the new implementations in the public cloud.

Many of the capabilities promoted by sales teams are still wish-list items, he says, and some platforms may have geographic limitations, so what is available in North America might not be in Europe.

Doria says its also critical to learn about providers disaster recovery and business continuity plans, and understand what they really mean when they talk about uptime and availability, their service level agreements and the type of data centers they utilize.

As a CIO, you have to make a conscious decision on whether you want to be in the data services business and create what the large players are doing, or focus your time and attention and scarce resources on whats strategic to the business, Doria says. To continue operating their own infrastructure would consume more time and resources than would be reasonable and would distract from tactical and strategic initiatives IT needs to do to advance the business, he says.

The initial thought about moving to the cloud is its cost savings, he says. The reality is, its not cost that drove me to look at cloud, but the scalability and agility that comes with it, and the ability to take advantage of mature architecture that is ISO compliant, and that would satisfy my business continuity and security needs.

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Dean Dorton Technology named to Sage Intacct President’s Club, Rookie of the Year and New Partner of the Second … – The Lane Report

Jason Miller, director of business consulting services at Dean Dorton.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Sept. 6, 2017) Dean Dorton Technology, a leading technology consulting firm focused on providing software consulting, infrastructure services, managed services and IT audit and compliance services, receivedthe 2017 Sage Intacct Rookie of the Year Award.

Dean Dorton was also recently named to the 2017 Sage Intacct Presidents Club along with being named New Partner of the Second Half.

All three honors recognize Dean Dorton for having achieved excellence in customer satisfaction, significant sales success and exceptional growth as a value-added reseller (VAR) specializing in accounting and financial solutions.

The sales and customer satisfaction awards, given annually by Sage Intacct to its top-performing channel partners, recognizes VARs and Sage Intacct Accountants Program firms (IAPs) for their success in helping clients migrate to Sage Intaccts cloud financial management solutions. In Dean Dorton Technologys first year as a Sage Intacct VAR partner, the company achieved record revenue.

Dean Dorton is comprised of financial, technology, and operational professionals who have excelled in their areas of expertise while helping companies overcome the barriers of growth. They earned a position as a Presidents Club winner for their level of commitment and growth in the Sage Intacct Premier Program. Sage Intacct is the first and only cloud financial system in Dean Dorton Technologys product portfolio.

The Sage Intacct partner program is designed to help channel partners build sustainable excellence and achieve remarkable growth year after year, said Taylor Macdonald, senior vice president of channel sales for Sage Intacct. The large increase in partners we added in FY17 is a result of heavy focus on recruiting high quality organizations and members consistently seeing the value-add in Sage Intaccts solution along with our industry-leading customer satisfaction rating.

Sage Intaccts cloud based system is well suited to todays ever-changing technological advancements and helps companies of all sizes operate efficiently and effectively using their real-time financial data, said Jason Miller, director of business consulting services at Dean Dorton. We are particularly proud of these honors given the high standards Sage Intacct sets for its channel program and are privileged be a part of a community that consistently delivers on its promise to provide best-in-class cloud financial management solutions to its customers. In assisting clients with selection and implementation first-hand we have seen companies flourish with an increased speed of every finance and accounting process, driving faster revenue and influencing timely conversations to improve performance.

As a Sage Intacct value added reseller, Dean Dorton Technology sells, implements, supports, and integrates solutions for Sage Intaccts award-winning cloud financial applications. Dean Dorton Technology recently aligned with Sage Intacct in response to increased demand for cloud-based accounting applications from its prospects and clients.

About Dean Dorton TechnologyDean Dorton Technology provides full-service technology solutions to businesses of all sizes delivering excellence in technology from planning and management through implementation and continued support and improvement. Dean Dorton Technologys services includes: software evaluation, selection, and systems integration, infrastructure design and management, network and security solutions, business phone and VoIP solutions, technology assessments, Cloud hosting solutions, managed technology services, IT audit and compliance services, and preventative maintenance and strategic planning. As an Intacct Business Partner, Dean Dorton Technology has the proven ability to provide sophisticated, value-added Intacct solutions that deliver a high-quality accounting software experience for clients.

For more information visit: http://deandortontech.com/software-services/accounting-software/intacct/.

About Sage IntacctSage Intacct is the innovation and customer satisfaction leader in cloud Financial Management. With the powerful combination of Sage and Intacct, the Sage Business Cloud offers the best capabilities of both companies. Bringing cloud computing to finance and accounting, Sage Intaccts innovative and award-winning applications are the preferred financial applications for AICPA business solutions. In use by organizations from startups to public companies, Sage Intacct is designed to improve company performance and make finance more productive. Hundreds of leading CPA firms and Value Added Resellers also offer Intacct to their clients. The Sage Intacct system includes accounting, cash management, purchasing, vendor management, financial consolidation, revenue recognition, subscription billing, contract management, project accounting, fund accounting, inventory management, and financial reporting applications, all delivered through the cloud.

Sage Intacct is based in San Jose, California and an entity of Sage, the market and technology leader for integrated accounting, payroll and payment systems, supporting the ambition of entrepreneurs and business builders and a FTSE 100 business.

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Microsoft Signs Deal to Put More Apps on Huawei’s Cloud in China – eWeek

Microsoft The Redmond, Wash. software maker and Chinese tech giant Huawei announced today that they had formed strategic partnership that will bring more of Microsoft's enterprise applications to the Huawei cloud ecosystem.

The companies signed a memorandum of understanding, an early step in establishing the partnership, during a ceremony at the Huawei Connect 2017 conference in Shanghai, China. Huawei already serves up some Microsoft products on its cloud, including Windows Server and a relational database service that supports SQL Server. In a Sept. 5 media advisory, Huawei said the expanded partnership will "bring more Microsoft enterprise-level products online."

Alain Crozier, CEO of Microsoft China, echoed his company's focus on helping to make digital transformation-enabling technologies more accessible to businesses.

"The fourth industrial revolution, driven by technology innovation, is creating opportunities for customers to achieve more across nearly every industry," he said in a statement. "As a global leader in enterprise IT, Huawei is a strategic partner for Microsoft in the mission to empower organizations as they transform."

However, the partnership is not without risks, cautioned Marty Puranik, CEO of cloud hosting provider Atlantic.Net. Puranik said that hardware makers such as Huaweiwhich is best known for manufacturing networking products, smartphones and other deviceshave a spotty track record when it comes to sustaining a successful cloud business. "The partnership is interesting, because Huawei is traditionally a hardware maker that competed with Cisco," Puranik told eWEEK in email remarks.

"Cisco tried 'intercloud' which was something like this, but failed. So it will be interesting to see if this succeeds. Other hardware makers like HP also tried doing public cloud and failed, so traditional hardware makers have not had success in doing this," Puranik wrote, noting that the skills used in hardware manufacturing often don't translate well into the realm of the public cloud.

There's a bit more upside for the Microsoft half of the partnership, Puranik predicted.

"Huawei will have a big footprint in China, and obviously gets Microsoft penetration inside of a huge market (and inside the great firewall). So Huawei could be a great partner," he said. "This is a win for Microsoft to help reach more enterprise-level customers in China."

Still, there remains some uncertainty. The memorandum of understanding is an initial step in formalizing the partnership, meaning that it may take some time before additional Microsoft products show up on Huawei's cloud, said Puranik.

Microsoft, meanwhile, already enjoys a big lead in the worldwide cloud application market.

Last week, Synergy Research Group released its latest analysis of the software-as-a-service market, stating that Microsoft is well ahead of its rivals. The analyst firm credited the software giant's $26 billion acquisition of LinkedIn as part of the reason it has been able to fend off Salesforce, Adobe, Oracle, SAP and other cloud software providers.

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CryptoCurrency Investing: Research and Due-Diligence …

How to perform your own due-diligencebefore investing in CryptoCurrencies?

One key lesson from Jim Rogers on investing is to do your own thinking. This article will help you understand cryptocurrencies. If you are an altcoin investor (An Altcoin is a cryptocurrency which is not Bitcoin), fundamental analysis will help you choose the ones with long-term potential.

All investments have pros and cons. A Cryptocurrency investor needs to look for the cons first, as some are definite deal breakers. If they exist, it is not worth investing more time in researching the crypto-currency.

Finding the right information about Crypto-Currencies is challenging because:

What are the core reasons to invest in an Altcoin?

The fundamental reason for a cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin or an Altcoin to exist is to serve its users, the only reason why users will engage with an altcoin is, if it is solving a problem they have. Some Altcoins promise to solve problems we did not know we had, for example, LBRY is creating a pay-to-view content system, while others such as Crown Coin, Dash and deCRED are variants of Bitcoin. They are solving the same key problemin different ways. An investor needs to predict who will be the best at it.

Others like EDC and iEx.ec are bringing blockchain or decentralisation to problems which have been addressed by centralised solutions. For an Altcoin to have the wind blowing in its sails, it needs to get the very basic core mission both right the functionally, the context and the timing right.

Branding, Marketing and Visibility:

If they do not know about you, you do not exist.

Marketing is everything. Without knowing about a solution, how can that solution be applied to a users problems? Marketing is about informing the market of the solution.

Branding is about the trust between the Cryptocurrency and its potential investors first; actual users usually will come in later. A hyperinflation ultimately occurs because the users of a currency lose trust in it, but the inverse is also true. Hyper re-valuations (Manias?) occur when many new investors want to buy in the belief that the actual users will come in later.

Re-branding is not an uncommon thing in the crypto space, as an altcoin goes through periods of maturation so does its brand image. Frequent re-brandings are a sign of frequent changes of strategy (or trying to hide something). Frequentand recent re-brands throughout an Altcoins life are not a good indication of future strategic decisions.

Media Coverage

Positive mentions in crypto-media outlets such as Cointelegraph.com, CryptoCoinsNews.com and Altcoin Reviews all add credibility to Altcoin when discussed in positive terms.

More street cred is accumulated when the media mentions are outside of the crypto universe. Editorials and articles in Forbes, Bloomberg, Nasdaq add more authority and credibility to an Altcoin. Coverage in general newspapers and news media are indicators of mainstream interest.

Altcoin Social ProofHow many other investors/users believe in the project?

This is one of the most important metrics to evaluate a cryptocurrency as it is the results of all the other metrics combined.

Coin market cap or the total value of a crypto-coin is also a form of social proof. The total value of a coin is the result of investors voting with their wallets for the coin or against.

Cult Factor

Cryptocurrency developers and spoke persons, give a face to the project, they consolidate information and can be the champions and evangelists. Spreading the idea and solution to the masses. Any U-turn by these coin champions can have serious adverse effects on the coins value. These spokespeople become key influencers because naive investors delegate their thinking to them.

When high profile coin spokespersons jump from one bandwagon to other many investors could follow and the results could be cataclysmic.

Altcoin development team and technology

The core value of any project is the functionality of the coin. (and how many people know about it and trust it)

Bitcoin has proven itself over and over again, although many have sung to its obituary. Most Altcoins have either modified the Bitcoins block chain code or created an entirely new blockchain tech.

New technologies bring new risks. For example, the now famous DAO hack was the product of a bug in a new smart contract technology. Such breakages in the technology can have different impacts. The DAO was destroyed, but in other instances, it serves as a resilience exercise.

In general when something in the cryptocurrency ecosystem breaks down it does not help the cryptocurrency investor as mainstream adoption is postponed with each of these negative events.

Price, Market and Exchanges

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Altcoin pumping and dumping:

Altcoins usually have a core following which are true believers in the project. These believers are a mix of the founders, developers and those with a vested interested in seeing this coin flourish either ideologically, or for monetary reasons. These groups will promote the pros and try to find solutions to the cons.

There will be other groups who market more the disadvantages of a specific coin over the advantages. This group will be made up of believers in the competing coins and those who missed out on the ICO or buying the coin at lower prices.

Some pumps are focused around a certain new feature being released others can be more structural such as regulation changes, a breakdown or an increase in the competition.

Trying to follow the pumps and dumps is the job of the market makers and the day traders. Other investors choose, not to roll with that roller coaster and focus on the long term fundamentals of the cryptos.

Malicious market makers, pump and dump coins while they skim money from both the greedy investor and the fearful investor. The pumps take placethrough a hype, promises and fear of losing out.

Some pumps are phenomenal for example between Jan and Feb 2017 Dash doubled in price. Such a rise in price needs to be sustained to be of any value to the buy and hold crypto investor. If the prices go up and then comes crashing down, investor confidence erodes each time this takes place.

Can the price of a crypto-currency be manipulated easily by external agents intent on causing harm? This question is more important in the future than today, when investors will be able to invest in cryptocurrency ETFs. When these are approved by the SEC, these ETFs can be used to do naked short selling. This system allows speculators to bet on the downside of a coin, this is done without owning any of the actual coins hence the term naked.

Altcoin Economics

The economics of an altcoin, determine the supply side of the coin. Coin founders amount to the FED of that specific coin, their behaviour needs to be scrutinised as much as that of any central banker!

Altcoin History

Within the history of an altcoin, investors can potentially find the virtues, tantrums and the seeds of greatness or otherwise. To go into an Altcoins history,investors need to define what is an Altcoin first.

To me, an Altcoin encompasses the mindset of the founders, the whitepaper, the connection and interaction between the market and the Altcoin developers.

Some Altcoins are scam coins by design, others have good intentions but are implemented badly or too weakly, or the competition is too overwhelming. The past is no guarantee of the future, but the futures foundations are laid down in the past.

Crypto-Currency Regulation challenges

Regulators have the power to destroy the viability of a cryptocurrency overnight, at least within their own borders. Indeed cryptocurrencies are somewhat resilient to such an attack because of their decentralised design. However, the owners of such cryptocurrencies are not. Probably 99% of cryptocurrency holders are good, law abiding citizens.

If a cryptocurrency is declared, investors holding it will probably dump it. The risk to themselves and families will be too high and impossible to mitigate. There are some variables which increase the power of the regulators and the likelihood of being targeted, for example:

Does an altcoin:

Regulation can also ake an altcoin stronger:

Regulators of particular jurisdictions which maintain the status quo or openly accept BlockChain technology push cryptocurrencies more in the mainstream.

Private forms of public blockchain oversight such as companies which monitor blockchains for illicit activities help regulators and discourage illegal use of cryptos. Others firms rank ICOs (Wings.ai, IcoRating ) and this helps private investors make informed decisions.

Another school of thought considers that all forms of impediments thrown at a cryptocurrency only serve to make it stronger. Cryptocurrencies will evolve and change shape to either outsmart, evade or adopt to regulators. Regulations will act like natural forces which will take the weak out and make the stronger more resilient to outside influences.

Regulators have issues with anonymity, and not privacy, blockchains by default provide privacy, and some cryptos build layers of anonymity on top, this is where regulators are most likely to clash with altcoins. If Altcoins are the new Panama, Governments will do everything in their power to stop their use as illegal tax avoidance vehicles.

Scam Warnings from regulators and rating agencies.

Some governments have issued notices concerning particular cryptocurrencies; this is a sign for investors that such coins need closer scrutiny especially when such announcements target a specific Altcoin rather than the who crypto space.

Investors should take a much deeper look at this altcoin, both because of the regulatory threat itself and the possibility that the altcoin is an outright scam or has MLM (multi-level marketing) or scam like tactics/mechanics.

Centralised / Decentralised Network and Governance

Centralised / Decentralised are attributes not adjectives. Some attribute centralised, to bad and decentralised to good. Given the spirit of liberty and autonomy in the crypto space, this is a common misconception.

These two attributes have both their pros and cons.

Centralization brings the perils of cult figures and centralised points of attack, but they also bring the benefits of better coordination, deployment of resources and central points of contact for support and media.

Centralisation of development could be a threat to currency. For Example, Monero an anonymous crypto-currency has a public spokesperson. In a recent podcast, he statedthat he was worried at times being too much in the limelight. If someone wants to lash out at a certain crypto, the people who are the face of that crypto make prime targets.

deCRED has a decentralised development structure, and this gives it strength regarding towards expanding its functionality, but it is more challenging to integrate code coming from different developers.

Most of Crown Coins developers are anonymous; this gives potential entities who would like to disturb the coin network much less of a clear target. However, it also brings a question mark about the reputation and expertise of the devs. Having said that, they are very accessible through their slack channel.

Centralised / Decentralised Infrastructure.

A lot of Bitcoin mining power is located in China. Miners swarm around cheap sources of electricity. These mining clusters can create weak links in the blockchain as it opens the hashing power up to attack. Especially within jurisdictions vulnerable to state interference and failures of infrastructure points.

Other points of failure include service nodes, master nodes, super nodes, exchanges and other critical infrastructure points which maintain the coins value and the ability of users to exchange the coin or use it.

The Future of Bitcoin or the Altcoin

Conclusion:

Investing in cryptocurrency can be done by following the momentum and technical analysis of charts. Does this work? Different people have different levels of success with such strategies, the fundamentals approach to investing has worked for Warren Buffet andthere is no reason why it should not work in for cryptocurrency investors. In addition to fundamental analysis dollar cost averaging is alsoan important investing strategy. Buy low and Sell High!

Jim Reynolds

Tips: Sponsor my addiction to tea and biscuits!

MUE:7P3J5cJbYgV8zFGp2f5p6pedRCgXKd7fBgPIVX:DKDPyk7oCqKqPzmLDP4JATk8UcjUFR3wwDCrown:1DamFkfncBjkxStMcjx8Fq3SNLenaJrrLQExcl:EWvYxcUSgrA8qSSMGQoAMq8f9jvyvkV31PTransfer:TxL9eupngAZBj5btjFGJhmzQsZep8kw4zfBTC:17AfSPgw8ZX81w7uD4jqCf6JT5gDEvAf7RDash:Xfd62PhbnPtVoZgPo2it5JHRudR7ps732JETH: 0x9ADdA4B2D72E631a1Bbd6c6bc38a0924842240e4LTC:LdNJzQbTvVmr8qLJ1zTBicsCjEcgw6fuNL

Any comments and help to improve this document would be grealty apprciated.

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Cloud computing to drive Billabong’s omnichannel experience – Chain Store Age

A board sports apparel retailer is taking steps to blend its physical and digital retail channels.

Billabong is leveraging the Aptos Singular Commerce platform to support omnichannel retailing across its global enterprise. The cloud-based solution will merge the retailers physical and digital retail channels, and create a single view of customers, inventory and orders, among other operations.

In addition to managing point-of-sale, the solution also supports customer relationship management (CRM), order management, merchandising and auditing functions. By integrating these functions, Billabong is positioned to deliver truly seamless customer experiences regardless where, when or how its customers shop, the company said.

Transitioning to a cloud-based platform also helps Billabong to consolidate its retail technology stack, and accelerate the implementation of new solutions goals that required a seasoned partner.

Aptos global presence, leading cloud-based technology, and professional services and implementation team were important considerations in our selection process, said Michael Yerkes, senior VP, global operations of Billabong International Limited.

Billabong operates 372 retail stores, as well as operates e-commerce sites for each of its key brands, Billabong, RVCA, Element, Von Zipper, Honolua Surf Company, Kustom, Palmers Surf and Xcel.

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Cloud computing to drive Billabong's omnichannel experience - Chain Store Age

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