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How to Cut Costs When Migrating to the Cloud – CIO Insight

A statistical analysis of operating system instancesthe creation of objects each time a program runsoffers insights into the economics behind cloud migration. The fine-grained, algorithmic analysis attempts to answer questions such as these: Is it more economical to run workloads on-premise or in the cloud? Should companies invest in refreshing their technology or in cloud migration? Often, businesses rely on spreadsheets and high-level financial models to make these decisions. This statistical method, performed by TSO Logic, uses anonymized data that includes hundreds of millions of data points from more than 10,000 servers, including hypervisors and non-hypervisors. There were 25,000 virtual OS instances from which the authors compiled a sample. Other questions addressed were: What is the cost of running OS instances as currently provisioned? How much is each instance used historically? How well do currently provisioned resources match up to utilization? And which of these workloads would be economically more viable in future environments, including cloud or server refresh? Following are the study findings.

Karen A. Frenkel writes about technology and innovation and lives in New York City.

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Rackspace Doubles Down on Microsoft Competencies – Redmond Channel Partner (blog)

Rackspace Doubles Down on Microsoft Competencies

Hosting and managed cloud services provider Rackspace is doubling down on its Microsoft commitments, at least in terms of earning Microsoft competencies.

Rackspace announced Thursday that it went from five Microsoft competencies a year ago to 10 competencies now.

Rackspace renewed gold competencies in Cloud Platform, Cloud Productivity, Collaboration and Content, Hosting, and Small and Mid-Market Cloud Solutions. The San Antonio, Texas-based provider added gold competencies in Application Development and Data Center and silver competencies in Data Analytics, Data Platform and Messaging.

The company also touted individual Microsoft certifications by its employees, referred to officially by the company as "Rackers" -- 1,000 technical certifications and 800 sales and licensing certifications. Without providing specifics, a spokesperson said the individual certifications marked a "significant increase" from 2015 to 2016.

The investment in technical expertise and competencies comes during a time that Rackspace has been undergoing major changes as a company. The company went private in a $4.3 billion deal that closed in November.

At the same time, Rackspace has been aggressively expanding from its traditional hosting business to add a substantial practice involving providing managed services for public clouds and hybrid clouds.

For what would be Rackspace's final public earnings release last August, CEO Taylor Rhodes said the company was providing managed services for nearly 600 customers on Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft cloud services and OpenStack. "Demand is scaling rapidly for the expertise and managed services that we provide to businesses that use AWS, the Microsoft cloud and our OpenStack private cloud," Rhodes said at the time.

Although AWS has the bigger share of the total cloud platform market, Rackspace's emphasis so far has been heavier on the Microsoft side, which befits its 15-year partnership with Microsoft as a major hosting provider. The five-time Microsoft Partner of the Year Award winner's Microsoft technology products and services include Fanatical Support for Microsoft Azure, Rackspace Private Cloud powered by Microsoft Cloud Platform, Fanatical Support for Office 365 and Rackspace Support for Microsoft SQL Server.

That said, the company is rapidly building up its AWS expertise in parallel. The Rackspace Web site currently claims more than 700 individual AWS technical certifications, up from 500 in November and 300 in July.

While Rackspace is a major Microsoft partner in its own right, the company serves as an intermediary between Microsoft and a lot of other Microsoft partners, as well. Rackspace has referral and reseller programs and stepped up within the Microsoft Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program last July from being a marquee Tier-1 CSP to becoming a Tier-2 CSP, a distribution role that allows companies in the Rackspace Partner Network to resell Office 365 and Azure.

Posted by Scott Bekker on February 16, 2017 at 10:44 AM

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China’s Bitcoin Drama Isn’t A Financial Meltdown – Forbes


Forbes
China's Bitcoin Drama Isn't A Financial Meltdown
Forbes
China, currently the world's largest Bitcoin trader, has caused some complications for the cryptocurrency since the beginning of the year. The amount of Bitcoin traded in the country has plummeted from 10 million a day to 30,000-90,000 due to 'abnormal ...
Bitcoin traders look to other digital currencies for returnsCNBC
Bitcoin Price Above $1000 For One Whole Week, Passes $1060CoinTelegraph
Bitcoin Tracker: Denouement?PYMNTS.com
The Merkle -Brave New Coin -newsBTC
all 16 news articles »

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History of Bitcoin in 500 words – The Merkle

The concept of bitcoin remains baffling to a lot of people Albeit this cryptocurrency has only been around for eight years, there are so many things people want to know about bitcoin. The currency has had a rather colored past as well, spurring multiple waves of mainstream media attention in the process. The below article will summarize Bitcoins 8 year history in under 500 words.

Bitcoin was created by Satoshi Nakamoto in 2009. It took nearly two weeks after its initial release until the first official transaction on the network occurred between Satoshi and Hal Finney. Moreover, it took some time until the first financial transaction denominated in bitcoin took place. This day is known as Bitcoin Pizza Day, an event that is celebrated around the world every single year.

Despite its potential, bitcoin hasnt been without flaws. A major flaw was discovered in August of 2010 which effectively allowed users to create an infinite amount of bitcoins. Thankfully, any wrongdoings were erased from the blockchain and a software update was released. So far, it is the only major bug to be found and exploited in the bitcoin protocol code to date.

It took until 2011 until bitcoin got taken more seriously. WikiLeaks embraced bitcoin as a donation method after being cut off by credit card issuers and PayPal. One year later, Bitcoin made its first TV appearance in an episode of The Good Wife. Quite a few shows have featured bitcoin ever since, albeit nearly always in a criminal setting. Considering the popular darknet marketplace Silk Road was created in 2011 and gained significant popularity throughout 2012, it is not hard to see where this criminal angle comes from. The platform was eventually taken offline by the FBI in 2014.

Things started to unravel a bit in 2013, as the Mt. Gox exchange had bank accounts seized by the US authorities. Operating an unlicensed bitcoin exchange while serving US customers was one of the final nails in the coffin for Mt. Gox before declaring bankruptcy in 2014. Several hacks affected the bitcoin ecosystem in 2013 as well, albeit the payment technology itself was never breached. On the upside, M-Pesa and Bitcoin came together in Kenya under the Bitpesa banner and turned into a very successful company.

Bitcoin was ruled a form of money in August of 2013. Ever since that time, various countries have started debating how they want to label bitcoin moving forward. Japan will legalize cryptocurrency later this year. During 2014 and 2015, merchants started accepting bitcoin payments, bringing their total to 160,000 in August of 2015. That number has continued to grow and includes some of the worlds largest platforms, including Microsoft and Overstock.com.

2016 Has been the year during which the bitcoin price exploded in the final 6 months. Bitcoin was deemed one of the worlds best performing assets for the calendar year, and that bullish trend is still visible today. With the number of bitcoin ATMs around the world reaching the 1,000 mark soon, the future looks very bright for cryptocurrency. There are exciting times to live in, that much is certain.

If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and technology news.

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What Is Bitcoin’s Correlation With Other Financial Assets? – Seeking Alpha

I'm strongly considering entering into a substantial investment in bitcoin as part of my passively managed, fully long portfolio. Before I do that, I decided to look into two questions regarding bitcoin's role in a portfolio:

My reasoning was that, if possible, it would be preferable to replicate exposure to bitcoin using existing financial assets because there are still substantial risks to owning bitcoin. First, a plot of bitcoin's price in both a linear and log scale to place the following analysis in context.

Can Bitcoin Be Considered a Financial Asset?

Before calculating bitcoin's correlation to other financial assets, it's useful to take a step back and think of whether bitcoin can be considered a financial asset based on its fundamental characteristics. And if bitcoin is a financial asset, how should it be classified?

A useful framework for thinking about this is in Robert J. Greer's paper, "What is an Asset Class, Anyway?" In this paper, Greer defines an asset class as "a set of assets that bear some fundamental economic similarities to each other, and that have characteristics that make them distinct from other assets that are not part of that class."

He proposes that any asset can be classified into one of three super classes:

In the real world, not every asset falls neatly into one of the three categories. Gold, for example, is both a consumable asset and a store of value asset. It's arguable that U.S. sovereign bonds are both a capital asset and a store of value asset. But it's still a useful framework to keep in mind when thinking about portfolio construction.

Where does bitcoin fall in this framework? Bitcoin can be safely categorized as a store of value asset in that it doesn't generate income, you can't consume it, and yet it has economic value. Store of value assets are often referred to by other names, including "safe haven assets" and "flight to safety assets". Thus, we should expect a priori that bitcoin should have a higher correlation to other store of value assets, including gold, other precious metals, and safe haven currencies like the Swiss franc, U.S. dollar, and Japanese yen.

Testing Bitcoin's Correlation Using the Brute Force Approach

In the past few years, ETF offerings have become sufficiently broad to represent virtually all asset classes across all major countries and geographies. ETF historical prices, therefore, represent a fairly high-quality source of asset returns. I wrote about how to obtain this data in a previous post: How to Scrape Data for Over 1,900 ETFs.

I first tested bitcoin's correlation to other financial assets using what I call the brute force approach: I calculate the correlation between bitcoin's weekly return and the weekly return of all ETFs with over $10 million in assets and plot the results in the following histogram.

The interpretation is that the correlation between bitcoin and other financial assets is extremely low. Most asset classes have a correlation between -0.1 and +0.1. The few ETFs with correlations outside of this range were mainly explained by the fact that some ETFs were launched recently and thus the correlation between bitcoin and these ETFs was largely spurious in nature.

This result was a bit disappointing since I was originally hoping to replicate bitcoin's exposure using a collection of highly correlated ETFs. On the other hand, this is a strong argument for including bitcoin as a significant part of a portfolio of risky assets. Finding and adding an uncorrelated asset to a portfolio can act as a powerful source of diversification by increasing the portfolio's sharpe ratio. There are extremely few assets that are this uncorrelated with other assets and that makes bitcoin extremely desirable from a portfolio construction perspective.

Testing Bitcoin's Correlation Using the Refined Approach

I decided to look into bitcoin's correlation further using a refined approach by calculating the one-year rolling correlation between bitcoin's weekly returns and the weekly returns of selected ETFs. There is evidence that bitcoin has become a more mature asset class over time in that its volatility has reduced and it has started to react more to macroeconomic factors and geopolitical events rather than things that are specific to bitcoin itself.

Below I plot of the one-year rolling correlation between bitcoin's weekly returns and the weekly returns of a selection of risky assets followed by a plot of a selection of safe assets.

The interpretation is that even looking at a one-year rolling window, the correlation remains low with many correlations oscillating between positive and negative. Current correlation is still low even though bitcoin has had time to mature into a legitimate asset class.

Remember, I had expected a priori that bitcoin would have a higher correlation to these safe, store of value assets. Originally, I had hoped to replicate bitcoin exposure using a combination of gold, US sovereign bonds, and foreign currencies. These results strongly suggest that this is not possible and that bitcoin is a unique, uncorrelated asset class that is not strongly affected by the macroeconomic factors that drive most asset classes.

Doing this analysis has given me conviction that bitcoin should be a part of my passively held, long-only portfolio. First, there aren't that many store of value assets in the first place. There's gold, US sovereign debt, safe haven currencies, and that's it. Second, it's surprising that bitcoin's correlation is this low, even among other store of value assets.

At the same time, there are strong theoretical arguments that bitcoin will serve as a hedge against harmful geopolitical events due to its decentralized nature. There's a growing body of empirical evidence of this also with bitcoin price spiking in response to both Brexit and Donald Trump's win.

Bitcoin is uniquely positioned to hedge against geopolitical risks but remain unaffected by the macroeconomic factors that drive other store of value assets.

Exposure to bitcoin can be obtained either by buying bitcoin directly, through the upcoming bitcoin ETF (Pending:COIN), or the Bitcoin Investment Trust (OTCQX:GBTC).

The code for this post can be found on my Github.

Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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Bitcoin Needs to Be Watched Closely Now – CryptoCoinsNews

Bitcoin continues to show strength as it is relentlessly advancing through each and every resistance it encounters. I find myself in a quandary. It is becoming increasingly clear that the macro vision I had in the past few weeks, of Bitcoin testing its recent lows, and from there beginning a stunning advance to ridiculous new highs, was wrong. I am starting to grasp that it is more likely that the recent lows will not be tested.

The daily chart has broken through the 2nd arc. Barring a stunning reversal before tomorrow morning, the daily chart will give a clear buy signal tomorrow.

Meanwhile, the 4 hour chart has closed above resistance, again. It has even poked its head above a novice resistance line drawn from the last 2 swing highs.

There is a 5th arc at ~ $1100 on the 4 hour chart, which could be a stopper, but that resistance is not readily apparent on the daily chart. My reticence to be a short-term bull is starting to feel like I am being victimized by preconceptions not endorsed by recent chart signals.

So, I am looking anew at the charts. As I have stated in the past, 2/19-2/21 is an energy point in time for bitcoin. As I have stated, I had thought a low would be seen in that time frame. Recently, it seemed more likely there would be a top in that time frame. Well, 2/19 is tomorrow. I see little compelling reason to think that a top will be reached tomorrow or the next day on the daily chart. There, the strong resistance is seen ~ $1200. (If $1200 is reached by 2/21, it will likely be a top.)

The weekly chart is showing a warning however:

As you can see, the last advance was stopped by the 2nd arc of the 3rd pair. Pricetime will hit that same arc again at ~ $1074. I suspect price will get through it this time. We will see

Happy trading!

Remember: The author is a trader who is subject to all manner of error in judgement. Do your own research, and be prepared to take full responsibility for your own trades.

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Even More US Enterprises Are Stockpiling Bitcoin To Combat Cyber Attacks – newsBTC

Last but not least, paying the bitcoin ransom is no guarantee to have company files decrypted again.

It would appear even more US companies are stockpiling bitcoin to fight off cyber attacks. This type of behavior is not entirely new, but it appears to become even more prevalent as of late. Rather than upgrading cybersecurity measures, US companies would rather pay criminals in bitcoin. A very troublesome development that will only invite more criminal activity moving forward.

It is not advisable to stockpile bitcoin in case a cyber attack occurs. Criminals from all over the world use a wide range of tools to infiltrate enterprises. Once they do so, the enterprise will receive a request to pay a ransom in bitcoin. Since hardly any company keeps cryptocurrency on hand, that causes a bit of a problem.

To combat this issue, US companies are now buying bitcoin in case an attack would occur. That is anything but the right approach, as it only invites more cyber attacks moving forward. Losing valuable corporate data is a big problem, everyone can understand that. Openly inviting criminals to do their worst and pay their demand in bitcoin, however, is an incomprehensible decision.

Dealing with this moral dilemma is anything but easy for US companies right now. Then again, looking to pay off criminals once they infiltrate a system is equal to taking three steps backward. Paying means helping the bad guys and rewarding them for illegal behavior. It is the same as negotiating with terrorists, which is something no American would ever do, or so they claim. Incident response planning in the corporate sector should never include stockpiling bitcoin to meet ransom demands.

To put this into perspective, the average ransom demand sits between US$10,000 and US$75,000. Even at current prices, that equals to stockpiling bitcoin in large quantities. Once criminals become aware of which companies are easy to exploit, they will continue hitting them with malware attacks. This unusual strategy will not work out in the end, as it only serves to enrich hackers. A better option would be to beef up existing security protocols. Doing so is not only the only morally right course of action, but also the much cheaper option in the long run.

Last but not least, paying the bitcoin ransom is no guarantee to have company files decrypted again. So far, nearly 25% of all malware attacks remained unresolved after the bitcoin payment was made. It is expected this number will go up over time, especially when companies are so eager to pay bitcoins for criminals. Stockpiling bitcoin is not the answer to these threats, that much is certain.

Header image courtesy of Shutterstock

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Brit watchdog spanks Microsoft, Amazon, Apple into promising fairer … – The Register

Amazon, Apple and Microsoft have committed to providing cloud storage users with fairer contracts after a crackdown by the UK's Competition Markets Authority (CMA).

The companies are the latest cloud storage providers to improve their terms and conditions following the CMA's review of compliance with consumer law in the sector.

Price hikes and last-minute service tweaks prompted the CMA to open its investigation at the end of 2015. So far the regulator has secured changes to the contract terms from JustCloud, Livedrive, Dixons Carphone, BT, Dropbox, Google and Mozy.

Amazon, Apple and Microsoft have separately agreed to make changes to their respective terms and conditions.

This includes: adequate notice to customers before significant changes are made to the service; cancellation rights and pro-rata refunds if customers don't want to accept significant changes; and adequate notice before the service is suspended or cancelled.

Andrea Coscelli, acting chief exec of CMA, said: "People rely on cloud storage to keep things such as treasured family photos, music, films and important documents safe, so it is important that they are treated fairly and should not be hit by unexpected price rises or changes to storage levels."

She said as a result millions of cloud storage users will benefit from fairer terms which will help them make the right choices when using cloud storage services.

Cloud storage is used by one-third of British adults in a personal capacity, said the CMA.

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iEX.ec Introduced Blockchain-based Distributed Cloud Computing … – The Merkle

iEx.ec presented a working demo of the worlds first distributed cloud computing network at the European Ethereum Conference EDCON this week. The French startup aims to be the first to market with a new technology that uses blockchain smart contracts to redesign cloud computing.

A Vision for the Future

Iex.ec is creating a distributed market network that it hopes will be home to a new generation of businesses. Internet of Things (IoT), Distributed Applications (DApps) and High Performance Computing (HPC) commonly known as supercomputing could all benefit from access to the iEx.ec distributed cloud. These types of businesses are resource intensive and current cloud environments are too costly, or simply unsuitable for distributed business models. The iEx.ec distributed cloud will create a native environment in which they can thrive, lowering costs through the sharing of resources such as computing power and enabling them to do business with on another.

iEx.ecs demo features a mini DApp designed specifically to show its technology in actionUsing the DApp one can submit a transaction to the Ethereum blockchain and then execute computations live across a test network. The computation will return the user a Vanity Address a bespoke Bitcoin address the creation of such addresses is computationally intense but iEx.ex reduces compute times significantly.

Under the Hood

Whilst the practice of pooling computing resources together isnt new, the addition of blockchain to marketize it is. The key to iEx.ecs offering lies in its Oracle developed specifically to manage seamless transactions between the blockchain and a global computing platform. When launched the iEx.ec cloud will be an easy to use, pay-as-you-go, trustless system where the complexities of system management are automated via smart contracts.

The startup will shortly release its API and have further plans to provide a set of smart contracts templates for easy on-boarding into the new cloud.

iEx.ec is the combination two concepts that are at the core of decentralization: blockchain and distributed computing. Our team have produced numerous breakthrough innovations in the area of large scale data processing, data management, parallel computing, security and dependability, QoS, and many more.

By revealing for the first time the iEx.ec blockchain cloud, we are showing to the world that we are ready for a new era of distributed applications monetized on the Blockchain with the highest level of transparency, resiliency, and security. Gilles Fedak, CEO, iEx.ec

iEx.ec will be crowdfunding via an ICO in the spring and if successful they plan to roll out distributed services for DApps as early as the Autumn

About

iEx.ec is founded by Gilles Fedak Ph.D and Haiwu He, Ph.D, certified experts in distributed computing. It has headquarters in Lyon, France. iEx.ec provides distributed businesses with an ecosystem where they can access the services and computing resources they need to thrive in the decentralised economy. iEx.ec technology runs on Ethereum smart contracts providing a market network in the cloud that is scalable, secure and open to all.

iEx.ec Demo DApp: http://52.44.51.109:8080 Demo Walkthrough: https://medium.com/iex-ec/a-walk-through-iex-ec-demo-app-3a39316b3c36 Website: http://iex.ec Press Contact: freya@iex.ec Whitepaper: http://iex.ec/whitepaper

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Here’s why your business should consider cloud computing – YourStory.com

Cloud computing has seen a major surge in the business world in the last few years, and it is here to stay. As you are probably already aware, this service is responsible for storing and protecting a companys data. Instead of your organisation maintaining its own software, cloud computing is available to you as a service you can access over the internet. With remote teams sprouting up everywhere and more and more employees working at their own time and pace, cloud backup and recovery proves to be an ideal solution for every business that is worried about cyber security. Weve compiled a few reasons as to why your business should move to the Cloud today.

Image : shutterstock

Hiring an in-house IT team can prove to be heavy on your pocket as substantial capital is needed for server storage and application needs. Instead, when you opt for cloud computing, there is no requirement for on-premises infrastructure, which saves space. Using this service also relieves you of additional expenses in the form of air conditioning, admin staff and power. With cloud computing, businesses pay only for what they need and are free to discontinue the service if they are not satisfied.

With the expansion of remote teams and employees who work on their personal devices like tablets and laptops, every company's security and compliance headaches have increased manifold. Cloud computing creates a personal environment to enable Single Sign On, allowing IT departments to easily manage user accounts across numerous devices. Working for a cloud-based business allows employees to work from home and telecommute. This can make a huge difference for individuals who are struggling to strike a wok-life balance.

A lot of entrepreneurs still aren't sure how secure the Cloud is, because of which they aren't willing to opt for this service. Keeping important information safe is essential for the growth of any business. Cloud services recognise this, and therefore, moving to the Cloud offers a chance to upgrade security, making it a lot safer than on-site servers. Cloud providers can reap the benefits of a specialised staff that allows users to set up a virtual office anytime, anywhere.

Cloud storage options such as Google Drive and Dropbox allow you to access and share documents easily from any location. Not only are cloud backup services economical, reliable and safe, but they also provide innumerable benefits to startups and small business owners. Since important data can be backed up and shared with ease, utilising cloud backup to its full potential allows your business to be more efficient and productive.

Instead of huge IT capital investments every few years, your cost will be distributed as monthly or annual payments if you move to the Cloud. It is in the interest of the cloud computing vendors to equip their servers with cutting-edge and energy-efficient equipment so that your only focus is the betterment of your products and services.

If your company doesn't move to cloud computing, you will end up spending huge amounts on an in-house IT department, and you won't have a backup of important files when caught in a disaster. It is for these reasons, and many more, that your company should consider moving to the Cloud today.

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