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Save 98 Percent on 1TB of Lifetime Cloud Storage on Zoolz – Tom’s Guide

Storing data in the cloud used to be prohibitively expensive, but as prices have fallen and Internet speeds have gone up, cloud storage has become more routine. Companies like Apple, Microsoft, and Google have also popularized cloud storage via services like iCloud, One Drive, and Google Drive, respectively.

While all of today's services are great, few of them offer as much value as Zoolz. For a limited time, you can buy a 1TB lifetime cloud storage plan with Zoolz for $39. The plan normally costs $3,600, so you're saving 98 percent off the full price.

Zoolz's Lifetime plan comes in two buckets: You receive 500GB of Instant Storage and 500GB of Cold Storage. It can take anywhere from 3 to 5 hours to retrieve data placed in Cold Storage, so you'll want to reserve that for data that you don't need on a daily basis such as backups and photo or video archives. Data placed in Instant Storage can be accessed immediately via the Zoolz app.

Feature-wise, your data is protected using 256-AES encryption and you can download the Zoolz software on two machines and restore from a third device.

The Zoolz 1TB Lifetime Cloud Storage plan is only available for a limited time, so be sure to lock in your savings before a potential disaster strikes.

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Microsoft Azure Cuts Prices On Virtual Machines And Cloud Storage In Australia – Lifehacker Australia

Microsoft has reduced the price of some virtual machine (VM) instances and storage offerings on its Azure public cloud platform. Here's how much you will save.

We confirmed with Microsoft Australia that the price reductions apply to the local Azure regions.

Microsoft offers a number of different types of VM instances globally. The ones that will be discounted are the Compute Optimised F Series (up to 24% off) and the general purpose A1 Basic VM instances (up to 61% off).

Azure F Series virtual machines are optimised for compute intensive workloads. They are suitable for scenarios like batch processing, web servers, analytics and gaming. Here's how much the F Series instances cost for Azure in Australia using CentOS or Ubuntu Linux (regions labelled):

A Basic instances are suitable for development workloads, test servers, build servers, code repositories, low-traffic websites and web applications, micro services, early product experiments and small databases. It's the more economical option.

Here's how much A Basic instances cost for Azure in Australia using CentOS or Ubuntu Linux (regions labelled):

You can compare some of the prices here with our condensed pricing list from October. It seems that Microsoft has made the pricing for the F Series and A Basic more uniform between the East and Southeast regions.

Azure Blog Storage, which is used for streaming and storing documents, videos, pictures, backups and other unstructured text or binary data. Microsoft is offering a price reduction of up to 26% for Hot Block Blob storage and 38% for Cool Block Blog storage.

You can visit the Azure Pricing page for all the details.

[Microsoft Azure]

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Sometimes in life you lack perspective. Sometimes youre just too close. To the situation, to the person. Sometimes untenable attitudes or ideas become normalised. Like theyve always existed, like they cannot be questioned. This is the way it is and has always been. In cases like these it often takes a fresh set of eyeballs, a rogue outsider. It takes that radical voice in the crowd to shatter the illusion. The emperor has no clothes. Today I am those eyeballs. Today I am that outsider. Today I am that voice in the crowd.

A smartphone without a big whack of mobile data is like a sports car without petrol in the tank. Almost everything we do with our phones requires an internet connection, so there is no point cheaping out on a plan with puny data inclusions nowadays. The good news is that data keeps getting cheaper. The rise in popularity (and sheer volume) of mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) has put crushing pressure on the price we pay for each gigabyte, and if you're not regularly checking your options and switching then there is a good chance you are missing out. Here are the best deals.

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Fox Film picks Brazilian cloud provider – ZDNet

The Brazilian office of Fox Film has hired local vendor Mandic Cloud Solutions for the provision of cloud storage services.

The provider of facility, Mandic, is a company that was previously known as one of the country's main enterprise email service providers. It reinvented itself as a cloud services firm and has since been acquired by Riverwood Capital.

Fox Film is using Mandic's cloud storage for its financial data and was implemented in one month. According to IT coordinator at Fox Film, Arlem Silva, the platform has already delivered results.

"There was a 70 percent improvement from the stability, information access and security aspects, both from the IT and business standpoints," Silva told Brazilian portal Baguete.

"Before the implementation, reports would be generated in about half an hour and today the same information can be obtained in 10 minutes," the IT executive added.

Silva also highlighted the ease of access to information from the company's headquarters in London as well as partners, which is now possible with the new set-up, in a more agile and transparent manner.

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Cloud computing key to precision medicine but security concerns … – Healthcare IT News

Precision medicine promises to change the healthcare paradigm and create a powerful new model of care designed specifically for each individual, offering a much greater likelihood of effectiveness. But to realize much of this vision requires eliminating data silos and aggregating information from all sources Internet of Things, patient surveys, genomic data, EHRs and more into a central repository that gives clinicians worldwide access to this data.

Many believe the cloud will become the primary platform for data aggregation and harmonization. And thats the direction Nephi Walton, MD, informaticist and clinical geneticist at Washington University School of Medicine, is heading.

People are misled a bit by the benefits of cloud computing in this domain, Walton said. A lot of people are touting the advantage of data anywhere, which indeed is an advantage of cloud computing. But that is not the major role that the cloud will play in precision medicine. Its more related to the size of the data and the ability to analyze and access data quickly. And the ability to plug into cloud services of different types. There are certain things that lend themselves to cloud computing more than others, and in precision medicine it is more the large data sets involved.

A caregiver may have huge data sets, entire genomes, gigabytes on an individual. Historically, healthcare has placed all this data on huge servers; but when one has this large a data set on each patient, one really needs to use distributed computing, Walton explained.

Learn more at theCloud Computing ForumHIMSS17.Register here. University of Mississippi Medical Center finds big analytics gains in the cloud Intermountain exec: Cloud changes breadth and depth of innovation

When you think about who is doing it and allowing huge sets of analysis, you think of someone like Google; it is using database cloud computing technology, he explained. The advantage is setting up all of these large data sets in something similar to Google Big Table a database structure different from standard relational databases as it allows one to use a distributed model that enables rapid access to large amounts of data. Here you can quickly access lots of information and process it quickly.

That is where the power will be in terms of cloud computing and precision medicine, he added.

You will have someones genomic data in an accessible database where you can access all the people with certain conditions to do real-time analysis and apply new knowledge to large data sets quickly, he said.

Walton will be speaking on the benefits and challenges of using cloud computing with precision medicine at the HIMSS and Healthcare IT News Cloud Computing Forum in Orlando, Florida, on February 19, during the 2017 HIMSS Conference & Exhibition. Waltons session is entitled Precision Medicine and the Cloud.

One of the big challenges with cloud computing and precision medicine is peoples fear of data security, Walton said.

The thing people do not realize is that the cloud is probably in some ways more secure than what a lot of people are doing now, he said. I know of some organizations that are fearful of the security of putting the data out there in the cloud but that actually have serious gaping security holes that expose them to far more risk than would happen with cloud computing. Anytime you allow remote access to data your weakest link in security is your employees passwords. If you have any reasonable security, the weakest spot will be at the employee level.

Walton said most companies that provide cloud computing services have excellent reliability and security and can provide these things on a scale that would be difficult for smaller organizations and even challenging for larger organizations.

The issue is it is not cheap, he added. But when you look at all the people you employ for security and backup and maintenance and so forth, for smaller organizations it makes sense to turn to the cloud; for larger organizations, it depends.

In the end, healthcare organizations must understand why they wish to get into cloud computing before they actually do so, Walton advised.

Understand if you are doing it for the right reasons, that you have done a good analysis of not just the real obvious things and are not just jumping into the ring without fully understanding why, he said. If you do it from the perspective of you do not want to be the person who manages servers and worry about backups and data security, essentially what you are doing is putting off a lot of your IT expenses to someone else. You can build a cloud in-house. The question is can you do it more efficiently than someone who's job and mission it is to do that. You have to make sure you know why you are doing it and the benefits you will get from it.

HIMSS17runs from Feb. 19-23, 2017 at the Orange County Convention Center.

This article is part of our ongoing coverage of HIMSS17. VisitDestination HIMSS17for previews, reporting live from the show floor and after the conference.

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WTF is cloud computing? – TechCrunch


ZDNet
WTF is cloud computing?
TechCrunch
After more than a decade of being in the popular tech lexicon, people kind of get the idea of the cloud, but most probably only understand a bit of it. That's because the cloud isn't a single concrete thing so much as a concept that encompasses many ...
AWS dominates cloud computing infrastructure market, bigger than IBM/Google/Microsoft combinedZDNet
The cloud continues to riseand fastNetwork World
Dropbox Rolls Out Google Docs CompetitorCIO Today
InfoWorld -University Herald -1redDrop (blog) -Canalys
all 77 news articles »

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The Best Cloud Computing Companies And CEOs To Work For In 2017 Based On Glassdoor – Forbes


Forbes
The Best Cloud Computing Companies And CEOs To Work For In 2017 Based On Glassdoor
Forbes
Employees would most recommend Apprenda, DocuSign, Google, HyTrust, Mendix, M-Files, Mimecast, OutSystems, ProsperWorks and Zerto to their friends looking for a cloud computing company to work for in 2017. These and other insights are from an ...

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How a rebirth at the edge will change the cloud – Network World

For enterprise IT, the cloud has finally reached the tipping point. It is no longer a question of whether cloud is part of the strategic plan for most organizations, but simply when and how they will realize the move to cloud.

If youre an IT leader, however, you may not want to get too comfortable with your cloud strategy.

Despite having just fully arrived in the cloud era, we are about to move onat least according to Peter Levine of Andreessen Horowitz.

As 2016 wrapped up, Levine gave a talk in which he made his provocative prediction: Cloud computing is coming to an end.

Levines prediction is provocative. Enterprise executives are just coming to terms with the real implications of cloud on their IT strategy, so the idea that they are already behind the curve again is stark. Levines statement is guilty of a bit of hyperbole, as Ill explain in a moment, but business and IT leaders should pay close attention to this prediction.

Levines premise is that while the industry has been rushing to push data and compute to the cloud, a new generation of edge devices and edge strategies has been exponentially growing in both compute and storage powerupsetting the balance and shifting the focus from cloud back to the edge.

A luxury automobile, not a self-driving car, has about 100 CPUs in it today. A self-driving car, in the not too distant future, may have over 200 connected computers inside of it, he explains. If you think about a self-driving car, its effectively a data center on wheels.

The edge he is referring to is a combination of smart devices and sensors, self-driving cars, drones, robots and everything else covered under the large umbrella called the Internet of Things (IoT), along with mobile devices and even traditional web browsers.

But this is where the hyperbole comes in because he isnt saying organizations will abandon the cloud and push compute and storage exclusively back to these devicesjust that certain specific aspects of compute and storage will move back to the edge.

What Levine describes, in fact, is more of a complex, hybrid ecosystem that leverages compute and storage at every stage of the data workflowwherever it makes the most sense and provides the greatest value.

Using the autonomous vehicle as an example, he explains that it may generate as much as 10GB of data for each mile driven. That data will be stored within the vehicle, processed and used immediately, because its needed in real time. Only those data elements that can improve algorithms or are beneficial for analytics or other uses will move to the cloud.

Processing-intensive activities, such as machine learning, will occur within the cloud, and the resulting data will be fed into the broader ecosystem for analytical correlation, related transactions and the like. It makes perfect sense, but Im not sure Id characterize it as the end of cloud computing.

Nevertheless, it does represent a rapidly developing future, as a host of both new and existing vendors develop edge-focused technologies. These developments mean IT leaders need to pay attention and start adapting their strategies to account for this new approach.

The starting point of this process is to begin imagining what it means to push your compute closer to the edgeand closer to your customer. This push to the edge will naturally dovetail with your burgeoning IoT strategy. Youre working on one, right?

But as you develop your IoT strategy, it demands that you move beyond thinking of your smart devices as merely data collection agents and instead begin to think about how you can create richer engagement at the edge.

Companies such as Greenwave are developing technologies that enable manufacturers to embed analytics directly onto their smart devices to enable sophisticated, real-time data analytics and data mining at the edge, allowing organizations to respond and react more quickly.

At the other end of the spectrum, companies such as Instart Logic are looking at the browser as a richer computing platform and leveraging it to transform how content providers deliver content. They have developed what they call the Nanovisor, a web application virtualization component that they inject into the browser to virtualize and take control of the underlying browser resources.

Their Nanovisor communicates with their cloud-based platform. By operating within both the edge and the cloud, leveraging compute resources within both layers, they can provide an additional layer of services and monitor transactions on an end-to-end basisneither of which they could do if they were operating solely within the cloud.

Cloud is not dead. But we are seeing a re-envisioning of the role edge devices will play in our hybrid futureand it will change the role of the cloud and how you approach it. Business and IT leaders need to understand the impact of this shift and begin adapting their strategies accordingly.

The bigger message, however, is more fundamental. In the digital era, the only thing you can count on is that you will be in a constant state of change. As I wrote recently, "The essence of digital transformation is the destruction of the static state. You may as well get used to it.

Disclosure: As of the time of writing, Instart Logic is an Intellyx customer. None of the other organizations mentioned in this article are Intellyx customers.

This article is published as part of the IDG Contributor Network. Want to Join?

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HPE’s Whitman Gets $35.6 Million in 2016 After Company Split – Talkin’ Cloud

(Bloomberg) --Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. Chief Executive Officer Meg Whitman got $35.6 million in compensation for fiscal 2016 after leading efforts to pare down her company amid growing competition from cloud-based service providers.

Whitman, 60, got stock options worth $11.7 million, some of which are tied to share price goals, for the year ended Oct. 31, according to a regulatory filing Monday. She also got restricted shares worth $19 million that will be hers if she remains on the job through 2018 and meets certain performance targets. The total value of her pay package more than doubled from the prior year, when she ran Hewlett-Packard Co. and orchestrated the split from sister company HP Inc.

The CEO also got $1.5 million in salary and a $3.08 million bonus from the Palo Alto, California-based computer maker. Companies typically grant newly hired executives significant equity awards to provide an incentive for them to stick around and align their interests with shareholders.

Whitman has been slimming down her company, which focuses on software and hardware for corporate customers, as she looks to free it from less promising assets and focus on core products for data centers. Since splitting from HP in November 2015, shes announced deals to shed the services business and also key software units. The stock price rose 53 percent in the fiscal year ended Oct. 31.

The CEO received one-time equity grants worth $15 million tied to the split from HP Inc. Half are options tied to stock price appreciation. The company has already met the targets and said Whitman will receive the options by November 2018. The remainder are restricted shares tied to her continued employment.

About $2.63 million of the disclosed cost of her stock awards came from accounting charges tied to previous grants from Hewlett-Packard that were converted. For 2017, her equity awards will be split between restricted shares vesting over time and options thatll vest if the companys stock rises from 15 percent to 35 percent, and the company meets certain growth targets.

Executive Vice President Michael Nefkens received a $14.6 million pay package while Antonio Neri, who leads the companys enterprise group, got $12.4 million. About $989,000 and $411,000, respectively, came from accounting adjustments of existing awards.

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The 100 Coolest Cloud Computing Vendors Of 2017 – CRN

It's been seven years since CRN introduced the first 100 Coolest Cloud Computing Vendors list, a comprehensive guide designed to help solution providers navigate the then-new world of cloud technology.

In the rapidly evolving technology ecosystem, seven years can seem like a lifetime. The aim of the project hasn't changed in 2017 and, in fact, one could argue that its insight is actually more valuable than ever.

Cloud is no longer an industry buzzword whose meaning is only understood by the high-tech savvy. It's no longer a space occupied by Amazon, Google and a variety of other vendors taking aim at various niche spaces.

Cloud is now thrown around in everyday conversation, providing us with a means to access our favorite music on-the-go and being referenced as fodder in high-profile celebrity mishaps.

With seemingly every major tech vendor touting a cloud offering, cloud in the enterprise is now an overwhelming market, where identifying the companies and technologies that set up the most lucrative recurring revenue plays can be invaluable for today's solution providers.

So here we present The 100 Coolest Cloud Computing Vendors Of 2017, once again broken up into five categories.

In the cloud storage arena, we examine the vendors providing everything from backup destinations to disaster recovery services, gateways to a wide-range of online storage offerings for business data.

In the platform space, we look at the Platform-as-a-Service solutions powering today's digital transformations.

In the cloud infrastructure services industry, we look at not only the four major companies -- Amazon, Microsoft, Google and IBM -- but also the upstarts taking advantage of the market's massive growth.

Across the cloud security spectrum, we look at the security companies that are stepping up to the plate with new offerings to protect public, private,and hybrid cloud environments.

And lastly, we explore the CRM and accounting applications, the business analytics tools, and the content management offerings from today's software companies that are truly helping businesses and their employees get work done.

The 20 Coolest Cloud Storage Vendors Of The 2017 Cloud 100 These cloud storage vendors are generating buzz in a variety of facets that together make up one of the most interesting parts of the IT business.

The 20 Coolest Cloud Platform And Development Vendors Of The 2017 Cloud 100 Cloud-based development platforms allow enterprises to focus on designing applications that serve the needs of their employees, customers and partners.

The 20 Coolest Cloud Infrastructure Vendors Of The 2017 Cloud 100 The cloud infrastructure market continues to be dominated by major legacy vendors, with four companies control more than half the world's Infrastructure-as-a-Service revenue.

The 20 Coolest Cloud Security Vendors Of The 2017 Cloud 100 Cloud security companies are more important than ever as they look to solve a wide range of challenges, including data protection, traffic visibility, segmentation, application security and more.

The 20 Coolest Cloud Software Vendors Of The 2017 Cloud 100 Cloud software is the fuel that powers businesses and their employees to get work done. Here are 20 cloud software vendors that caught our attention for 2017.

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Cloud-Based Disaster Recovery as a Service: How is DRaaS Different from Backup and Recovery? – Enterprise Storage Forum

For businesses, cloud-based backup and recovery has become common these days. If backup is fast enough to fit within a backup window, and if recovery times hit recovery time objective (RTO) and recovery point objective (RPO) service levels, youre golden.

After that, it gets complicated. Backup and recovery are critical components of disaster recovery (DR), but alone they cant assure that application processing continues uninterrupted. Many enterprises have built their DR plans around remote sites because they already own multiple data centers, or they have the budget for secondary hot sites. However, unless they have an extra data center hanging around or can afford to lease a secondary hot site midsized and small businesses were out of luck for remote DR.

In response, many cloud service providers and disaster recovery vendors took the cloud-based backup and recovery model to its logical next step: failing-over applications to the cloud.

One of the big advantages of cloud-based failover is that even small and midsize companies can now afford to contract for cloud-based failover. Its more expensive than just using cloud-based backup and recovery, but its considerably less expensive than building or leasing fully mirrored secondary data centers. We call this offering disaster recovery as a service, or DRaaS.

The three primary service types of cloud-based data protection (DP) services include backup as a service (BaaS), recovery as a service (RaaS) and disaster recovery as a service (DRaaS). Lines between the three can be blurry, but in general, the following definitions apply:

DRaaS is not by definition necessarily based in the cloud. Some service providers offer DRaaS as a site-to-site service where they host and operate a secondary hot site. Others offer server replacement, where they rebuild and ship servers to the client site.

The primary advantage of cloud-based DRaaS is its ability to immediately failover applications, reconnect users via VPN or Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), and orchestrate failback to rebuilt servers in the customer data center.

Cloud-based disaster recovery service providers deliver their services different ways. Some use appliances; some do not. Some limit failover to the cloud while others offer managed site-to-site failover as well. Many offer DR testing on at least a quarterly basis.

Nothing is Perfect: DRaaS has a lot to offer but there are some drawbacks.

One particularly important consideration is choosing between virtual to virtual (V2V)-only providers and providers who do both V2V, physical to physical (P2P), and perhaps physical to virtual (P2V). V2V works best when a customer has a near 100 percent virtualization rate, and when physical servers can be easily re-created on-site. Customers with high-priority physical servers should look for DRaaS providers who do both. In this case, the customer replicates image-based server backups to the cloud disaster site as well as replicating VMs. Also, look for providers that offer bare metal restore services for efficient server rebuilds.

It's important to understand not only failover services but also reconnection. Its one thing for applications to restart in the cloud; its quite another for application users to reconnect to the cloud securely and with high enough performance. Learn about your providers methods of reconnecting users including networking details, WAN speeds and security details, including firewalls, intrusion protection and port monitoring. You will also want to know exactly what youre getting with failback and restore services. Be very clear in your service level agreements over application restore orchestration.

There are many DRaaS service providers to choose from. Some DRaaS vendors use their own products as a service offering. Other service providers use DRaaS products from partner vendors, so be sure to ask who their partners are and what products they are using. Dont forget to check your providers geography and data center resources. In a regional disaster when many companies are attempting to restart their applications in the providers data center, that provider had better have sufficient resources to serve them all.

Below is a selection of vendors who develop their own DRaaS products. Most of them sell their services to partners, and a few of them exclusively offer their own services.

Zetta.nets software-only DRaaS offering enables physical and virtual server spin-ups, scales from a single server to a network and remotely boots over a VPN or RDP connection.

Unitrend's DRaaS works with Recovery Series or Unitrends Enterprise Backup appliances to rapidly spin-up critical applications in the Unitrends cloud.

Acronis acquired nScaled in 2014 to develop Acronis Disaster Recovery Service. The offering is targeted at midsized and enterprise organizations and has an appliance option.

Datto SIRIS 3 backs up, restores and fails over physical, virtual and cloud environments running on Windows, Mac or Linux OSes. Customers have the choice of deploying SIRIS as a physical, software or virtual appliance.

Public cloud vendors Amazon, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud all offer DRaaS services through partners, and may also offer their own. Their shared advantages are economies of scale and many global data centers. AWS works with multiple DR product providers to enable rapid failover, scaling from a single server to large-scale enterprise environments. DRaaS service providers like Geminare DRaaS run on Google Cloud, and Google also positions Google Cloud Storage Nearline as a low-cost DRaaS alternative. MS Azure Site Recovery automates VM protection and replication plus remote health monitoring, DR plan testing and orchestrated recovery. MS Azure StorSimple is a widely deployed on-premise onramp to Azure DRaaS.

Veeam provides V2V DRaaS services for VMware and Hyper-V, and it runs on both private and public clouds.

Zerto is an enterprise offering that provides backup, recovery, and DRaaS services across multiple replication sites. It offers RPOs in seconds and RTOs in minutes.

IBM offers BaaS and fully managed DRaaS in its data centers. It provides three levels of spin-up service agreements so customers can control costs: the premium service offers minutes per server, the next level one hour for shared VMs, and the third level a maximum of six hours for shared VMs.

Finally, Actifio is something of a hybrid: its primarily a copy data management player but powers DRaaS service offerings from companies like Verizon.

Photo courtesy of Shutterstock.

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