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ITenpower Technologies Webhosting, Cloud, Dedicated and Managed Servers! – Video



13-06-2012 09:40 ITenpower Technologies is a Canadian Company. We offer Shared Webhosting, Cloud, Dedicated and Managed Server Solutions. We also offer SEO optimization and website design services. Our rates are affordable, and our support is powered by quality technicians. We offer support through live chat, support ticket, and email. Please like our Facebook Page here: Please Follow us on Twitter: You can visit our website at

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SoftLayer Announces Turnkey Private Clouds

DALLAS, TX--(Marketwire -06/12/12)- SoftLayer, a leading provider of global, Internet-scale cloud infrastructure, today unveiled its new SoftLayer Private Clouds solution that provisions and configures full private cloud deployments on demand. These scalable, secure and high-performance deployments leverage the company's automated architecture, worldwide data center locations and private network, and customer-controlled infrastructure management system.

"For some time our customers have used our portfolio of dedicated servers, network resources, and virtualization options to build their own private clouds. Now, with SoftLayer Private Clouds, instead of starting at square one, you begin with a pre-configured cloud ready for whatever you want to do with it," said Duke Skarda, Chief Technology Officer for SoftLayer. "We've built our Private Clouds solution out of our experience creating and managing our own cloud, and our unique capabilities in automating sophisticated deployments. At the push of a button you have a dedicated cloud at your command, with full access and control over every aspect, and the ability to scale infinitely, on demand."

SoftLayer Private Clouds streamlines ordering, enabling customers to simply choose the number of physical servers that they need as client hosts and then customize the configuration and resources for those servers as desired. In as few as two hours, SoftLayer's automated provisioning system will have automatically:

Additional features include:

SoftLayer's first Private Clouds solution is built on Citrix CloudPlatform, powered by Apache CloudStack. "We are proud to play a central role in this powerful new cloud-infrastructure-as-a-service," said Peder Ulander, vice president of Citrix. "SoftLayer innovates with solutions that make the cloud more accessible, affordable, and scalable and Apache CloudStack is the perfect match for that goal. The combined solution brings flexibility and ease of use while ensuring the control, efficiency, and scalability that dynamic private clouds require."

"This innovative new offering from SoftLayer is a testament to how they understand customer needs. Customers will benefit from the proven configuration and the speed at which SoftLayer will deliver it," said Bailey Caldwell, RightScale Vice President of Business Development. "We're delighted that RightScale and myCloud are available for cloud management of SoftLayer private clouds -- it's an ideal fit with our existing ability to manage SoftLayer public clouds; now customers can manage both through a single pane of glass."

Availability & Pricing SoftLayer Private Clouds will be available starting August 1, 2012. Pricing starts at $1,218 per-month for a base configuration including one management server, one host server, and associated software licenses.

About SoftLayer TechnologiesHeadquartered in Dallas, SoftLayer operates a global cloud infrastructure platform built for Internet scale. Spanning 13 data centers in the United States, Asia and Europe and a global footprint of network points of presence, SoftLayer's modular architecture provides unparalleled performance and control, with a full-featured API and sophisticated automation controlling a flexible platform that seamlessly spans physical and virtual devices, and a global network for secure, low-latency communications. With 100,000 servers under management, SoftLayer is the largest privately held infrastructure-as-a-service provider in the world with a portfolio of 25,000 leading-edge customers from Web startups to global enterprises. For more information, please visit softlayer.com or call 1.866.398.7638.

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Gandi Launches Gandi Basekit to Meet Growing Need for iPhone and iPad-Ready Sites

SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire -06/14/12)- Gandi, a leading domain name registrar and cloud hosting provider, today announced Gandi Basekit, a free website creation tool for organizations, companies and individuals hosted by Gandi, allowing compatibility with Apple iOS devices. Now any Gandi customer can create sites that are clearly viewable on iPads and iPhones. Gandi Basekit is the latest in a portfolio of tools offered by Gandi free of charge in order to provide the highest quality experience for customers.

Gandi Basekit allows the creation of websites using HTML5 and CSS style sheets, which are essential to supporting good display of sites on iOS devices, which do not support Flash. Prior to the introduction of Gandi Basekit, customers needed to set up either a PaaS or IaaS system to achieve comparable functionality.

"To adapt to the massive influx of iPads and iPhones in the browser pool, Gandi is enhancing its services with tools for customers to respond to that market need," said Thomas Stocking, VP of U.S. Operations, Gandi.net. "Internet browsing is increasingly done via smartphones or tablets, and now it is more important than ever that sites not only display well on these devices, but are built with these devices in mind."

Key features and benefits of Gandi Basekit include:

Ease of use for beginners: With the intuitive WYSIWYG interface, users can build pages without having to know HTML5 or CSS3. Preconfigured, customizable theme templates allow for a quick start.

Powerful for experts: Along with its simplicity and ease of use for the casual or beginning user, Gandi BaseKit provides tools that allow experts to directly edit the HTML and CSS code for their sites. Preset or user-supplied graphics and images can both be used.

Integrated social tools: Modern websites incorporate links to share interesting content via social media. Gandi Basekit includes tools that allow drag and drop installation of links to the most widely used social media sites.

Intuitive content management: Gandi Basekit also provides a drag and drop interface for editing block text, adding another block, repositioning an image or adding a submit button and a navigation menu.

Ecommerce integration: The Google CheckOut Widget allows you to use Gandi Basekit to quickly integrate internationally accepted payment functionality into your site.

Availability:

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CloudPassage Introduces Halo GhostPorts SMS

SAN FRANCISCO June 12, 2012 CloudPassage, the leading cloud server security provider, today announces SMS support for GhostPorts, a multi-factor mobile authentication method for its Halo cloud server security platform. GhostPorts SMS provides secure access control for any application on any server in any cloud using any mobile phone as the authentication device, barring the need for any additional authentication infrastructure.

Secure administrative access to public and hybrid cloud servers is an enormous barrier to cloud adoption., While multi-factor authentication is standard practice for securing servers in private datacenters, until now it has been impossible to deploy it in the cloud without expensive and complex infrastructure, said Rand Wacker, vice president of product management at CloudPassage. With Halo GhostPorts SMS, we are eliminating this roadblock with an approach to dynamic network access that is easy to manage and can be implemented quite literally in a matter of minutes.

For secure server access, Halo GhostPorts SMS generates a one-time passcode that authenticates the user and temporarily opens a server management port for only the IP address the user authenticates from. Used in conjunction with existing server authentication, this broadly accepted process for multi-factor authentication provides outstanding server access control. Visible only to authorized users, the server port remains invisible and inaccessible to would-be hackers, worms, malware and other threats. Since the passcode is delivered via SMS to the users mobile device, this approach works on even basic mobile phones and pagers in the United States and internationally.

Halo GhostPorts SMS was specifically built for rapidly securing elastic public and hybrid cloud environments and works on any cloud provider or hosting model, allowing users to secure any cloud server or application. GhostPorts creates dynamic, time-bound firewall rules that open temporary access for authenticated users.

GhostPorts SMS is powered by cloud communications leader Twilio, and was developed with their SMS API. "CloudPassage has built an innovative approach to cloud security, said Twilio Co-founder and CEO Jeff Lawson. "And Twilio is proud to extend CloudPassges capabilities by powering GhostPorts SMS to provide a secure channel that's universal, simple, and flexible.

Security must not only be easy for the company, but also for the individual user, which is why we are focusing on the most convenient authentication form possible the mobile phone, continued Wacker. For those companies with a successful BYOD implementation, this model takes advantage of the phones users already carry with them and are comfortable using, providing a simple and cost-effective path to network security.

Halo GhostPorts SMS can be used with most major Linux and Windows operating systems. Halo GhostPorts also offers an alternative USB key-based approach to two-factor authentication.

Availability

Halo GhostPorts SMS is now available as part of Halo NetSec and Halo Professional. To learn more, and to sign up for the Halo cloud server security platform, visit http://www.cloudpassage.com/ghost.

About CloudPassage CloudPassage is the leading provider of public and private cloud server security and creator of Halo, the industry's first security and compliance platform purpose-built for elastic cloud environments. Halo operates across public, private and hybrid clouds. Industry-leading companies like Foursquare, Avatar New York and Exois trust Halo to seamlessly manage their server security configuration, host-based firewalls, intrusion detection and server account auditing from one system. A feature-rich version of Halo is available for free at http://www.cloudpassage.com/free. Headquartered in San Francisco, Calif., CloudPassage is backed by Benchmark Capital, Tenaya Capital and other leading investors. For more information, please visit http://www.CloudPassage.com.

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RightScale Survey Reveals Hybrid Cloud Driving Multi-Cloud Strategy

SANTA BARBARA, CA--(Marketwire -06/13/12)- Companies of all sizes view cloud computing as a strategic business opportunity. With the increase in the number of cloud infrastructure providers, businesses are now able to choose from a variety of options to align their cloud strategy with their specific business needs. RightScale Inc., the leader in cloud management, today announced results of a new market study of over 600 companies to uncover how businesses are approaching cloud computing and what priorities they set for implementing their cloud strategies.

"Cloud infrastructure now dominates as the architecture for 'the new IT' -- and companies big and small enjoy an unprecedented variety of options for deploying the best cloud solution to meet their business needs," said Michael Crandell, CEO of RightScale. "No one-size-fits-all approach will work for everyone, which is why it's important to choose a platform that will allow you freedom of choice now and into the future as you decide where and how to leverage infrastructure-as-a-service cloud providers."

Multi-Cloud is the Strategy of Choice for BusinessesWith adoption of cloud computing rising, businesses are becoming more sophisticated in their strategies for leveraging cloud technologies. More than two-thirds (68 percent) of survey respondents report that they are pursuing a multi-cloud strategy. 53 percent of respondents are pursuing a hybrid strategy that includes a combination of public and private clouds. Another 15 percent of respondents have a multi-cloud strategy that includes multiple public clouds, but no private clouds. Among the respondents that plan to use both public and private clouds, 55 percent prioritize their public and private cloud efforts equally, while 23 percent prioritize their private cloud initiatives and 22 percent prioritize their public cloud initiatives. 89 percent of the respondents report that public cloud will be included in their multi-cloud portfolio.

Customers often cite this multi-cloud approach as a key driver for choosing RightScale as their cloud management platform. "In order to make our customers successful, it is critical that we leverage the best in class solutions -- from public cloud, private cloud and even physical servers," said Sanket Naik, Senior Director, Cloud Operations at Coupa. "We are committed to zero downtime and seamless availability for customers to our platform. RightScale's multi-cloud support empowers us to customize our approach to the cloud to meet the business needs of Coupa and our customers."

Open Source Technologies Take the Lead for Private Cloud

Among the 64 percent of respondents who plan to include a private cloud option as part of their cloud portfolio, open source private cloud solutions are taking the lead. 41 percent of those respondents plan to use only open source-based private cloud options (CloudStack, OpenStack or Eucalyptus), while another 29 percent plan to use a combination of open source and VMware options. 30 percent of those respondents plan to use VMware-only based private cloud options.

"We've seen an explosion in multi-cloud usage in the market, and among our own customer base," said Michael Crandell, CEO of RightScale. "Many RightScale customers have already deployed multiple clouds, including private clouds, and those multi-cloud companies represent over 90% of cloud usage we manage. This means that cloud leaders are already using multiple clouds, and our survey shows that many more companies intend to employ that strategy. RightScale helps companies navigate and manage this complex landscape by offering support of eight public clouds and three private clouds. We are focused on continuing to evolve our platform and ecosystem to enable companies to take full advantage of infrastructure-as-a-service with more of the applications they use every day."

About the RightScale Cloud Market Survey RightScale polled 651 businesses of all sizes and from a variety of industries, between April and May, 2012.

About RightScale RightScale Inc., cloud management enables organizations to easily deploy and manage business-critical applications across public, private, and hybrid clouds. RightScale provides efficient configuration, monitoring, automation, and governance of cloud computing infrastructure and applications. Since 2006, millions of servers have been launched with the RightScale solution by leading enterprises including the Associated Press, CBS Interactive, Intercontinental Hotels Group, PBS, and Zynga.

RightScale is a registered trademark of RightScale, Inc. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners. Other product or company names mentioned may be trademarks or trade names of their respective companies.

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Report: Amazon Cozying Up to Music Labels to Expand Cloud

Amazon is closing in on licensing deals with music labels for its cloud music service, according to CNET.

Amazon has already reached agreements with Universal Music Group and EMI, CNET said, and is in the late stages of negotiations with Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group.

Sony could not be reached for comment; Warner Music Group did not immediately respond to request for confirmation.

The news comes shortly after Amazon released an iPhone and iPod touch version of its Cloud Player app.

Amazon launched its Amazon Cloud Drive, Amazon Cloud Player for Web, and Amazon Cloud Player for Android in March 2011. Cloud Drive allowed users to upload music, e-books, videos, and other digital media onto Amazon's servers, while Cloud Player allowed them to listen to their stored music on mobile devices or the PC.

After the service's release, however, record labels were reportedly irked that Amazon did not secure the proper licenses, but at the time, Amazon said it did not need them. "We don't need a license to store music," Craig Pape, director of music at Amazon, told the New York Times last year. "The functionality is the same as an external hard drive."

When Google released its Google Music service later that year, it said it had deals with more than 1,000 music labels, including Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, and EMI, as well as indie labels, like those from Merlin.

Apple, meanwhile, has licenses for iTunes Match, which allows users to store their entire music library in the cloud, or iCloud, for on-the-go access to music from any iOS device or computerfor $24.99 per year.

Amazon did not immediately respond to request for comment.

For more, see PCMag's reviews of Amazon Cloud Player (for Android), as well as Amazon Cloud Player and Amazon Cloud Drive.

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Cloud Computing vs. Real Cloud Computing

Many so-called cloud vendors have adopted the safe and sure approach of separate spindles and virtual servers to define something that by rights ought to be collective and multitenant. In Oracle's case, it is even more amazing that the company that builds the database on which so much of true cloud computing rests, chooses to go a different way when it comes to its enterprise customers.

Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) re-introduced its new cloud/social constellation of stuff last week that it had announced back at OpenWorld. If I count the analyst briefing I got in Redwood Shores in April, it was a re-re-introduction. Oracle is not the only company to follow this strategy . For example, Salesforce follows a conventional triple-tell approach too -- tell them what you're going to say, say it, tell them what you said. But each time Salesforce repeats itself, the messaging gets clearer. When Oracle does it, the message only gets louder.

There was important back channel chatter over Larry Ellison's claim that there are 100 Fusion applications now available on the Oracle cloud, which many experts of my acquaintance found dubious, though the mainstream press, such as The New York Times, seemed to report as straight news.

Perhaps because of this news and the skepticism with which it was greeted in some quarters, we should take this as one of a dwindling number of opportunities to call bullpucky on the new cloud establishment. Or as I would prefer to call it, "legacy to cloud hybridization." It's quite a mouthful but here are some points to consider.

Every major legacy software house I know of has adopted cloud messaging and some form of "data center in the sky" technology to stamp "paid" on its obligation to take its customers to the promised land. However, the vast majority of these solutions have merely harvested the low-hanging fruit from multi-tenant cloud and used it to solidify and prolong their hold on the customer base.

So we have data centers hosting conventional applications, which supposedly qualify as cloud, A.K.A. Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS). If you add conventional applications to this, in some circles you automatically get Software as a Service (SaaS), and the further addition of development tools yields Platform as a Service (PaaS).

But if you are like me, you ask how moving the conventional circus to another location really changes anything. You might reap some cost savings from outsourcing some IT management functions, but that is a poor substitute for outsourcing the whole enchilada and enabling people to concentrate on the business.

The big sticking point has, for the last 10 years or more, been the issue of where the data resides and who has access to it. Some of us have become adept at worrying about data leaking out of one database and materializing, like Schrodinger's cat, elsewhere and causing serious business problems. To me, this is comical and it tells me that although we have invented this high technology, we are not much further advanced from our hominid ancestors.

As Edward O. Wilson recently put it in his latest book, The Social Conquest of Earth, "We have created a Star Wars civilization, with Stone Age emotions, medieval institutions, and godlike technology." Nowhere do all of these ideas converge as perfectly as in cloud computing.

The cloud computing debate, especially as it refers to data security, might learn from the late medieval or early Renaissance institution we refer to as "banking." Banks might represent the first multi-tenant human invention, followed closely by water utilities and sanitation services, because they comingle money and overlay it with the metadata of accounts, passwords and statements all designed to keep your money separate from mine.

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Cloud secrecy: Will it cause a system meltdown?

Summary: The tendency of cloud providers to keep the internal details of their infrastructure secret could cause problems that could wreak havoc in the cloud, a researcher has warned.

Microsofts general manager for Windows Azure, Bill Hilf, thinks it is okay for cloud providers to hang onto the secrets of their internal infrastructure, and says if customers are designing applications that live or die on the basis of very specific requirements, they should not be going to the cloud in the first place.

Youve picked a hammer instead of a screwdriver for a screw, Hilf says. He stresses that less than one percent of the Windows Azure customers he talks to have requirements that go this far, and they tend to be from the government.

Hilf was reacting to a paper published by a Yale academic that argues the secrecy with which cloud providers treat their infrastructure could lead to wide-ranging problems.

In his Icebergs in the Clouds: the Other risks of cloud computing (PDF) academic Bryan Ford argues the lack of disclosure about the inner workings of clouds could put service providers on a collision course with one another.

As diverse, independently developed cloud services share ever more fluidly and aggressively multiplexed hardware resource pools, unpredictable interactions between load balancing and other reactive mechanisms could lead to dynamic instabilities or meltdowns, he writes.

The problems he identifies come in two classes - programming issues and interdependency problems - and look set to become more prevalent over time as cloud providers and services interlace with one another. He presented his paper on Tuesday at the Hotcloud 12 conference in Boston.

A programming issue he identifies is where an application providers load balancer eventually syncs its update cycles with the hardware power optimiser operated by a separate provider. This leads to a death spiral where as power is cut to one server the load balancer moves workloads to another and all incoming traffic ends up oscillating between one server and the other, cutting the systems overall capacity in half - or worse if more than two servers are involved, he writes.

This problem would not arise if cloud providers disclosed the internal technologies they use to scale power, distribute loads and perform other detailed infrastructure management techniques, he argues, as developers would be able to see problems before they arose.

Ford believes the cloud business model encourages providers not to share with each other the details of their resource allocation and optimisation algorithms - crucial parts of their secret sauce - that would be necessary to analyse or ensure the stability of the larger, composite system.

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SPEC Forms Cloud Benchmarking Group

GAINESVILLE, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Standard Performance Evaluation Corp. (SPEC) has formed a new group to research and recommend application workloads for benchmarking cloud computing performance.

The group functions under SPECs Open Systems Group (OSG) and is working in cooperation with other SPEC committees and subcommittees to define cloud benchmark methodologies, determine and recommend application workloads, identify cloud metrics for existing SPEC benchmarks, and develop new cloud benchmarks.

Current participants in OSGCloud include AMD, Dell, IBM, Ideas International, Intel, Karlshuhe Institute of Technology, Oracle, Red Hat and VMware. Long-time SPEC benchmark developer Yun Chao is a supporting contributor. The group collaborates with the SPEC Research Cloud group, which is working on gaining a broader understanding of cloud behavior and performance issues.

A major shift

While cloud performance takes into account many of the same characteristics as current SPEC benchmarks throughput, response time and power, for example it also brings into play new metrics such as elasticity, defined as how quickly a service can adapt to changing customer needs.

Cloud computing is on the rise and represents a major shift in how servers are used and how their performance is measured, says Rema Hariharan, chair of OSGCloud. We want to assemble the best minds to define this space, create workloads, augment existing SPEC benchmarks, and develop new cloud-based benchmarks.

Call for wider participation

The group targets three types of users for the workloads and benchmarks it will create:

OSGCloud has already developed a 50-page report that details its objectives, benchmark considerations, characteristics of a cloud benchmark, and tools for creating metrics.

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