Cloud Storage for Business: 37 Cloud Experts Reveal the Top Cloud Storage Mistakes They See Companies Make

Posted by Cloud computing is no longer a new field in the current digital landscape. In fact, unlike several years ago when moving to the cloud was an optional business decision, today, most established businesses that conduct a significant portion of their activities online, whether they are a technology-based company or not, are almost expected to have already implemented some type of cloud storage solution due to the convenience, efficiency, and cost-savings it provides (when done right). And for those companies who have not yet made the switch to the cloud, the transition is imminent.But moving a business to cloud storage is not something to be taken lightly. It affects a number of different components of the business itself, from information and personnel management, infrastructure, expenses, security, performance, and more. Fortunately, with appropriate research, most businesses can mitigate many of the risks that come with making the move to cloud storage. But just because you’ve read up on a few articles on cloud storage and cloud computing, doesn’t mean your business’ cloud infrastructure is invincible.As a provider of cloud-based solutions, we wanted to know more advanced tips on how businesses can ensure a move to cloud storage is as smooth as possible, and also how businesses can make the most of cloud storage once it is implemented. To do that, we asked 37 business cloud experts the following question:

What’s the number one mistake large companies make when moving to cloud storage?

We’ve collected and compiled their expert advice into this comprehensive guide to effective cloud storage tips for businesses. We hope it will help you improve and protect your company’s cloud storage infrastructure, and ultimately take your business productivity to the next level.Docurated_CloudStorageExpert_Banner

Meet Our Panel of Cloud Experts:

 

Emil Sayegh

Emil-Sayegh_Codero-HeadshotEmil Sayegh is the CEO of Codero Hosting and is a pioneer of cloud computing. He is credited with launching the very successful cloud computing and hosting businesses for HP and Rackspace. He is also known as one of the “fathers of OpenStack,” having created the open source software. Emil joined Codero in 2012 and recently introduced a hybrid cloud solution.The number one mistake large companies make when moving to cloud storage is…Picking a monolithic storage solution such as an old fashioned SAN. First and foremost, those solutions are very expensive. Secondly, nowadays there is a plethora of excellent storage solutions that are optimized for the exact use case and performance requirements of an application. Archiving, as an example, should be done on an object storage solution, while demanding applications such as databases require the highest Input/Output performance per second (IOPS) possible so they need an Elastic Block Storage solution that delivers guaranteed high-performance. Large companies need to be able customize the amount of storage and IOPS to meet their performance and availability needs rather than get stuck with an old fashioned, and expensive, monolithic solution.

College seniors, take heart! There are jobs to be had at PE portfolio companies

By Brian RichPrivate equity firms generally hire very few recent college grads, but there’s one area of PE often missed by candidates: portfolio companies.In January, Catalyst Investors polled its companies and found that there is hope for the well-informed sheepskin bearer. There are indeed jobs out there – philosophy majors included – if you know where to look.Our portfolio companies increased their ranks by 22 percent in 2013. More importantly, recent college grads were more than half of the total jobs added, growing fully 79 percent versus 2012. Admittedly, our sample set is a microcosm of total U.S. employment with just 2,777 jobs, and it is self-selected since we are growth equity investors. Still, the point remains – if an ambitious graduate knows where and how to look, he or she can find a job.So when should college seniors start looking? While they’re still in school. They should focus on companies that are growing and hiring the fastest. These are often smaller organizations with limited, if any, on-campus recruiting. Students and soon-to-be-grads must be proactive in looking for them.Liberal Arts majors should understand the term “availability heuristic.” This means the universe of potential companies you can work for is not limited to those recruiting on campus or places your friends (or their parents) work.The easiest first step is to look within the fastest-growing sectors of the U.S. economy like technology, healthcare and energy. Searches shouldn’t be limited to household names like Google, Facebook and LinkedIn. Purely based on numbers, the chances of securing jobs there are slim at best. There are thousands of interesting businesses that aren’t interviewing on campus – you cannot rely on a college Career Services Center!Students are drawn to earlier stage venture capital companies, but such jobs are problematic. These firms don’t have the infrastructure, like training or HR, set up for recent grads. Bigger companies are slower growing or more staid, and most recruit on campus. Growth companies, like Catalyst portfolio companies, offer a great work environment with lots of upside.But remember that the successful candidate needs to do significant homework, research and preparation to get the job. I recently encountered a recent grad (Ivy League, no less) that was job-hunting in the fast-growing digital marketing space.“Can you tell me three players in the space?” I asked.“Uh, no,” was the reply.“What is the name of the CEO of the company you’re interviewing with?” I asked.“I don’t know that either,” he said.Obviously this person was not a promising conversation, but it could have easily been remedied with some due diligence. Sure, parents, friends and your network are helpful, but they can only do so much. To quote Jerry Maguire, “Help me help you.”Here’s how:

  • Choose an industry that is growing faster than 10 percent.
  • Make or find a “market map” within that industry. Don’t know what that is? Here are some examples.
  • Proactively reach out to HR at several, if not most, of the companies on your market map. Be targeted and definite in what you can bring them.
  • Once you get the interview, make sure you do your research. Do not show up without really understanding the company and what job it is that you’re interviewing for.

Growth-stage companies – like the college graduates with strong work ethics – are going places, and operating like growth equity investors reveals the diamonds in the rough. I can’t guarantee a job but if you follow this advice, I assure a dramatic increase in the chances of a successful job hunt and more importantly, starting your career in the right direction.

The Secret to Burning More Calories on Your Run

How to Build a Better Running PlaylistOne simple way to get swift: Turn up the tunes. Research shows that it can be a great motivator. To build a better playlist, download these music apps.PaceDJ: Have a favorite running tune, but its tempo doesn't fit your workout? No problem. This app will speed up or slow down the song to match your target pace. ($3; pacedj.com)TempoRun: Once you select your pace (speedy or snail), the app analyzes the songs in your library, then categorizes them by beats per minute. ($3; temporunapp.com)FitRadio: Choose a genre plus your target pace (for speedwork, that's between 120 and 140 beats per minute), and this app will formulate a playlist to match your taste and preferred tempo. (Free; fitradio.com)

Friday's Last Word: Codero Hosting CEO Emil Sayegh

, Talkin' Cloud

Codero Hosting CEO Emil Sayegh

Codero Hosting provides dedicated, managed and cloud hosting services to the market, claiming to deliver these services with out all the "hype and fluff." But what does its top executive like to do on his own time? Click through our slides to find out.Emil

1. Last Concert Attended

SAYEGH: I am lucky to be living in Austin, the Live Music Capital of the World. We always have a great line-up of concerts. My last concert was actually a Pitbull concert at the Formula 1 race in Austin in late October. In early October, I attended Austin City Limits Festival (ACL) and got to enjoy an amazing line-up of bands and singers such as Depeche Mode, The Cure, Lionel Richie, etc. I am looking forward to the upcoming SXSW event in March to enjoy more excellent emerging bands.TALKIN CLOUD's SPIN: Did You Know?: Pitbull said he chose his name because pitbulls "bite to lock. The dog is too stupid to lose. And they're outlawed in Dade County. They're basically everything that I am. It's been a constant fight."

2. Last Cocktail Ordered

SAYEGHMargarita.TALKIN CLOUD's SPIN: Is it time to head down to Margaritaville?

3. Last Sport Played

SAYEGHSoccer.TALKIN CLOUD's SPIN: Have you played soccer with Todd Croteau?

4. Last Favorite Television Show

SAYEGHDuck Dynasty. It is a wholesome family show that I can watch with my kids, and family.TALKIN CLOUD's SPINDuck Dynasty will be sponsoring a NASCAR race in Texas.

5. Last Book Read

SAYEGH"The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership" by John Maxwell.TALKIN CLOUD's SPIN: Maxwell combines his years of leadership skills with historical events to unveil the laws of leadership.

6. Last Gadget Purchased

SAYEGHHelicopter drone with a video camera.TALKIN CLOUD's SPIN: Perhaps, televising the Olympic events?

7. Last Website Accessed

SAYEGHCodero.com, of course!TALKIN CLOUD's SPIN: Of course ...

8. Last Vacation Trip

SAYEGHDisney Cruise to the Western Caribbean.TALKIN CLOUD's SPIN: Yes, this is what all of us on the East Coast need.

Advantage Business Media Sold to PE Firm

Publisher had been active in acquisitions in lead-up to sale.  BY MICHAEL RONDONAdvantage Business Media is being sold to the Owner Resource Group, an Austin-based private-equity firm, according to a release.The seller, Catalyst Investors, did not disclose terms of the deal. It had held ABM since buying it from Reed Elsevier in 2006—a long hold for private equity."The [ABM] team effectively navigated through the financial downturn and the business was able to succeed by transitioning from print-centric to digital. When Catalyst originally invested in the company, ABM's digital revenue was about 11 percent of total revenue and now it is nearly 50 percent," says Gene Wolfson, partner with Catalyst Investors, in a statement. "We believe ORG will help [ABM] continue its digital evolution and find new opportunities to grow the business."ABM's growth has come both organically and through acquisitions. The company made a small, strategic buy in mid-2011, followed up by the purchase of Vicon Publishing in early 2012. A year later, they quietly acquired eMedia Vitals, and named Prescott Shibles to its executive team.ABM is currently without a CEO however. Former CEO, Richard Reiff, left in March, according to a spokesperson.Catalyst also holds an undisclosed stake in F+W Media, an enthusiast publisher in more than 20 vertical markets, according to its website.Fit With New OwnershipORG has been busy—the ABM deal was it's second major investment in the last six weeks. The firm purchased a majority stake in CHEM Group Holdings, a tech-based chemical producer, on Dec. 31.That investment was more in line with the company's stated goals however. Founded in 2008, the ABM purchase appears to be one of ORG's first entrances into media."We are broadly invested but do have a preference toward certain industries," its website says. "These tend to be engineering-intensive manufacturing, service-supported distribution and niche service companies."Some of ABM's market verticals-namely, manufacturing-seem to fit that profile, however.ORG says it typically invests in companies with more than $15 million in revenue that "exhibit long-term growth prospects."

Owner Resource Buys PE-Backed Advantage Business Media

Catalyst bought the marketing and information services group in 2006 from Reed ElsevierBY ALLISON COLLINS Private equity firm Owner Resource Group LLC has acquired Advantage Business Media (ABM) from Catalyst Investors.ABM is a digital marketing and information services company that provides editorial content to science, design, manufacturing and communications professionals. The company delivers content through daily e-newsletters, branded websites, webcasts, videos, white papers, print media, conferences and live events. Publications include Electronic Component News, Manufacturing Business Technology, Product Design & Development and Wireless Week. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.Austin-based Owner Resource is a PE firm that invests in companies that have more than $15 million in revenue.Catalyst acquired ABM from PE firm Reed Elsevier in 2006. During the firm’s ownership, ABM increased digital revenue from about 11 percent of its income, to almost 50 percent. Catalyst is currently invested in the Reputation Institute, which it grabbed a minority stake in last May, as well as Alert Solutions and InSite Wireless Group LLC. The firm closed a $213 million fund in August 2012.

Codero Hosting adds more capital to expand

By Data center operator Codero Hosting has completed an $8 million financing.The Kansas-based company, which has key senior executives at its Austin office, plans to use the capital to open new data centers in the U.S. and Europe and expand its hosting portfolio to serve more customers and multiple data center locations, company executives said Tuesday.Codero Hosting collected the financing from Silicon Valley Bank and Minnesota-based Farnam Street Financial. Its majority investor is New York-based growth equity firm Catalyst Investors.Codero, which was founded in 2009, is operated by APH Inc. It employs 100 workers. The company operates data centers in Chicago, Virginia and Phoenix.In 2012, Kansas-based Codero expanded to Austin, nine months after hiring local tech executive Emil Sayegh, who was previously the Austin-based vice president of cloud services for California-basedHewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ), as CEO.The company’s Westlake Drive office employs 20 workers, including product development, marketing, customer support and sales workers, company officials said.In October 2013, Codero Hosting brought in Robert Autenrieth as chief operating officer. He was previously vice president of global support operations for San Antonio-based Rackspace Hosting Inc. (NYSE: RAX). Autenrieth is based at Codero’s Austin office.

Codero Gets $8M in Financing, Plans Dallas Expansion

By Jason VergeHosting provider Codero received $8 million in financing from Silicon Valley Bank and Farnam Street Financial, and will use the funds to expand its hybrid hosting product across all of its data center locations.“We’ve looked at different sources and found debt is a lot less expensive,” said Emil Sayegh, president and CEO of Codero Hostng. “We’ve found a partner in Silicon Valley Bank that completely understands our model. They’re able to help us and fund our growth.”Travis Wood, managing director for Silicon Valley Bank in Austin, said, “Helping innovators like Codero succeed is what we aim to do every day. With the flexibility provided by this financing, the Codero team is on a path to meet its ambitious global expansion goals.”The company is operated out of data centers in Phoenix, Ashburn, and Chicago, but its next phase of growth will be in Dallas Forth Worth Area.  “We signed on a long term lease, but we can’t say with who yet, only that it’s a state of the art facility,” said Sayegh. “It will be a flagship facility, offering cloud, dedicated and hybrid solutions.” The company is taking down a sizeable chunk of space in the new facility, and there is room to grow.”Codero’s hybrid cloud computing platform allows customers to purchase infrastructure essentially through a “drag and drop” interface and pay for it via a credit card.Codero’s CEO said that their cloud is “completely automated.” He noted, “There’s nobody running around the data center running cables. It’s all done natively at the switch.” The company has invested substantially in automation technology, hoping that in the long-term the investment will save money.Codero is making sure all of its data centers are connected with dark fiber, and ultimately wants to extend its hybrid hosting platform to its customers’ data centers.Also, the team is growing, as the company added COO and former Rackspace VP of Operations Robert Autenrieth recently. The former Racker architected the Dallas-Forth Worth expansion. The company just tripled its space at its headquarters in Austin as well.According to Sayegh, the debt financing comes at a good time, with multiple initiatives and a big push to bring its hybrid hosting platform to all locations.“Fast-growing companies like Codero need long-term relationships that deliver creative solutions,” said Dale Olsen, SVP of sales, Farnam Street Financial. “We feel that Farnam is uniquely positioned to help Codero maintain its high level of service while accelerating its revenue growth.”

Future-Proof Your IT: The 2020 Game Plan

Posted by Emil SayeghThe world of IT is changing at an ever-increasing pace. No one can tell in detail what the next big technologies will be, what they will be called or how they will exactly work. What you can count on are surprises and the continuation of some tech elements. It will be a mix of innovation and rapid evolution of existing technologies. The mobile explosion will continue, there will be more mobile users than ever before, BYOD and web applications will continue to advance. When looking to build for the future, the #1 thing to keep in mind is there will be a lot more devices everywhere.The future will demand scale, flexibility and ubiquitous access. It’s a simple formula with many underlying complex components. At this point we hear about “the cloud” ad nauseam, but few realize it is the key to building IT for the future.To add some perspective, think about the massive scale out there on the horizon. We have to strategize to accommodate a tsunami of data, access and usage. Millions, even billions, of devices will enter into the digital flow in ways we have yet to see. There will be all kinds of new demands to deal with.

  • Wearable computing, tracking, monitoring technology will be integrated into our daily habits and routines.
  • Sure, we’ve heard about “smart homes” for years now, but they have in fact arrived and it’s not a stretch to say that the average modern home is indeed “smart.” All smart appliances, utility controls and entertainment devices are tied to the internet and placing immeasurable demand. Everything from thermostats and security systems to refrigerators and cable boxes.
  • Tracking devices will trace nearly everything – from cars and mobile devices to valuables.
  • Computing will continue to miniaturize fitting in a “hand watch” form factor, or even smaller such as a simple lapel button, placing unprecedented computing resources in tiny spaces.
  • The industry will shift to computer learning rather than just processing.
  • Big data and analytics will continue their incredible demands on technology.
  • 3D printing has emerged and will be increasingly commercially viable.

The only one way to embrace the immense data processing demands of all of these is with an innovative and flexible computing approach. The old ways simply will not work. There are plenty of reasons for this but mostly it comes down to the massive scale necessary and the requirements for massive “instant performance.” We can already see the need for enormous storage and hence enormous databases. This is the future we all need to build for, looking even beyond 2020. Obviously things change quickly, but we can see what’s going to happen – there will be more and more requests for data, there will be more IPs than ever, and there will be tremendous demands for computer resources.Think back to just six years ago; Apple’s App Store first hit the scene, spawning the thriving app ecosystem we see today. That was followed a few months later by the Android Market (later Google Play). Consider the explosion of apps and information that became of that. Today, apps have emerged in automobiles, televisions, tablets, and they’re coming to nearly everything that you can think of: from appliances, garage door openers, smart homes, tools and more -- all examples of devices with near complete awareness, integrated to your digital world, and continuously producing data.So how should infrastructure providers adapt to accommodate this mountain of data? Clearly, traditional infrastructure can’t handle it because it cannot scale. Cloud alone can’t do it, as the virtualization layer introduces latency and performance issues when faced with large data sets. What will work?Hybrid cloud technology is the bridge between the performance and control of dedicated infrastructure and the flexibility and benefits of the cloud that we know. A computer layer has to scale up front and then there are all the control and performance requirements of the systems handling these technology waves. Big Data is a perfect example and use case. In a Big Data system, there are elements of the user interface and system management that do not benefit at all from being on dedicated hardware; however, the search, data processing, analysis and collection side of a Big Data system absolutely benefit. Other trends that the enterprise will look for are globalization and redundancy -- perfectly provided by the cloud elements of hybrid environments.To be future-proof, it is key to start the hybrid conversation as soon as possible and at the highest levels possible. It must be a business decision. Databases are always going to be better on dedicated systems; they simply cannot perform as effectively in virtual infrastructure. On the other hand, all site-level roles, control panels and many computing roles are adequately hosted in the cloud. It can’t be one or the other but a true mash-up delivered via hybrid cloud architecture.The future has immense demands in store for us. We require flexible, controlled and strategic frameworks to build on. The hybrid approach provides the infrastructure benefits we will ultimately depend on and it’s a key investment for any company. It will scale easily as you integrate data, text and voice information with an extensible, controlled and cost-effective infrastructure that meets your business needs. Not only does the business benefit, but the customer benefits as well.Best of all, there are platforms out there right now that are suitable for any kind of business regardless of size; with hybrid, the environment is always on your terms, delivering exactly what you need – nothing more, nothing less. If you’re building for today, you’re already behind. If you’re in this game for the long haul, you must prioritize a hassle-free hybrid cloud infrastructure. Plan your strategy, map it to your long-term needs, and pick the right technologies and partners. The journey to 2020 begins now.Emil Sayegh is President and CEO of Codero Hosting.

Top Ten Ways the Cloud Has Changed How Startups Launch

By Screen Shot 2013-12-10 at 11.53.05 AM The world is on the brink of a tremendous wave of new startup activity, and the catalyst of this new era of innovation and entrepreneurship is the cloud. The “dot cloud boom” that we are just starting to see is the result of entrepreneurs realizing that yes, they can start a company without moving to California, they can do it with fewer people, and with less money and still have a better-than-average chance at success.Despite what the wonks, academics, advisors, and armchair business counselors tell you, there is not – and never has been – a standard formula for startup success. What worked for people like Henry Ford, Andrew Carnegie, and even latter-day entrepreneurs like Steve Jobs, doesn’t work today. And what works today will not work five years from now.The biggest changes in how startups get started are derived from cloud computing. While NIST does have a definition for the cloud that breaks it into software, infrastructure, and platform-as-a-service, cloud computing is more than technology. Cloud is a business model that fundamentally changes how businesses operate, and more to the point, changes how they get started.Today’s successful innovators weighed in with Techie.com staff to discuss precisely how the cloud has changed how they approach startup entrepreneurship. The top ten ways the cloud has changed how startups launch include:1. No more “jack of all trades” founders.Typical startup founders have had to have a hand in virtually everything, whether they know anything about it or not – leading to a sort of “fake it till you make it” type of philosophy. It’s great to be a Renaissance Man that knows something about everything, but the good news is that you don’t have to be in order to gain success. This can work, but it’s even better when you can focus on what you know best, and leave the rest to third party suppliers.Douglas Berman, a Dallas attorney who focuses on startups and emerging growth companies, has seen significant changes in this area. “The biggest change I have seen in terms of launching is that cloud services allow companies to focus more on their business model and key functions rather than using time and resources to build back-end infrastructure,” said Berman. “This can save a lot of time and money. It can also allow a small company to focus post-launch resources on refining its business model and core product rather than worrying about whether its servers can handle capacity since many cloud services can be increased very quickly.”The cloud has led to an era of specialization. Third party companies are springing up to offer highly specialized, strategic services – on an “as-a-service” basis – giving even bootstrapped startups access to specialists that they wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford. The end result? Entrepreneurs don’t have to spread themselves too thin, and they can spend their time focusing on growing their businesses.2. Easier scalability lets you think big from the very beginning.Entrepreneurs seldom shy away from thinking big, but it can be difficult when your pockets are empty, you have no customers, and your friends and family are all telling you to go get a real job.When you are just starting out, it’s easy to keep track of customers on index cards and back up your files manually to a thumb drive. Surprisingly, startup failures often result not from not enough growth, but growth that happens too quickly to manage – and the inability to scale.When Peter Kirwan, serial entrepreneur and CEO of Collexion, Inc., co-founded this online home for collectors of just about anything from vintage beer cans to antique typewriters, he decided to go “all cloud” from the very beginning. “Because there are not software upgrades, hardware upgrades and up front capital, a company can grow from one to thousands of employees in a very linear way without many disruptions as they grow, both technically and financially,” said Kirwan.This sort of easy scalability lets entrepreneurs think big. “Because you can scale with services like Amazon’s web service for your website and productivity apps so easily, there is no limit to how quickly you can grow,” said Kirwan. “Costs tend to grow with revenue and you don’t have to think about technical challenges of growth as much. Everyone thinks bigger. Not having these roadblocks changed everyone’s way of thinking about limits – and there are none, really.”3. Offices anywhere – startups are not geographically-centric any more.Where are all the tech startups these days? They are everywhere. Tech startups are just as likely to be in South Bend, Indiana as San Jose, California, simply because they can. The geocentric nature of the tech startup world is a thing of the past. Do you, as a startup, want to be around other startups? Sure. But you don’t have to go to Silicon Valley to find them – they are springing up all over, due to several factors: First and foremost, the cloud has made it possible to launch from anywhere. Communication and collaboration technologies have made it possible to have a widely dispersed team and to reach out to potential clients the world over. The lean startup model lets you focus on your core competency, while allowing other cloud-based strategic services suppliers – in all parts of the world – provide you with necessary services to keep your company going.Brandon Bruce, co-founder of Cirrus Insight, knows plenty about the democratization of tech startups. Cirrus’ own technology synchronizes Google Apps with Salesforce to make this powerful CRM even more powerful and universally accessible to a dispersed team. Bruce is located in Maryville, Tennessee, just south of Knoxville. His partner and co-founder Ryan Huff is in Orange County, California. “We’re a pretty connected team,” said Bruce. “I’m on the phone with my partner several hours a day, whether it’s GoToMeetings or Google hangouts, or just a phone call. We may not be in the same room, but we’re basically in the same room.” And while Bruce is first to admit that Knoxville isn’t Silicon Valley, it doesn’t need to be, and he’s been seeing a lot more tech excitement in the area with several new startups, an accelerator called Tech 20/20 that has created a regional entrepreneurial ecosystem, and technology transfer coming out of nearby Oak Ridge National Lab.The costs for creating a geographically diverse business ecosystem has been minimal. Besides his own system of course, Bruce uses tools like Google hangouts, Google video calls, GoToMeeting, and Basecamp. “We use Google Drive a lot for collaborative creation and editing files, and then we use Dropbox also a lot for file saving,” he said. Most of these tools are low-cost or free, making the virtual business model and an extended team a practical and geographically-independent option for almost every startup.4. Startups can access services that were once available only to large enterprises.The all-encompassing software systems with six- and seven-figure price tags may be wonderful things for the companies that can afford them, but that doesn’t mean that bootstrapped startups are relegated to freeware, trial versions, and paper index cards. Software-as-a-service has gone beyond replacing day-to-day productivity apps, and has entered into the realm of ERP, CRM, and big data, giving startups access to services that were once far too costly. Semantria is a perfect example. The company’s fully cloud-based text and sentiment analysis solution can take vast amounts of unstructured text and transform it into actionable data. This sort of big data analytics was until recently the domain of larger companies seeking useful tools for market research, often paying large amounts of money. Semantria CEO Oleg Rogynskyy founded the company in direct response to this dilemma. In working previously with data mining companies, he would frequently see customers coming into the office, saying, “‘Hey, I really like what you guys do. Can I try it?’ And our response was, ‘Yes. $100,000, please.’ The premise behind Semantria was to make text mining and analysis technology available to a nontechnical user, in under three minutes, and for less than $100,000.” Rogynskyy has achieved that goal impressively, with a free trial version, a standard version accommodating 100,000 transactions per month at just $999, and a premium version accommodating a million transactions per month for $1,999.Eighty percent of Semantria’s customers are startups or individual users. The company has been able to democratize this type of data mining by leveraging the cloud. Semantria is built on the Amazon cloud, and it has an Excel plugin that lets you use it from within Excel.5. You don’t need the Super Bowl to advertise.You meet with an ad agency’s account man at a trendy bar in Manhattan. He is wearing a double-breasted charcoal grey suit with a pocket square folded just-so. You order an Old Fashioned, complain about the traffic, and tell the account man about your plans to dominate the industry. He shares his ad campaign concept with you, and you’re impressed. You sign on for a retainer of about a million bucks a month, and your ads are on network television and every trade magazine in the country.It really does work that way – just not too often. Most tech companies don’t have that kind of budget, the best agencies are no longer just in Manhattan, and there’s a lot more to consider than television and print.New media ad platforms started with the likes of Google Adsense and have evolved from there, giving small businesses an opportunity to advertise online without having to have a big budget. Moving beyond Google, you’ll see companies like Adagogo, which is a self-service ad platform for SMBs that want to get onto mobile ad platforms. Mobile advertising is huge – according to Ad Age, mobile ad spending in the US will hit $8 billion this year, and that means advertisers have to design their campaigns around mobile platforms.Based in Minnesota, Adagogo and its parent company DoApp make it easy and affordable for startups (even broke startups) to get started in mobile advertising and drive business. Founder Joe Sriver describes the hyperlocal focus of Adagogo. “We have an infrastructure of about 1,500 mobile apps, in major metropolitan areas as well as smaller ones. So we have an infrastructure of ads that’s just sitting there. We wanted to push this out, and see what the response was from local businesses who wanted to quickly get on mobile devices and get their name out. Adagogo came out two or three weeks ago, and we’ve had great response.”The click-through rate for Adagogo’s mobile ads is between two and five percent, compared to an average of about a half percent for other banner ads on Facebook, LinkedIn and Google.6. “Offices? We don’t need no stinkin’ offices!”Among startups that have venture money, especially startups in Silicon Valley, the quintessential office space is huge and open, with a gourmet kitchen, plenty of lounge areas, an outside area for picnics and afternoon walks, a full workout room, and a hammock room for relaxing while deep in thought.Today’s startup office is . . . well, usually nonexistent. We have moved from easy communication to easy collaboration, enabling a situation where instead of “the next best thing to being there”, modern technology is “the same thing as being there”.The change has taken place just over the past 20 years or so. Andrew Dixon, Senior Vice President of collaborative technology company Igloo Software, notes that it wasn’t that long ago that email was the primary tool used to allow people to communicate and share information, and that was not very efficient. E-mail did give us an easy way to send messages, but it did nothing to advance business beyond the “information hoarding” that was frequently prevalent throughout a business. “Once upon a time with more traditional tools, the behavior that was encouraged was for you to hoard information, because that made you the expert,” said Dixon. “And you were rewarded for being that expert. When you introduce social technologies and real discussions, what’s being recognized is your contribution of knowledge to the community. You’re commenting, and with your expertise, providing for the betterment of whatever piece of work you’re focused on. It has fundamentally changed behaviors, and it tends to pull cultures together in a way that wasn’t possible before.”Tools like the Igloo platform make it possible to enable that deep level of collaboration, and to preserve the corporate culture even when the workforce is distributed across multiple states or countries. “There’s probably no replacement for in-person,” said Dixon. “But if you have the ability to use these tools, like video and teleconferencing, if you can express a quick thought using a microblog, and you can be immediately notified if anybody updates a document you were working on and ask for feedback, these are all things we never had before. And it goes a long way towards improving that team collaboration when you’re not in the same room.”7. You don’t have to sell to the CIO.Startups always faced an uphill battle in selling a new product and getting face-time with the head honchos of target customers. But lately, the cloud has shifted the buy decision from being top-down, to bottom-up. Which software tools a company ends up using is often dictated now by end users, who increasingly, have direct access to tools via the cloud. And more importantly, these tools are typically easy enough to deploy and run that the IT department is often completely left out of the loop.This type of democratization has taken hold in every part of the startup environment, from funding, to development moving out of the back room, to end-user engagement. Pat White, CEO of Synata, a company with an innovative tool that helps users find data inside their clouds, says, “The focus is on the end-user, even in enterprise applications. Thinking back to the CIO-driven ’80s and ’90s, decisions were made based on cost and project timing. Now that companies can market directly to the end-user, the CIO can’t solely dictate what apps the company uses. The CIO would make decisions based on price and feature sets; now that the power has shifted to the end-user, all-in-one suites aren’t in demand. Companies that focus on a specific niche in the cloud are more likely to succeed in today’s best-of-breed world.”Further enabling that trend is the fact that distribution has become less of an issue, especially for software companies. “It used to be that in order to get mass distribution, a company’s best bet was to get acquired early by a large vendor. Bottom-up marketing has completely disrupted that model. Instead of going through the CIO to sell the product, companies target managers and doers – the people who actually use the tool. They’re able to download the product, usually for free, from the cloud. This has worked incredibly well for companies like Dropbox and Box,” said White.8. Startup costs are approaching zero.Business schools still preach the gospel of adequate capitalization, and certainly having a fat bank account makes launching a company a lot easier. But if you lack wealthy parents and don’t know any VCs, you are – like almost every startup entrepreneur in America – out of luck. Or are you? The fact is, you just don’t need as much money to start a tech company as you used to. The cloud, rich collaboration tools, and the ability to create a virtual team with no physical office, has lowered startup costs to almost zero.Sean Heilweil, co-founder and CEO of Exit Monitor, a software-as-a-service company with a lead conversion tool, not only has a great toolset that helps online companies get leads and make sales without a big investment, he is also an example of a lean startup that started with very little. “As of now we’re four people,” says Heilweil. “we’ve been working on development for the better part of the last four months, and have finally launched about two weeks ago. We have essentially been able to launch this new product without any funding and in theory, less than $500, which went to infrastructure costs.”Those infrastructure costs, which would have run up six-figure bills just a couple decades ago, are very minimal now, because of low-cost and robust infrastructure-as-a-service offerings that eliminate the need for an on premise data center. “Our infrastructure is all in the cloud, using services like Heroku and MongoHQ. Our entire team works remotely, and we have no plans to ever have an actual office. We use Google Hangouts all hours of the day to make it possible for us to collaborate, stay constantly connected, and communicate better.”Heilweil thinks a lot of startups are headed in the same direction. “For me and a few others, it never made sense to commute to a computer, do your work, and then commute back home. Why can’t I roll over in bed, grab my laptop and start working? There should be no reason that can’t happen. People seem to be more productive and get more done when they’re able to work comfortably and on their own terms.”9. Change in team structure.How many people do you need to launch a tech startup? A team of coders, some creatives, some sales guys, some people to deploy and run the physical network and infrastructure, system administrators – the list is endless. Increasingly though, startups are launching with a very small, core group of three or four people. Serial entrepreneur David Campbell, whose latest startup JumpCloud recently launched at TechCrunch Disrupt this year, notes that “modern ‘lean’ startups that leverage the public cloud often do so with a fundamentally different team composition than startups that built their foundation on top of traditional infrastructure.”“In particular,” adds Campbell, “They rely on their developers to perform system administration functions, which has been a major impetus for the ‘DevOps movement’. They also frequently do not have anybody on staff with a deep background in networking or storage infrastructure.” The biggest change in 2014, according to Campbell, is the change in team structure (no ops people), and that after an initial ramping period, public cloud spending often exceeds the cost of standing up a traditional data center. “Startups going down the public cloud path that get traction, wake up to find that within a few months they are paying Amazon $50K to $150K a month, which seems to be the inflection point for moving out of the public cloud. However, often their cloud spend continues to rise because they don’t have the ops and sysadmin staff required to run a traditional infrastructure, and also don’t want to spend the time and energy to build a data center.”Cloud computing pioneer Emil Sayegh, president and CEO of Codero Hosting, also notes startups’ infatuation with Amazon Web Services (AWS). “Why? At the surface, the economics looked better than on-site hosting, the reliability of such large infrastructure looked very attractive, but the more important reason was so precious company resources could be focused on differentiation – not running infrastructure.” All those factors are true, but there is still a shift underway that may end that infatuation with AWS, marked by higher costs and a level of inflexibility.  Sayegh notes, “AWS is not suited to run many applications such as big data applications, databases, or any I/O intensive applications. We are now seeing the rapid and strong emergence of the ‘hybrid cloud’. This brings all the benefits of the cloud that investors and startups love, combined with the traditional unbridled performance of traditional infrastructure.”The best solution, according to Sayegh, is a hybrid cloud that offers the on-demand functionality that startups need. “What tech startups need is an on-demand hybrid cloud that spools up dedicated bare metal servers for high performance, and virtual cloud servers for front-end apps instantly on-demand, without contracts.”10. Fewer worries about IT security.“If I can’t see it and touch it, it must not be secure.”That’s the heart of the Fallacy of Direct Control. This common fallacy incorrectly posits that in order for an infrastructure to be secure, a company’s administrator must be able to have direct access to it. In fact, in most cases you’re better off leaving it in the hands of an off-site data center. SMBs in particular just don’t have the security know-how, the time, the 24×7 coverage, or the physical security environment to protect their data. 24×7 coverage may mean little more than waking up the admin at three in the morning when something goes wonky, and physical security is a deadbolt on the office door to which eight people have a key.According to Joel Lehrer, partner at Goodwin Procter, a national law firm specializing in IP transactions and provider of the free online legal and business resource for entrepreneurs called Founders Workbench, “High level data breaches and privacy concerns are changing how entrepreneurs address privacy issues even at the early stages of their businesses. We are increasingly seeing today’s entrepreneurs opting to launch their companies in the cloud and to use aggregated and anonymous data collected from their customers in new and creative ways.  With this comes a new set of considerations to ensure IP rights are documented and data are properly protected. For example, it is important for entrepreneurs to research and evaluate their chosen cloud provider and to make certain the selected provider is able to protect the privacy of their data to meet any applicable legal and regulatory requirements. Failing to do so jeopardizes employee and client privacy and can impact the overall success of the company.”Today’s startups however, are worrying less about security, mostly because the cloud data centers that are serving them are worrying more about it. Ray Cavanagh, board member of the ASIS Physical Security for Cloud Computing Council, notes that physical security is increasingly important, especially in an increasingly virtual and BYOD environment. “The market has to be more cognizant,” he said. “The initial reaction was that people shied away from the cloud because of the security element. If you can’t touch it, you don’t feel like you control it, and if you don’t control it, how do you know how well it’s being handled? So I think the market is forcing the data centers to be able to prove how security is being handled. Companies who are migrating to the cloud are becoming more aware that they have to do due diligence on those firms to make sure that all the proper controls and security elements are in place.”Startups are more comfortable in the cloudAll of the above ten factors have dramatically changed the nature of tech startups, how they operate, and how they think. More readily available and more secure infrastructure and services are available via the cloud, making it less necessary to deploy on-premise right from the start. Up-front startup costs are decreasing, while quality of as-a-service offerings is increasing, and the security of the cloud – driven largely by market realities and competition between data centers – has made these options even more attractive.   

Your Weekly Fitness Checklist: November 24–30

7 ways to be fitter and healthier this weekBy Amy Robertsfit-list-nov22Here is your Fit List of 7 tricks to be healthier and fitter this week. (For the uninitiated, check out What’s a Fit List?). How many challenges did you complete last week?Keep us posted on your progress and successes throughout the week. Use the hashtag #WHFitList, and share it on your social feeds—and mention @WomensHealthMag, of course.Good luck!—Amy Roberts, NASM-CPT1. Keep it up, home or awayEven if you're short on time or traveling this week because of Thanksgiving, you can keep your fitness on track with a quick and efficient bodyweight routine, like this CrossFit-inspired do-anywhere workout. You don't need a single piece of equipment!2. Try a ladder drillHere's a super-efficient, zero-equipment-needed strength circuit. You'll work your entire body with just two moves: a pushup and a squat.Think of the workout like climbing a ladder: You'll complete the exercises back-to-back without rest, each time lowering your rep for the first exercise while increasing the second. For your first time trying this drill, use 5 as your magic number. Do 5 pushups (or incline pushups if you need to) and 1 squat; then 4 pushups and 2 squats; then 3 pushups and 3 squats; then 2 pushups and 4 squats; and, finally, 1 pushup and 5 squats. Your goal is to finish the entire workout as quickly as possible, only resting if your form starts to suffer.  (Bonus tip: Time yourself! Each time you complete the workout, aim to finish just a few seconds faster.) Too easy? Work to increase your starting rep to 10, which increases the total volume of your workout.3. Mix up the ellipticalSwitch directions and "pedal" in reverse every 3 to 5 minutes. It'll change the demand on the muscles in your quads, hamstrings, glutes, and calves—and help fight off mental fatigue.4. Change your tunesA workout set to music is fun, for sure. But a workout set to a carefully chosen, heart-pumping playlist can push you to go even harder for awesome fitness gains. The super-cool PaceDJ app ($0.99 to $2.99,pacedj.com) finds tracks on your iPhone, iPod, or Android phone that meet your chosen beats per minute to help keep you moving. It can even speed up certain songs—without the chipmunk effect—so they match the rest of the mix.5. Get a leg upHit your lower half from all angle with clock lunges. With feet hip-width apart, lunge forward with your right foot, then bring it back to the start. Now lunge it to the side, then back, and finally, lunge it behind you and return to the start. Do 5 rounds on each side.6. Take a post-feast strollShortly after clearing the Thanksgiving table, grab a family member and head out for a leisurely 30-minute walk. Light activity after heavy meals can help aid digestion and boost energy to counteract the sleep-inducing effects of a feast (especially ones loaded with tryptophan, like turkey). Plus:daily movement outside of workouts is really good for your health—it keeps your circulation flowing and your metabolism humming.7. Perk up your plankWhen a straight 30-second plank feels like a breeze (or starting to feel like a snooze), make this quintessential core move more challenging with one of these 7 plank variations.

Best of fitness technology

By Laura Williams, M.S.Ed.Technology has infiltrated our world, and while the basics are still the basics (i.e. a run is still a run), tech companies have done their best to make every active experience bigger, broader, better, and safer. Check out a few of our favorite new tech products and accessories for the sporty woman.Screen Shot 2013-12-10 at 11.22.11 AM 

UCLEAR HBC220 SNOW, $250 for a single system

Staying in touch while shredding the snow has never been easier. The UCLEAR HBC220 SNOW allows you to make phone calls, control music, and intercom with other riders via Bluetooth without using obtrusive boom mics. The Multi-Hop Technology works as a repeater, providing up to .4 miles between units, allowing the network to grow as more users join. Even when the winds are blowing, the noise cancelation isolates the users voice, allowing for clear communication.

PUSH Band, $149

The PUSH Band is the first app-enabled fitness tracker to measure force, velocity, power, balance, speed, and more. It's perfect for the athlete or athlete-in-training who spends lots of time in the gym and wants metrics-based feedback on workout parameters. The band may be pre-ordered now on Indiegogo, and the app is free on iOS and Android devices. .

Watershot Underwater Camera Housing for Smartphones, $100-$190

Turn your smartphone into a completely waterproof camera in depths of up to 195 feet with the Watershot underwater camera housings developed for the iPhone and Samsung Galaxy 3 and 4. These camera housings are robust, allowing you to capture and share videos and images instantly when surfing, SUPing, diving, and more. The housings include a tripod mount and glass lens and baffle for image clarity.

iHome iB12 Headphones, $25

For the sporty woman who spends time exercising outside at night, grab a pair of iHome iB12 headphones featuring an inverted style that makes it easy for the wires to wrap around the ears for a stable fit. The headphones also include an LED flasher that the user can use during low-light activity.

PaceDJ, $1-$3

For the runner who wants to match her music to her pace, PaceDJ is the answer. PaceDJ helps you match your stride rate to the beats per minute (BM) of your music, and a new feature even enables you to change the BPM of your favorite songs to match your desired pace. PaceDJ can be used in conjunction with other fitness apps, such as FitBit and RunKeeper, allowing  you to effectively track and manage your runs.

Muku Shuttr, $40

Compatible with many of the leading Smartphone and tablet devices, Muku Shuttr is the solution for snapping the perfect active selfie. Hold the remote shutter release in your hand, and pose up to 30 feet away from your smartphone or tablet. You don't even need to worry about how to prop up your device because the Shuttr comes with an audio jack phone stand to make setup easy.

Glove.ly SOLID Touch Screen Gloves, $25

When it's cold outside, you need to wear gloves to protect your fingers, but how are you supposed to access all the fitness apps on your phone? Glove.ly is the simple solution - these warm, colorful, wool-blend gloves work seamlessly with your smartphone, but look like they shouldn't. Unlike many smartphone-compatible gloves that look ugly or obvious, these can be worn at any time without clunky-looking smartphone features.

Lifetrak Zone C410, $99

Track and sync basic fitness metrics, such as sleep, calories burned, heart rate, steps, and distance with the Lifetrak Zone C410. The watch requires no charging and is waterproof, so you can wear it all day every day. You can sync your data to the free Argus iOS app, or monitor a week's worth of data on your wrist. It's perfect for the on-the-go woman who doesn't want to think twice about charging more devices or logging into web-based tracking portals.

Top 10 FinTech Companies to Watch

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Crowd Computing Systems
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Technology: A website that matches freelancers around the world to companies seeking to outsource, and artificial intelligence for assigning and evaluating the quality of the work.Why It's One to Watch: The company is harnessing a global shift toward a freelance economy, and its technology could change the way companies like banks handle outsourcing.Seeing a fundamental labor shift around what NYU professor Clay Shirky calls "cognitive surplus" (in which people use the free time they spend creating cat GIFs to do freelance work on the internet) got Crowd Computing Systems' founders, researchers at MIT, thinking. They had been studying artificial intelligence and its impact on financial fraud."We quickly pivoted that research and applied our artificial intelligence to managing this cognitive surplus, the ability to have an artificial intelligence engine not only distribute work to people around the world, but also judge the quality of the output of that work and deliver it to the enterprise," says Max Yankelevich, CEO and founder. "This was one of the biggest challenges we saw with that shift to the freelance economy. You don't have that person sitting there in your office to manage them closely. At the same time, now that you have access to many more people around the world, you have the ability to do more work on a much larger scale, parallelizing the work. You need computer aids like an artificial intelligence to do that, otherwise your management overhead would be tremendous."About 46% of Americans are full-time employees, Yankevelich estimates, the rest are freelancers. "The situation is similar around the world," he says. "By 2020, both Deloitte and Accenture are projecting much larger numbers in the freelance economy."The company has 20 million freelancers in its database. It matches workers up with work, evaluates the quality of that work and bases pay and future work assignments on the level of quality. The company's 50 employees, who work in New York and Newark, N.J., are mostly engineers.The company plans to quadruple its sales and marketing staff in the coming year.In early October, Crowd Computing was getting ready to announce a deal with a large financial information provider. Investment banks, which are already heavy users of business process outsourcing, are among the company's clients, as are online retailers and consumer goods companies.Traditional banks should come on board later, Yankelevich says. "They seem to be more conservative."For slideshow and full story, visit American Banker.

Blurred lines: Hybrid cloud deployment the future of the enterprise

By Adam HughesDoes an enterprise go with a public or a private cloud deployment? It's no longer one or the other.Nearly half of large enterprises will have deployed a hybrid cloud by the end of 2017, according to a recent Gartner Inc. study. The growth of hybrid cloud only compounds the use of cloud computing in general, which will account for the bulk of IT spending by 2017, the report noted."Hybrid is indeed the cloud architecture that will dominate," said Dave Bartoletti, analyst with Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Mass. "We're seeing over 50% of enterprises prioritizing private cloud in 2013 to 2014, and there will likely be very few private clouds that don't have a public [hybrid] component."Private clouds don't provide scaling options and cost efficiencies to the degree that public clouds do, but enterprises also want the option to keep some data behind their firewalls.A hybrid model takes the best of both worlds -- or clouds, that is.Bartoletti went even further, saying, "everyone" has plans to extend the private cloud to include public resources, which leads to a cloud that offers infrastructure both on- and off-premises, as paramount for an enterprise."The future is systems of record linked to new cloud-style systems of engagement, and that is hybrid cloud," he said.

The 'on-demand' hybrid cloud

How much easier would it be for an enterprise to connect cloud instances with dedicated servers with a simple click of a button?According to Codero Hosting, based in Austin, Texas, it's possible. Codero recently released what it dubbed as the 'on-demand hybrid cloud,' where a customer can drag and drop dedicated servers and cloud instances into its hybrid network, all within seconds, said Emil Sayegh, CEO at the company.The private network for each customer is isolated at the switch level, without a connect device, and is entirely driven by application programming interfaces."Codero's got a smart offering that mixes dedicated and elastic hosting resources, since that is the essence of hybrid," Forrester's Bartoletti said."Making it easy to consume elastic capacity outside of an existing customer's dedicated infrastructure -- with the same provider -- will definitely speed the path to cloud for companies that value their hosting provider relationships," he added.Bartoletti noted that many providers similar to Codero use some type of mix between traditional hosting and cloud services, citing CenturyLink Inc. and Verizon/Terremark as two companies with a combination of dedicated, managed and on-demand instance types.Some were not as enthused about the "on-demand" model."It's clearly not groundbreaking, and we're seeing many of these types of offerings around hybrid and multi-cloud," said David S. Linthicum, senior vice president with Cloud Technology Partners, a Boston-based cloud consulting firm.Codero's pricing starts at $15 per month for 10 Mbps, $65 for 100 Mbps, $150 for 250 Mbps, and $275 for 500 Mbps. The pricing is for each individual hybrid network that a customer adds.

The 'multi-cloud' deployment

Other cloud advocates maintain that a multi-cloud deployment with several providers is the future of cloud computing."The majority of enterprises I consult with leverage a multi-cloud model where hybrid cloud is certainly there, but [is] being replaced by something that's much more complex and valuable," Linthicum said.Many enterprises mix and match multiple clouds depending on their needs -- and that's where a cloud deployment gets complicated, he said. For instance, one enterprise could use two or more public Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) providers, along with a private Platform as a Service (PaaS) and on-demand management and security systems from a public cloud.This week, Jelastic Inc., based in San Mateo, Calif., unveiled another option for enterprises -- an integrated PaaS for private, public and hybrid clouds. According to Jelastic, it is the first time PaaS and IaaS have been integrated into a single platform."These days, the number of projects involving just one or two cloud computing providers or technologies is few and far between," Linthicum noted. "It's more likely there are a half dozen involved."The key, Linthicum said, is that a cloud provider needs to be able to work with other vendors to make an effective hybrid cloud -- regardless of whether it offers a distribution on a private or a public cloud.And that makes OpenStack valuable, as it allows IT to use the same cloud platform on-premises and with a service provider, analysts added."That will help extend skills to more cloud deployment types and allow cloud service providers to offer services around OpenStack to help clients migrate and evolve toward a consistent, hybrid architecture," Bartoletti said.Meanwhile, finding the resources to manage complex hybrid cloud deployments remains a challenge."Since you're managing a platform across private and public clouds, the ability to make these resources work and play well together is certainly a problem," Linthicum said.Linthicum cited cloud management platform vendors that provide a management, governance and automation layer, including RightScale Inc., ServiceMesh, Hewlett-Packard, VMware Inc. and IBM.

Codero Launches Hybrid Cloud Hosting

By Chris BurtCodero announced on Wednesday the release of an On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting offeringCloud provider Codero has announced on Wednesday the release of an On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting offering.Codero says this will provide customers with the advantages of traditional IT infrastructure as well as the strength and flexibility of a public cloud.“While public cloud hosting was the hype a few years ago, it is now clear that a more adaptable computing model is needed in order for businesses to run their applications in the best ways possible,” Emil Sayegh, CEO and president of Codero Hosting said. “Our On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting was developed based on the reality of how businesses deploy and run applications today. It gives customers the power to use the IT resources best suited for their individual needs, getting the best of all worlds through one trusted partner with unparalleled hosting expertise – a true on-demand IT infrastructure model.”According to Codero, its hybrid offering avoids the reliance of its competitors on proprietary or outside sources for components. This makes the Codero hybrid cloud less expensive, the company says, with dedicated native and cloud instances in one private network.Codero boasts “an easy click-and-drop approach” and automated provisioning and instancing “in just minutes.”The On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting features include on-demand scalability for usage spikes, no I/O resource contentions for databases, customizable network performance, guaranteed 100 percent network uptime, and easy connection to dedicated servers, Smart Servers, and cloud servers.The service promises the “ultimate combination of IT architectures and performance,” and that customers will pay only for necessary connection speeds.Hybrid hosting has become a hot topic, as CloudSigma CEO Robert Jenkins discussed with the WHIR last month, and as suggested in a study Microsoft and 451 Research earlier this year. Hybrid offerings generally involve partnerships, such as VMware vCloud Hybrid Service, which was announced in late August along with a partnership with Savvis.

Codero Launches On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting

By Chris Talbot

Codero is boosting its hybrid cloud hosting services with the release of On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting, which blends best-of-breed cloud and hosting technologies with public cloud offerings.There's hybrid cloud. And then there's on-demand hybrid cloud, according to Codero Hosting. The provider of dedicated, managed, cloud and hybrid hosting services has extended its hybrid cloud offering with the introduction of On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting, which it bills as "the industry's only true hybrid solution."With the new offering, Codero pairs "best-of-breed cloud and dedicated hosting technologies" to provide the flexibility and benefits of a public cloud with the security of traditional IT infrastructure. According to Codero, this flexible computing model enables businesses to simultaneously run apps on traditional and cloud infrastructure, depending on the needs of the individual application."Our On-Demand Hybrid Cloud Hosting was developed based on the reality of how businesses deploy and run applications today," said Emil Sayegh, president and CEO of Codero Hosting, in a prepared statement. "It gives customers the power to use the IT resources best suited for their individual needs, getting the best of all worlds through one trusted partner with unparalleled hosting expertise—a true on-demand IT infrastructure model."The company noted a few of the features in its announcement. They include:
  • On-demand scalability for usage spikes
  • No I/O resource contentions for databases
  • Customizable network performance
  • Dedicated servers, smart servers, cloud servers and networking devices connect easily
  • Customers pay only for connection speeds needed
  • Guaranteed 100 percent network uptime

The differentiating factor, according to Codero, is that other hosting providers claim hybrid functionality, but aren't able to deliver all the components of a hybrid solution without bridging to proprietary or outside sources. That, Codero noted, makes for a more expensive and "less elegant" hybrid cloud offering that lacks a single point of accountability.Codero aims to provide customers with those capabilities with native dedicated and cloud instances in one private network.

Software tool to expedite application development for simulation offered by Presagis

By John KellerPresagis Canada Inc. in Montreal is introducing the M&S Suite 13 modeling and simulation (M&S) software portfolio to help expedite application development for training, operations, and simulation analysis.The software includes hundreds of product enhancements designed to save users time and money by uniting 3D modeling, terrain generation, simulation, and visualization software into one package.Simulation and training applications designers typically spend 60 to 80 percent of project budgets on integrating disparate homegrown and third-party solutions, Presagis officials say.M&S Suite 13 enables users to create simulation content and scenarios quickly while achieving realism and performance. Its toolset provides an open, scalable, and reusable M&S environment. Components of Presagis' M&S Suite 13 include Creator, Terra Vista, STAGE, and Vega Prime.The Creator 3D modeling tool has a user interface with customizable desktop helps build, modify, and validate models. The Terra Vista terrain generator uses a logical and step-by-step workflow. STAGE is a simulation development environment, and Vega Prime provides enhanced rendering performance.Presagis_images_medias_Creator

Executive Hires for Active Power, Codero, GoGrid

By Rich MillerOctober has already been a busy month for executive appointments at companies in the data center industry. Here’s a review of recent appointments at Active Power, Codero and GoGrid.Ascolese to Take Helm at Active PowerFlywheel UPS specialist Active Power (ACPW) has named Mark A. Ascolese as president and chief executive officer, effective Oct. 14. Ascolese will replace Dr. Ake Almgren, who currently serves as interim president and CEO and will continue his role as chairman of the company’s board of directors.Since 2006, Ascolese has served as CEO and is currently Chairman of the Board of Power Analytics, an electrical infrastructure enterprise software firm based in San Diego, Calif. Prior to Power Analytics, he served for more than 20 years in various leadership roles at Powerware Corporation, a global provider of power quality and backup power management products, which is now a part of Eaton Corp.“We are excited to have an industry veteran like Mark on board,” said Almgren. “We believe his track record and deep knowledge of UPS products and mission critical markets will greatly benefit our business.”“Active Power has a highly differentiated product offering with a convincing value proposition, a strong base of global customers, and a solid operating platform from which to grow the business,” said Ascolese. “I’m excited about what the future holds particularly for the new CSHD UPS as I believe it will position Active Power as an even stronger participant in the market than it is today.”Codero Hires Rackspace Veteran Autenreith as COOHosting and cloud provider Codero Hosting has named Robert Autenrieth as COO and Vice President, Technical Operations and Support. His responsibilities will include management of Codero’s 24/7/365 customer support, data center operations and technical operations teams. Additionally, he will manage Codero’s data center strategy, from design to execution. Autenrieth was previously Vice President of Global Support Operations at Rackspace.“With his extensive hosting technology experience, Robert is uniquely qualified to deliver on Codero’s promise of exceptional service through industry-leading uptime, expert customer support, and unparalleled value and performance,” said Emil Sayegh, CEO and President of Codero Hosting. “Robert led one of the largest teams at Rackspace with hundreds of employees reporting to him, making him an ideal fit to ensure Codero reliably delivers cloud-based services on a massive scale, always advancing our technology to meet growing customer and business demands.”Autenrieth spent eight years with Rackspace in various roles and most recently provided the executive oversight of strategic planning, tactical alignment and P&L responsibility of nine teams supporting revenue generation, Customer Support and product engineering activities for Rackspace globally (USA, EMEA, APAC). As General Manager of Data Center Engineering/Operations, Autenrieth orchestrated operational strategies around data center management, customer care, engineering, and asset management, resulting in improved customer experience and increased profitability.New C-Suite Posts for Worsey, Carroll at GoGridCloud infrastructure company GoGrid recently appointed CIO & EVP Technology Mark Worsey as the company’s Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President Technology, and named Robert Carroll as Chief Revenue Officer overseeing global sales, marketing, and products.“As we amplify our focus on providing the reliable high-performance cloud platform our customers need to support their Big Data and related technologies, we’re delighted to rely on these two industry veterans to help guide our strategic development,” said GoGrid CEO and Co-Founder John Keagy. “Their expertise helps us deliver the innovative solutions, services, and expertise our customers need to take their businesses to the next level.”Since 2010, Worsey served as GoGrid’s CIO & EVP Technology, responsible for all aspects of product execution including R&D, Engineering, and Network Operations as well as the company’s Customer Service Operations. Previously, he was CIO & Global VP Technology for Blackhawk Network, with responsibility for driving the technology platform strategy and global network operations for this prepaid and gift card payments processing leader.As GoGrid’s Chief Revenue Officer, Robert Carroll has global responsibility for executing the company’s Sales, Product, and Marketing strategies.Before joining GoGrid, Carroll was CMO at SDL Tridion, where he crafted and executed thought-leadership initiatives in the emerging Customer Experience Management (CXM) category.

Catalyst Investors-backed Codero Hosting appoints new COO

By Iris DorbianCodero Hosting said Wednesday that it has hired Robert Autenrieth as chief operating officer and vice president of technical operations and support. Previously, Autenrieth worked at Rackspace where he served as vice president of global support operations. Based in Austin, Texas and Overland Park, Kansas, Codero Hosting, which is backed by Catalyst Investors, is a provider of cloud hosting services.