10
Feb 14

Cloud Computing Journal – The Grand Challenge: Simplifying IT to Unleash Innovation

I don’t listen to music before I buy it anymore. I don’t need to – as long as I’m purchasing it from Amazon. Based on algorithms that crawl my purchasing history, the online retailer knows what I like as well as I do and, dare I say, better than my wife.

A company develops this intimate knowledge by using Big Data to improve the customer experience in an economical and adaptable way. Amazon has integrated this agility into every aspect of its business, from running its warehouses to its revolutionary ability to publish on demand.

Game-changing innovation happens when you simplify everyday processes. But managing a large, traditional application portfolio – however crucial it is to your business – disrupts innovation.

The cloud virtualizes your software, protecting you from the inefficiencies associated with IT. As a result, you spend less time and money introducing and maintaining applications and more resources innovating and advancing your business. Whether you implement a software-designed data center, a hybrid cloud approach or and end-user computing strategy, you’re taking the burden off of your own team and into the virtual world.

More of the Cloud Computing Journal article by Paul Strong


07
Feb 14

SecurityWeek – Understanding IT Risk from the Business Perspective

Most Organizations Lack the Tools and Processes to Assess and Prioritize Risks and Vulnerabilities from the Business Perspective…

Recent security breaches at major retailers such as Target, Neiman Marcus and Michaels Stores have given further visibility of and placed a greater urgency around IT risks that have a direct impact on the business. For many years, information security has taken a back seat to other corporate priorities, but security has evolved — and moved up the corporate ladder — from simply restricting access to a few monolithic systems, to enabling safe access in a business environment that is dynamic, global, and always on.

Security is no longer just a technical issue that can be managed in bits and bytes; it’s a core business issue. Modern networks and data centers consist of many complex and intertwined business applications — from commercial off-the-shelf applications such as SAP and SharePoint, to homegrown applications performing custom business logic, to 3rd party cloud-based services — all are critical for the business to run.

A security breach or an outage to a business application or an entire network has a direct impact on a company’s bottom line. Security has to be effective enough to minimize risks to the business but also must enable the business to be agile in order to stay relevant and competitive. This requires a different approach to vulnerability management and a shift in the way security is viewed.

More of the SecurityWeek post from Nimmy Reichenberg


06
Feb 14

Tech Time Tea – How PaaS and DevOps are the next big wave in Enterprise Cloud computing

Cloud computing, a disruptive phenomena has gone mainstream in 2013 and now in 2014, PaaS promises to revolutionize the enterprises globally. Although virtualisation of cloud computing is now ubiquitous, It is the implementation of private PaaS, a competitive and evolving service model along with DevOps internally for enterprise organization that promises to drive the next big wave in cloud computing. Cloud computing itself too has tremendously evolving from just being a software-as-a-service to complex forms that also includes hardware and platform as a service. The three service models namely IaaS, PaaS and SaaS too are now showing signs of integration through 2014 with SaaS as the dominant service model by 2015. For 2014, The spotlight is on PaaS and Enterprises across globe are rapidly adopting PaaS (Platform-as-a-Service), as a delivery model for software application development. However, even within PaaS, enterprises are in need for a faster delivery of software developments therefore a hybrid of private PaaS and DevOps emerges as better option. By working around the respective trade offs of PaaS namely extreme productivity at the expense of control and of DevOps namely high level of control and flexibility at the expense of productivity, Enterprises seek to tap into the benefits of Hybrid cloud computing. Thus by utilising DevOps as foundation for PaaS, Enterprises can have the control of DevOps and productivity of PaaS. This enables to bring more fluidity to automation, continuous delivery and integration. Such a hybrid system allows for significant cost advantage by reducing development cost and increasing margins.

More of the Tech Time Tea article


05
Feb 14

IT World – OpenStack still has an enterprise problem

After trotting out some impressive enterprise users at its conference in Portland, Oregon, early last year, OpenStack hasn’t been able to showcase many additional big names. Supporters tried to address “the debate about the opportunity for OpenStack in the enterprise” at a half-day conference yesterday that was held at the Computer History Museum and webcast.

The speakers ended up highlighting a few of the challenges holding back OpenStack deployments.

Many businesses are looking for the kind of enterprise technology product that they’re used to seeing, and that’s not what OpenStack looks like yet, said Ken Pepple, CTO and founder of Solinea, a consulting company that helps businesses implement OpenStack clouds. On one end of the spectrum are vendors that are packaging parts of OpenStack and adding support. On the other are tightly packed solutions that go as far as designating what hardware to use. “People want something in between. They want pretty installers and great looking GUIs. They want some management tools around it, things you normally see perhaps in an ERP system,” he said.

More of the IT World article by Nancy Gohring


04
Feb 14

DevOps is not a technology problem. DevOps is a business problem.

DevOps is not a technology problem. DevOps is a business problem.


04
Feb 14

The Enterprise Architect Paradox

The other day, I received the nicest note from Ivan Lazarov, Chief Architect – Enterprise Business Solutions at Intuit. Ivan wrote, “I recently read your book The CIO Paradox and a lot of what you wrote resonated with me. I even took the list of CIO paradox statements and with very little modification translated them to Enterprise Architecture Paradox statements.”

I really liked Ivan’s translation of the CIO Paradox into an EA Paradox, so I thought I would share it with all of you. Note: Ivan’s changes from the original CIO Paradox are in italics.

The Enterprise Architecture Paradox

• Your Role

–You were hired to be strategic, but spend a lot of your time on operational issues and convincing operationally focused folks that they don’t want to “just plug the hole for right now.”

More of the CIO.com article by Martha Heller


03
Feb 14

Mindjet: The High Cost of Multitasking [INFOGRAPHIC]

Even with all of the blogs, statistics, and other cautionary tales warning people about the consequences of multitasking, it’s still today’s most popular (and seemingly unavoidable) way to work. Modern life is hard, y’all — we have more gadgets and entertainment channels distracting us than ever before, higher expectations of output at a greater frequency and with infinitely faster turnaround. And if we’re being honest, the constant exposure to other people who at least seem to be doing it all is enough to make many of us go into overdrive.

More of the Mindjet post


31
Jan 14

ZDNet – Half of IT leaders are ‘cost-center’ CIOs, 25% are ‘digital’ CIOs, survey says

Summary: Survey finds traditional CIOs worry more about IT operations, versus digital CIOs, who work closely with top management. But corporate culture may be more a factor than individual styles.

There’s a lot of talk these days about “digital” initiatives, which tend to be treated separately from plain-old information technology work. But are the two really so different?

Yes, says CIO’s Maryfran Johnson, who just presented the results of CIO magazine’s “13th annual State of the CIO” study, which reveals “stark contrasts between traditional CIOs who focus more on internal operations and digital CIOs who expand IT’s influence externally to work directly with customers and business colleagues.”
Data Center at CERN 2 -photo courtesy of CERN Press OfficePhoto: CERN Press Office

In other words, “traditional” CIOs — who worry about the uptime of the mainframe — are different from “digital” CIOs, who are spending time on strategic business growth. (Not to be confused with the emerging title of “chief digital officer,” who focuses on social initiatives, or the existing role of chief technology officer, who is concerned with selling technology solutions.

More of the ZDNet article by Joe McKendrick


30
Jan 14

MagicSoftware.com – Critical Issues to Spell Out in a BYOD Enterprise Policy

You can’t stop people from bringing their mobile devices into a company network. Period.

Seven out of ten companies today are facing the reality of having to define policies and employees rules for personal devices interacting digitally with the company network, states itpro.co.uk. If a company can find a way to keep personal mobile devices relatively safe for the company network, their use can be advantageous, especially in reduced equipment costs for a business and increased productivity.

Luckily there are a variety of Mobile Device Management and Mobile Application Management solutions that enable them to do so. But even with these solutions, it’s important for companies to spell out clear policies.

More of the Magic Blog post


29
Jan 14

Baseline – Ten Mobility Trends Shaping the Enterprise

It would be an understatement to say that mobility is changing the enterprise. The reality is that this technology is redefining business and IT in profound and permanent ways. But it isn’t only smartphones and tablets that are driving all the disruption. An array of technologies and systems—ranging from the industrial Internet (Internet of things) to the “appification” of everything—are creating remarkable challenges and opportunities. Moreover, the intersection of cloud computing, big data and social media is pushing mobility in new directions and affecting employees and customers in profound ways.

More of the Baseline article by Samuel Greengard