Architecture

March 05, 2008

Google apps op OLPC en EEEpc?

Hoe kan ik nu het beste en zo simpel mogelijk de voordelen van Software + Services uitleggen ? Nou voor ... 'pure play' SaaS heb je een internetverbinding nodig ... De blogpost van Willem says it all ...

(Sorry Willem, die kans kon ik niet laten lopen :-) )

OLPC en EEEpc... Het leukste van mijn bezoek aan de Onderwijs & ICT beurs vandaag (waarover later meer) vond ik wel het feit dat ik de mensen van Edupaper en G-Company met elkaar in contact kon brengen. Ze stonden allebei met een stand op de beurs maar kenden elkaar en elkaars producten niet. Zo breng ik het matchen van trends in de praktijk...
De vraag die ik ze voorlegde was:
Kunnen jullie mij Google apps op deze mini laptops laten zien?
Helaas was de WiFi voorziening op de jaarbeurs weer eens slecht geregeld (onvoorstelbaar!) dus waren beide juweeltjes niet aangesloten op internet. ...

Source: Google apps op OLPC en EEEpc?

February 27, 2008

Novell koopt workloadbeheertechnologie

Novell is duidelijk haar portfolio aan het spekken door het kopen van diverse technologieën en oplossingen voor haar platform. Platespin is de meest recente toevoeging ...

Novell telt 205 miljoen dollar neer voor PlateSpin, een bedrijf dat Novells virtualisatiestrategie verder helpt invullen. PlateSpin levert software voor het beheer van de belastingsgraden op fysieke of virtuele hostcomputers.

Source: Novell koopt workloadbeheertechnologie
Automatisering Gids
Date Published: Wed, 27 Feb 2008

February 26, 2008

What's in a cloud ?

A colleague referred me to this article by Paul Wainwright about Rackspace / Mosso and their new offering for a truely commoditised hosting offering. Also others like IBM and Google are entering this market so lot's of developements can be expected here .. So ... starting a new category : Cloudcomputing
 

.. Rackspace subsidiary Mosso this week relaunched its hosting platform as a pay-as-you-grow cloud computing service. There have been noises recently about hosting provider Rackspace’s ability to compete with Amazon’s EC2 service and similar cloud offerings. Mosso is its answer to those critics.

Briefing me on the announcement last week, Rackspace’s senior VP of strategy Lew Moorman told me, “This is a very important strategy for Rackspace … This idea has really blossomed into something we feel is the future of hosting — we really think it’s going to bring something new to the market.”

Mosso the hosting cloud logoRebranded as The Hosting Cloud, the Mosso offering brings cloud attributes to the commodity Web server hosting market. Web developers can select the server stack they want to deploy — including Linux and Windows (both on the same website if they want), plus higher-level components such as PHP, mySQL, Ruby on Rails, Microsoft SQL Server and IIS7 — and the Mosso system implements it on demand. Its slogan: “Code, load and go.” ...

More at Source: ZDnet.com

February 14, 2008

Salesforce.com Suffers Outage

One of the downsides of a full 'in the cloud' service ...

... One of Salesforce.com's key North American CRM servers, NA5, was up and down for most of the business day Feb. 11 following a software upgrade, a Salesforce customer who asked to remain anonymous told eWEEK.

The unstable server caused some havoc in an unspecified number of customers' accounts, the customer said.
The software upgrade was installed over the weekend, but at 8:22 a.m. Pacific time, the company's internal server information Web page said,  "NA5 Service Degradation: The technology operations team has been made aware of intermittent service disruptions to NA5. Please check back for further updates."


Salesforce.com, based in San Francisco, subsequently reported similar "service degradations" at 9:26 a.m., 10:19 a.m., 11:23 p.m. and 12:20 p.m. before announcing at 2:04 p.m. that "the Salesforce.com Technology team has restored the service issue with NA5 at 22:11 UTC. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused you."


The tech op team did not specify exactly what the root cause of the problem was. That information may be posted by tomorrow, a Salesforce.com employee told eWEEK. The employee did not want his name used because he is not authorized to speak for the company. ...

Source: eWeek.com

February 07, 2008

Software+Services: Microsoft BizTalk

Microsoft BizTalk 2006 whitepaper outling the role of BizTalk in Software + Services scenrio's ..


Software + Services in the Microsoft World: A Technology Overview for IT Decision Makers

One of the most important changes in the technology world today is the shift within enterprises from relying solely on local software to a world of software plus services (S+S). This overview describes S+S, focusing on what Microsoft is doing in this area. While not everyone uses the same terms, the entire industry has embraced the idea of S+S under various headings and while the move to S+S certainly affects consumers, this description focuses on S+S for business users. S+S isn’t a futuristic idea; it’s a reality today. Yet the full impact of this transition is still years away. Understanding what that impact will look like requires thinking about the effect on applications—packages as well as custom software—and on the platforms those applications depend on. This overview describes both.

December 17, 2007

A Cost-Effective Software and Services Solution Boosts Funds Automation (Presented by WeathCraft)

A Cost-Effective Software and Services Solution Boosts Funds Automation, follow link to download (registration required)

clip_image001

Source: A Cost-Effective Software and Services Solution Boosts Funds Automation (Presented by WeathCraft)
Date Published: Mon, 17 Dec 2007 09:13:31 GMT

December 07, 2007

Forrester: The Strategic Potential Of Microsoft's Oslo

Review of Forrester on Microsoft Oslo ...

Microsoft recently announced Oslo, a strategic direction for several service-oriented architecture (SOA) and related technologies. Oslo has important near-term aims that will benefit Microsoft developers, but the long-term trajectory of Oslo is more critically important to understand — for enterprise architects of both Microsoft and non-Microsoft shops. While Microsoft must still prove its ability to deliver on the promises, Oslo embodies critical trends that move Microsoft's platform toward the focus on business design that is the future center of IT architecture. As envisioned by the Business Metadata Core of Forrester's Digital Business Architecture, Oslo's active metadata and unified modeling will increase Microsoft's ability to capture an executable model of the business itself. Architects must understand the significance of the industry trends behind Oslo — and similar initiatives by other vendors — so they can lead their organizations toward the business agility enabled by an architecture that is centered on business design and business metadata.

Source: The Strategic Potential Of Microsoft's Oslo
"Randy Heffner"
Date Published: Thu, 06 Dec 2007

November 29, 2007

Forrester: Why You Need A Long-Term Apps Strategy

Interesting point of view. I am sure SaaS / S+S / SOA surely impacts the applications are designed, implemented and maintained. The question is when / by how much and ... what about the legacy, this a weak link in any strategy ...

Business process and applications professionals face a barrage of requests to deploy new functionality, reduce IT costs, and meet vendor-imposed upgrade deadlines. Typical projects include instance consolidation, software upgrades, business process outsourcing (BPO), and third-party maintenance migration. But these projects often occur piecemeal, leading to organizational fatigue, expensive rework, and lost Total Economic Impact™ (TEI). As the industry moves to service-oriented architecture (SOA) and the beginning of the next upgrade cycle, business process and applications professionals should take advantage of this unique opportunity to plan strategically and initiate a long-term applications strategy.

Source: Why You Need A Long-Term Apps Strategy
Author: "R "Ray" Wang"
Date Published: Tue, 27 Nov 2007

October 25, 2007

Jeff Raikes: Desktop application software is not dead

InfoWorld published an article featuring some comments made by Jeff Raikes in his keynote at Convergence. I think that the article takes things a bit out of context; it makes Microsoft look defensive in a way. Microsoft should have no reason to be defensive over the Software + Services model it has introduced. Microsoft has created an asset over the last decade which it leverages in a very good way; it protects clients' investements in software and hardware and allows them to gradually take advatage of SaaS solutions.

Like Jeff Raikes said many other vendors are introducing or expanding solutions that create offline / rich client capabilities which indicates that not many client take a leap of faith to fully "cloud based" solutions ...

... top Microsoft executive defended desktop application software, the source of the company's revenue for three decades, arguing on Tuesday that even services-based companies such as Google still need it.

The comments by Jeff Raikes, president of Microsoft's business applications division, come as Microsoft is trying to position itself as a company capable of delivering applications over the Internet as well as on PCs, its traditional distribution model.

"It's interesting some our competitors who like to espouse the idea that software is dead," said Raikes said. "I think they're worried that actually people like a lot of what they have at their fingertips, and the real success is to use a combination."

Microsoft has come under increasing pressure from companies such as Salesforce.com, which specializes in Web-based CRM applications and Google, whose Docs suite is an online alternative to Microsoft's Office suite. Web-based applications tend to be cheaper, easier to update, and require little installation since applications are delivered through a Web browser.

Raikes claimed during a keynote to about 3,300 customers and partners at its Convergence conference that only Microsoft can deliver "the best of the traditional software model in combination with software as a service."

Later, Raikes said Google realized its Web-based applications need further enhancement on the desktop by introducing Google Gears, a set of open source tools to build applications that can run offline and then sync when a computer comes back online.

"It's fascinating to me to see that even some of those companies now are trying to backtrack on what we've been saying and to offer things like Gears in order to be able to be offline and or take advantage of global computing power," Raikes said. ...

Source : InforWorld.com

October 08, 2007

Computable: IBM en Google doneren aan 'cloud computing'-onderzoek

INteressante ontwikkeling. 'Cloud-computing' is de infratsructuur kant / back-end van SaaS zou je kunnen zeggen ...

... IBM en Google doneren elk 20 to 25 miljoen euro aan software, hardware en diensten, zodat universiteiten onderzoek kunnen doen naar 'cloud computing'.

IBM en Google starten een programma waarin ze universiteiten stimuleren onderzoek te doen naar ‘cloud computing'. Bij ‘cloud computing' worden een groep processoren gekoppeld, zodat zij meer kracht kunnen leveren bij het aanbieden van applicaties, onder andere over het internet. ...

Source: IBM en Google doneren aan 'cloud computing'-onderzoek
Date Published Mon, 08 Oct 2007

Bram Veenhof: SaaS design patronen

Bram's presentatie over 'het driekoppige monster van SaaS architectuur ...

Hi all, Ik moest laatst een presentatie geven over design patronen voor SaaS. Zoals veel van jullie weten is een deel van mijn functie het maken van slideware en dat presenteren. Op basis van het whitepaper van Gianpaolo en Fred heb ik deze presentatie gemaakt. Ik vond hem zelf erg geslaagd. Volgens mij geeft het zeer beknopt de problemen van het ontwikkelen van een multitenant platform weer. Het bespreekt het drie koppig monster van SaaS architectuur configurability, multitenancy en scalability...(read more)

Source: SaaS design patronen
Author: Bram Veenhof
Date Published: Fri, 05 Oct 2007

Design by Ewebscapes