AWS launches US Government Region - GovCloud

AWS announced GovCloud a new AWS region specifically designed for the US gov't users.

AWS GovCloud (US)

AWS GovCloud is an AWS Region designed to allow U.S. government agencies and contractors to move more sensitive workloads into the cloud by addressing their specific regulatory and compliance requirements. Previously, government agencies with data subject to compliance regulations such as the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), which governs how organizations manage and store defense-related data, were unable to process and store data in the cloud that the federal government mandated be accessible only by U.S. persons.

Part of what AWS has done is isolate the Region to have only US citizens.

Because AWS GovCloud is physically and logically accessible by U.S. persons only, government agencies can now manage more heavily regulated data in AWS while remaining compliant with strict federal requirements. The new Region offers the same high level of security as other AWS Regions and supports existing AWS security controls and certifications such as FISMA, SAS-70, ISO 27001, FIPS 140-2 compliant end points, and PCI DSS Level 1. AWS also provides an environment that enables agencies to comply with HIPAA regulations.

Nebula launches Hardware Appliance to run the cloud, but will users want the HW or SW?

The cloud is about virtualized environments.  So, it is bit ironic that Nebula's first product is a physical hardware appliance when the solution could be downloaded bits.

Nebula Cloud Appliance

What they’re all working is fairly fascinating: A hardware appliance pre-loaded with customized OpenStack software and Arista networking tools, designed to manage racks of commodity servers as a private cloud.

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Kemp wasn’t planning to do an appliance, he admits, but initial investor Bechtolsheim convinced him it was the right approach. It lets Nebula provide a turnkey product for deploying OpenStack, Kemp explained, by optimizing and locking down some of the variables that might make deploying a private cloud more difficult.

Nebula's team didn't like the Eucalyptus product and choose OpenStack.

However, even with all the specialization, Nebula is very committed to building the core OpenStack code base. “OpenStack exists because Eucalyptus didn’t work at NASA,” Kemp acknowledged, so he understands the importance of solid, customizable, open-source code.

Ultimately, he said, a better OpenStack means a better Nebula, because Nebula can focus on filling in the gaps and not on reinventing the wheel. Much like Bechtolsheim was successful at Sun Microsystems  by building atop Unix and at Arista by using standard hardware components.

Here is a question.  If Nebula is the cloud appliance.

Elastic Infrastructure

The Nebula appliance dynamically provisions and destroys virtual infrastructure and storage as workloads fluctuate.

Why wouldn't you run the Nebula SW on multiple Open Compute Servers in your cloud environment?  Seems like the Nebula appliances are single point of failures unless you have multiple instances running in your cloud environment.  Which should be easy if you buy a few more Open Compute Servers.

Nebula was announced at OSCON,  but who would let their cloud environment be down waiting for a Fedex and ship their cloud data outside the company in their Nebula Appliance?

Nebula will supply the appliance. "If it fails, FedEx it back to us, and we'll send you another one," Kemp said. "Our little box has a 10 gigabit ethernet switch built into it. You can plug cheap commodity servers into the rack. You don't have to turn them on. It will do that. The interface is like Amazon Services." These servers act as monitors by this appliance, including log files and flow data. "What we do is create interface points to all of the common CMDB tools, managing tools, security tools, like ArcSight or Splunk," said Kemp. "We will create integration points for those particular products."

I am sure there is a high availability architecture that Nebula has, but why buy multiple Nebula Appliances when the same hardware, the Open Compute Servers are in your environment?  Because, the investor convinced the Nebula Founders it was a better revenue model?

Kemp wasn’t planning to do an appliance, he admits, but initial investor Bechtolsheim convinced him it was the right approach.

Would you want an appliance or the software you can run on the Open Compute Server?

BTW, given the SW runs on the Open Compute Server the Nebula Software should run on any hardware, unless Nebula modified the software to be hardware specific.

 

CA Technologies, a cloud player most don’t think about

CNET has an article about CA Technologies focus on cloud computing.  Check out this statement.

As a side note, I've always thought of CA as a place where software goes to die--an image that the company is well aware of and working to fix. I was impressed with the focus and forward-looking comments from both Fry and Debra Danielson, senior vice president of mergers and acquisitions, and I expect to see them be more aggressive about marketing their cloud-oriented products.

The article is about a discussion with Jay Fry, VP of marketing for cloud computing.

Jay Fry, VP of Marketing, Cloud Computing Business, CA

At this week's Structure conference in San Francisco, I spoke with Jay Fry, vice president of marketing for cloud computing, about what the company is doing to address the burgeoning cloud marketplace. (The company changed its name last year from CA, and before that it was Computer Associates.)

According to Fry, this year is about figuring out what customers really want--not just from CA Technologies, but from any vendor focused on the emerging cloud market. Enterprise users are trying to keep things under their control while service providers are looking to get users connected to their services. The rate and pace of cloud adoption are very different depending on the use case.

I’ve known Jay Fry since his days at Cassatt, a company CA acquired and Jay came over.  Jay is a data center guy and I’ve chatted with Jay at Gartner Data Center, Uptime Symposium, Structure, and even at a Starbuck’s when we have been able to connect our schedules when we are both in the bay area.

It is nice to see a write-up on what I have learned in my conversations with Jay.  If you haven’t thought about CA Technologies as a cloud player, you should.

Future of Cloud Computing presentation at #structureconf

There is panel discussion at GigaOm Structure.

THE FUTURE OF THE CLOUD PANEL

Recently, GigaOM Pro, The 451 Group, and Northbridge Venture Partners conducted an industry survey to map the future of enterprise cloud computing. The results of the survey will be revealed for the first time in this panel, and we will hold a lively discussion among the stakeholders in key industry sectors about the implications of these results.

Moderated by:Michael Skok - General Partner, North Bridge Venture Partners
Speakers:Dries Buytaert - Co-Founder and CTO, Acquia

John Dillon - CEO, Engine Yard

Marten Mickos - CEO, Eucalyptus Systems

Lew Moorman - Chief Strategy Officer and President of the Rackspace Cloud, Rackspace

What is cool is you can see the slides here.  Here are a few from the presentation.

Cloud Start-up Bromium kicks off at #StructureConf, Secure Cloud Applications

The first talk at Structure was given by Simon Crosby who announced his new company, Bromium.

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Bromium Raises $9.2M Series A

Led by well-known industry experts, innovative virtualization and security company secures funding from leading venture capital firms Andreessen Horowitz, Ignition Ventures and Lightspeed Venture Partners

SAN FRANCISCO (Structure 2011) - June 22, 2011 - Bromium, emerging from stealth mode to develop technology in the areas of virtualization and security, today announced it has closed a $9.2 million series A round of funding with Andreessen Horowitz, Ignition Partners and Lightspeed Venture Partners. Founded by Gaurav Banga, Simon Crosby and Ian Pratt, Bromium is focused on the delivery of infrastructure solutions that permit enterprises to safely embrace two major trends in IT: consumerization and cloud computing. The rapid growth of new device types and consumer-driven device, application and network choices, combined with increasing mobility and the need for “anywhere, any time access” to enterprise data and applications, poses a significant risk to the enterprise. Similarly, the rapid adoption of cloud computing leaves enterprise data and applications vulnerable to attack. Bromium’s technology will permit the development of a powerful set of solutions to these problems and will help provide a more trustworthy computing infrastructure.

The Bromium Board of Directors is drawn from business leaders and technologists with extensive experience in infrastructure software, virtualization and security: Peter Levine, venture partner at Andreessen Horowitz; Frank Artale, managing director at Ignition Ventures; and George Kurtz, worldwide CTO and executive vice president at McAfee. Bromium has already attracted top engineering talent from Microsoft, VMware, Oracle, McAfee and NVIDIA.

Small world moment.  Frank Artale who represents Ignition Ventures investment in Bromium was one my bosses at Microsoft, and was one row in front of me on the flight from SEA to SJC.  Frank also wakeboards on the same lake I live on in Redmond (Lake Sammamish).  Frank is ex-Citrix exec so he knows the virtualization and enterprise space well.

Bromium is addressing the security of cloud applications.

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Simon had a good slide on where things are.

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And a cost of private clouds.

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Simon had some great slides like this one with Apples and Oranges analogy.

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