Another Alternative to Physical Media, Verizon and Coinstar's Redbox partner for New Streaming Service

Physical media has an environmental impact and streaming bits can have a lower environmental impact.  Netflix is infamous in this space and while we are watching the PR disasters by Netflix last year, it looked like it woke up a few to the opportunities to compete.

Verizon and Coinstar's Redbox announced a new joint venture today where Verizon is 65% owner.

The joint venture is a limited liability company with Verizon holding a 65 percent ownership share and Redbox holding a 35 percent ownership share at the outset.

Who else will join the streaming media momentum?

Verizon and Coinstar's Redbox Form Joint Venture to Create New Consumer Choice for Video Entertainment

Joint Venture Will Offer the Best of Both Worlds - Physical and Digital - to All Consumers Nationwide

 

 

NEW YORK, Feb. 6, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Verizon and Coinstar, Inc. today announced the formation of a joint venture that will create a new choice for quality- and value-conscious consumers seeking a simple and affordable way to access the video entertainment they crave. The venture's services will offer all of the convenience, simplicity and value of Redbox® new release DVD and Blu-ray Disc® rentals combined with a new content-rich video on-demand streaming and download service from Verizon.

HBR's #1 tip for the cloud, get the right people

Google sponsored the sharing of a Harvard Business Review article making cloud recommendations to the CEO.

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The best line to keep in mind is "Delegating the move to the cloud to traditional IT people is like Putting the crew running the boiler and steam turbine in charge of electrifying the factory."

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If you wonder why some cloud projects fall, keep in mind who the people were and their background.

 

The Two Battles in the Cloud, Brands and Profits

The NYTimes has a post on the idea of the Cloud Cartel.

Here Come the Cloud Cartels

January 30, 2012, 9:00 AM 6

What kind of cartels will deliver business computing, and how should businesses respond?

Forrester, the technology research company, just released its business and technology outlook for 2020. The short version is that cloud computing will come on quicker than you think, it will be controlled by a very few companies that will fight for the right to own your data, and businesses need to think about what software they can write that will differentiate them from all the other customers of these giants.

Like a lot of these reports, Forrester has a couple of clichés (we have entered the era of individual empowerment; change is the only constant) and interesting facts that you don’t really know what to do with (there will be 22 billion connected devices in 2020; Moore’s Law dictates that the computing power of I.B.M.’s Watson will fit into a human hand by then).

One of the points well made is the move to the cloud and mobile,  and how there will be a shift in the IT powerhouses.

The substance of the report, however, is plain: cloud and mobile computing combined will rapidly improve, dislodging many incumbents in enterprise computing, and vastly empowering a few others, becoming what Forrester calls “computing cartels” that control millions of servers in data centers around the globe. These cartels, the report says, will include Amazon, Cisco Systems, Google, I.B.M., Microsoft, Oracle and a few competitors. Like most of these reports, it does not name losers, though Hewlett-Packard and Dell were among those noticeably absent.

The Cloud is very confusing, and one way to filter the communication is to understand whether something is written for a battle of the brands to create awareness for their solution vs. the battle for profits where companies are grabbing market share from others.  You may think they are the same.  But a Brand Battle will be more creative in defining perceptions.  A Profit Battle will be how do I get the money from the IT department.  The Cloud has been succeeding when business units decide to bypass their internal IT department and buy cloud services direct at a lower cost.

The Brand Battles are going to be fought by the established enterprise companies that have the budgets to fund analyst reports - IBM, EMC, Cisco, HP, VMware, Dell, and Microsoft.  The Profit Battle are those who want to disrupt the status quo - Amazon, Rackspace (OpenStack), and many others that don't have a big marketing budget.

The fight for the Cloud is like a big Go Board.

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There are multiple battles for territory going on, and it easy for a big brand to claim it is winning in its area.  But, there is not a scorekeeper for the complete Cloud game.

You can argue over who is winning the cloud game.  But, it can more interesting to know who has adapted to the cloud to win other games.

The cloud is disruptive and those who understand who is winning these other cloud enabled games has the knowledge to play the cloud game differently than a simple brand or profit game.

 

Fujitsu launches big data services in the cloud

Next week I am moderating a panel discussion on "Opportunities in Big Data" at a small Fujitsu conference in SJ.  And Fujitsu just announced data services in the cloud.

Fujitsu Launches Cloud Services as a Platform for Big Data

Tokyo, January 16, 2012 — Fujitsu today announced the launch of Data Utilization Platform Services, which use cloud services as a platform leveraging big data(1).

This is a cloud service for gathering, compiling, and integrating massive quantities of sensing data; combining it with knowledge; processing it using realtime processing or batch processing; and using it for such purposes as making future projections. It covers four specific services offerings: Data Management & Integration Services, Communications Control Services, Data Collection and Detection Services, and Data Analysis Services.

Fujitsu is promoting Convergence Services that leverage big data to help resolve business and global issues, generate new sources of value, and bring about a more prosperous society. Data Utilization Platform Services will act as the core of these services.

...

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One of the personas Fujitsu has is the "data curator"

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I'll look for more information on this topic while I am at the conference.

Amazon Web Services abstraction of SSD in the cloud

GigaOm's Derek Harris has a phttp://gigaom.com/cloud/amazons-dynamodb-shows-hardware-as-mean-to-an-end/ost on AWS new Dynamo service.

Amazon’s DynamoDB shows hardware as means to an end

Somewhat lost in the greater story of Amazon Web Services’ new DynamoDB NoSQL database is that the new service runs atop a solid-state storage system. However, by abstracting those SSDs underneath a higher-level application service, AWS has once again demonstrated its cloud wisdom by illustrating how new hardware presents greater opportunities than Infrastructure-as-a-Service alone.

AWS doing solid-state drives is a big deal in the world of cloud computing, where users have been wondering for years when the company might start offering SSDs as a service. Other cloud providers already offer bare SSDs as a service, and more certainly are thinking about it with the advent of companies such as SolidFire that are specifically targeting cloud providers with solid-state arrays. The idea is that they’ll be necessary to run I/O-intensive applications such as databases and ERP, which many large organizations consider mission-critical but which many cloud providers aren’t yet equipped to handle.

I speculated on the arrival of SSD to AWS 2 years ago.

When will solid state memory server be an option in AWS instances?

I was having another stimulating conversation in silicon valley last night, and one of the ideas that made sense is for solid state memory servers to be part of the cloud computing option.  It’s just a matter of time.  Amazon has their current instance offerings with a division of performance and memory.

It took longer than I thought, but SSD has arrived to the AWS and I am sure it will be a standard expectation for high data IO services.