Several analyst firms are predicting industry disruption, starting as early as 2015.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) Inc. on Wednesday announced a number of new services during the opening keynote of its third-annual re:Invent conference, taking place this week in Las Vegas.
As companies go deeper into the cloud, the more difficult integration becomes, the study also finds.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) Inc. on Thursday introduced a new DevOps certification for IT pros.
MidoNet is used chiefly for SDN on the OpenStack cloud platform.
The best solution depends on what your data is doing.
- By Larry Parscale
- 11/05/2014
That represents a six-fold increase over 2014 sales.
Red Hat and SUSE fight to be King of the Hill for cloud services.
- By Dan Kusnetzky
- 11/04/2014
"Perimeter security is kind of done for," says one expert.
- By John K. Waters
- 11/04/2014
Enabled by emergent software-defined networking (SDN) technology, the nonprofit Internet2 organization announced "the first nationwide, multi-tenant SDN-powered virtualized network capability."
"Real-time protection" against malware is promised for the cloud platform.
The OpenShift Startup Program provides free hosting and technical support.
One popular myth is that the cloud should be used for everything.
Well known among developers for its Java-based integrated development environment, supporting vendors for the latest venture include IBM, Red Hat and SAP.
- By John K. Waters
- 10/27/2014
Amazon Web Services (AWS) Inc. maintained strong growth over the latest fiscal quarter for Amazon.com, despite a poor showing for the company as a whole.
The cloud platform is still seen as struggling, however, when compared with OpenStack, its main competition.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) Inc. on Tuesday announced the general availability of a new cloud-based identity management solution.
Also, Microsoft now loves Linux.
- By John K. Waters
- 10/21/2014
The company adds a new DevOps product, Code Stream, and rebrands its cloud management suite.
A study by datacenter security firm Imperva Inc. has found that roughly one-fifth of all Web application attacks originate from servers on Amazon Web Services (AWS).