Zappos was hacked recently and has requested the users to change their passwords. But if you are a user accessing the site from out of the country, it shows you a splash screen that the site is under construction. How must a user change password if he or she cannot access the site. I heard the site is hosted by Amazon WS. Can this site be trusted and the provider that owns the business. What are your thoughts?
Archive for the ‘Cloud Computing’ Category
Zappos Hack Exposes Passwords
Wednesday, January 18th, 2012SalesForce.com Purposesly Makes It Difficult For Its Clients To Move to Its Competitors like Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011
Wednesday, December 21st, 2011We have been using SalesForce.com for over 6 years. We decided to move to Microsoft CRM Online 2011 recently but SalesForce.com makes it difficult for companies to switch providers. Microsoft also does not provide good tools to make this migration possible. The competition between them is just making it tough for companies to maintain control over the sales data. I feel we should move to SugarCRM.
Microsoft COO Turner bashes competitors in WPC keynote
Thursday, July 14th, 2011
For his annual keynote at the Microsoft Wordwide Partner Conference, taking place this week in Los Angeles, Microsoft Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner wasted little time challenging Microsoft’s many competitors. He flouted the supposed weaknesses of Cisco, IBM, Google, Oracle and others, letting attendees know that Microsoft is gunning for these companies’ business.
“I am grateful for those competitors. It is fun going after them in a big way,” he said.
Turner even took the opportunity to criticize some of Microsoft’s old technologies, such as Windows XP and Office 2003.
As the COO, Turner oversees Microsoft’s worldwide sales, marketing, and services. And at the WPC conference, his role is to rally Microsoft partners to march into battle against competing companies. This year, however, Turner seemed even more eager than usual to call out competitors by name and list their putative deficiencies.
Google was one of the first companies Turner savaged, particularly in regards to its online office suite, Google Docs. “Two years ago, all of the headlines said Microsoft was in big trouble,” he said. “Guess what? It hasn’t happened.”
He criticized Google for hidden fees in Google Docs, which Microsoft competes against with its own recently launched Office365. Turner claimed that Google’s annual fee of $50 per user per year is “only the tip of the iceberg.” Customers may incur additional fees, the nature of which Turner did not specify.
He also touted Office365, taking the time to quote an article from a trade magazine, stating that “Office 365, frankly, is to Google Apps as XBOX 360 Live is to Pong.”
“Office365, ladies and gentlemen, is nothing but a Google butt-kicker,” he said, adding that Office365 had already gained 5 million licensed users. He also mocked Google Talk as an “inferior messaging system.”
Discussing Cisco, Turner extolled the audience to go after that company’s profitable teleconference business. “Think about all the years that Cisco has been milking those high margins — 75, 80 percent margins — on its unified communications product,” he said, adding that Microsoft’s partners could offer a lower-cost alternative through Microsoft’s Lync unified communications offering.
Another target was IBM. Turner notes that Microsoft has migrated 4.5 million users off of IBM’s Lotus Notes, and expects to migrate another 5 million this year, all in favor of Microsoft Exchange.
Taking aim at Oracle, Tuner rhetorically asked: “How many happy Oracle customers are you talking to?”
“There is a tremendous opportunity for us to really go after the Oracle customer right now,” he said. He posited that SQL Server was a lower-cost and more secure alternative to the Oracle database.
With VMware, he referred to something he called the “VMware tax,” noting that Microsoft’s Hyper-V virtualization software offers the ability to run more virtual machines, after the first six, at no additional cost. “We caught VMware flat-footed because of the economics of the cloud,” he said. “The more VMs you add, the more you save.”
This is not the first year that Turner has bashed competitors. Last year at WPC, Turner mocked Apple for its problems with the then recently released iPhone 4, calling it Apple’s Vista, referring to Microsoft’s own less-than-enthusiastically received operating system.
Apple was not spared Turner ‘s mockery this year either. Comparing Apple’s approach to its operating systems with Microsoft’s, Turned mused that “your guess is as good as mine as to when [Apple will merge] the iOS and MacOS.” Windows 8, in contrast, will be a single OS that will bridge a wide range of different devices, he noted.
Turner also took apparent delight in displaying photos of an unnamed authorized Apple reseller store in Latin America that was selling Apple desktops and Apple laptops running Windows 7. “That should tell you a lot about having a great OS.”
Some of Turner’s jibes were more enthusiastic than coherent. “It is so good to have something to compete with Salesforce.com head-to-head,” Turner trumpeted, referring to Microsoft’s Dynamics CRM Online, which has gone live in direct competition with Salesforce.com’s offerings. “Now, we have this humongous pacifier to stick in the mouth of [Salesforce.com CEO] Marc Benioff.”
Not all of Turner’s talk was bluster. He also took the opportunity to provide a eulogy for Microsoft products that the company hopes its users will upgrade, namely Windows XP, Office 2003 and Internet Explorer 6. “Those products deserve a standing ovation. They have been so good to so many people. But you know what? They are dead. End-of-life is 2014,” Turner said.
These widely used products define what Microsoft is for far too many people, he added. “The reality is that is not what we are at all. You can’t even begin to get someone’s mind around Lync and SharePoint and the cloud until we get these old applications remediated and moved forward,” he said.
Turner also outlined the strategy partners should take to help get their customers onto the Microsoft Azure cloud. Microsoft’s Azure service has already collected 40,000 customers across 41 countries, although this is a small percentage of the customers Microsoft would like to have using this service. He explained that the two vital pieces of software that every organizations should have to get cloud ready is Microsoft System Center and Microsoft Active Directory.
“When they want they want to go to the cloud, these two assets will make that possible,” he said. “If they are not quite ready to go to cloud, it doesn’t matter. We’ll take them when they are ready.”
Microsoft’s Hyper-V Cloud Fast Track Accelerates Private Cloud Deployment
Monday, May 30th, 2011What an exciting week at Tech Ed for Private Cloud solutions from Microsoft and our great partners! It started with the announcement of NetApp and Cisco joining the Hyper-V Cloud Fast Track program and bringing their solution to market immediately. We had a session where Alex Jauch from NetApp did a very cool demo. He showed provisioning of Cisco UCS blades via an Opalis workflow and PowerShell. He followed that with a Disaster Recovery scenario – bringing down a private cloud in Seattle and bringing the infrastructure back up in Tacoma without losing connectivity to the hosted applications.
Next, HP’s private cloud offering in the Fast Track program provided an incredible display of power – supporting thousands of VM’s on just a 16-node configuration. It was amazing to see this system in action, specifically the quick provisioning and de-provisioning of virtual machines, automating the process of workload balancing and the ability to keep the infrastructure available through advanced monitoring and automation. This live Fast Track implementation clearly demonstrates the benefit of shared resources pools with advanced automation and management.
And to top it all off, Fujitsu announced on Wednesday that their Fast Track offering is coming to market. Fujitsu’s is based on their Fujitsu PRIMERGY BX900 blade server system and ETERNUS storage systems.
Keep looking here for updates on how to implement private clouds in your organization – today – with Hyper-V Cloud Fast Track offerings from partners around the globe.
Source: Microsoft – Virtualization Team Blog
The Role of the Windows Azure VM Role
Sunday, May 15th, 2011Moving applications to the cloud is all about creating the right image. Server image, that is. The Windows Azure VM role lets you run a virtual hard disk image, store that image in the cloud and load and run it on demand.
You understand benefits of cloud computing, the efficiencies to be gained, the ability to scale your infrastructure based on immediate need and make more strategic use of IT staff. But what’s the best way to move your applications to cloud? The last thing you really want to do is start recoding applications and make changes to their deployment process.
Enter the Windows Azure Virtual Machine (VM) Role, which allows you to run a customized instance of Windows Server 2008 R2 in Windows Azure, making it easier to move applications to the cloud. The quick explanation is that a VM role runs an image, a virtual hard disk (VHD) of a Windows Server 2008 R2 virtual machine. This VHD is created using an on-premise Windows Server machine, and then uploaded to Windows Azure. You can configure and maintain the operating system and use Windows Services, scheduled tasks, etc. in the VM role. Once it’s stored in the cloud, the VHD can be loaded on demand into a VM role and executed. There’s no need to re-code to use Windows Azure, your existing applications can start to work for you in the cloud immediately.
IT Professionals can use Hyper-V or the Automated Installation Kit for Windows Server to build and upload their Windows Server 2008 R2 applications to the Windows Azure VM role. For packaging an application so that it runs in Windows Azure in the VM role, the Windows Azure SDK also includes command line tools. For more detail, see the Overview of the Windows Azure VM Role.
Our focus in this edition of TechNet ON is two-fold: to understand why you’d want to use the VM role and how to create VMs for Windows Azure.
In his TechNet Magazine article Taking Your Virtual Machines to the Cloud [[need URL]], Joshua Hoffman explains that the VM role lets you build virtual machines for Windows Azure to leverage the scalable infrastructure and cost savings that come with cloud computing.
Is the VM role a platform-as-a-service (PaaS), since it runs on Windows Azure, or is this Microsoft’s Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) play, as some speculated when the VM role was first announced. As explained in Windows Azure VM Role: Looking at it a different way, the VM role is a PaaS application that runs on Windows Azure, subject to the service model and all the other benefits and constraints, just like the Web and Worker Roles. The fact that it spins up a VM to house the application doesn’t change the fact that it is still a Windows Azure application.
Next you should understand why you would want to use the VM role to configure the operating system for a virtual machine, and how to create a hosted service for Windows Azure. A VM role is the same as the other Windows Azure roles in needing the service definition and service configuration files to be hosted as a service in Windows Azure. To begin, get a quick Overview of Creating a Hosted Service for Windows Azure.
Getting Started
In Your Virtual Machines to the Cloud [[need URL]], Hoffman walks through the steps of building your VMs for Windows Azure. Here are some key things to understand:
An image of the Windows Server 2008 R2 operating system is needed for a VM role in Windows Azure. To see what is involved in creating that VHD image, read Getting Started with Developing a Server Image for a VM Role. To create instances of a VM role, you must deploy a service model package to Windows Azure. Check out the TechNet Library article How to Create and Deploy the VM Role Service Model for details on deploying a service model package to Windows Azure, including how to how to create the base VHD for a VM role in Windows Azure, upload a VHD to Windows Azure and define the service model files.
Since Windows Azure Integration Components are required in a VM role that is hosted as a service in Windows Azure, you’ll also need to learn how to install the Windows Azure Integration Components. The Windows Azure Integration Components install the service runtime APIs to the image, so that the VM role instance may gather dynamic information from the Windows Azure environment.
When you are ready to deploy your VM role(s), check out Avkash Chauhan’s Expert Tips on VM Role Deployment with Windows Azure SDK 1.4
Last but not least, get some hands-on time with the Windows Azure VM role.
Webinar – Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite
Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010Cloud computing is becoming an increasingly popular approach to driving down costs while making the business more nimble. With Microsoft cloud computing, you can:
- Increase productivity and satisfaction by providing seamless experiences across the PC, Web, and phone and from the data center to the cloud
- Remain confident that your data and services will be protected and available as you reap the efficiency, cost, and environmental benefits of the cloud
Interested in the potential of cloud computing for your operations? We invite you to join us for a webcasts to learn how our approach enables enterprise-class services, consistent connected experiences, and the power of choice.
Register here – http://www.ishir.com/microsoft-online-services-presentation-23-feb10.htm
Also,
Learn how “City of Carlsbad” uses BPOS to save cost – http://www.ishir.com/v7-case-form.asp?pdf=ISHIR_Case_Study_City_of_Carlsbad
Microsoft BPOS: Trusting Software-plus-services
Friday, November 13th, 2009Software-plus-services brings together the best of cloud-based, hosted services and the software that resides on a variety of devices to provide flexible and effective solutions for doing business. With software-plus-services as your IT strategy, you can focus your internal IT efforts on the systems and applications that are most critical to your agency and that leverage your IT expertise. Other systems can be hosted by Microsoft or by a third party which handles deployment, maintenance, and software upgrades and helps ensure that your availability requirements are met.
Skepticism is healthy, and, especially in a challenging economy, it can mean the difference between success and failure. These days, there isn’t much leeway for a misstep. So when a new paradigm like cloud computing or a new platform like Microsoft’s Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) comes along, it’s smart to ask questions—and there are plenty to ask.
We’ve listened to BPOS customers as well as those who are just curious about the new offering. Across them all, a handful of common themes emerge from all of the questions. We looked at what Microsoft’s suite is in our prior BPOS article. This time around, we thought it would be a good idea to turn from what to why. Why is the new paradigm any better than the old? Why does the suite make sense? Why should companies trust in the new platform? Let’s dig up some answers.
Why Trust Software-plus-services?
Data is any company’s lifeblood. Email contains confidential correspondence with customers. Presentations hold competitive plans and forecasting. If these data should get lost or stolen or sold off to interested parties, the results for the company could be dire, possibly lethal. So it’s no wonder that many companies are loathe to let their data offsite. Today, many government agencies, with staff trained in the old school of security, strictly forbid it.
The cloud computing, or software-plus-services (SPS), model obviously defies the old paradigm. It’s not just that the company’s data is off-site—the data could be anywhere. A large vendor like Microsoft employs numerous data centers and makes sure that any company’s data is stored in multiple centers for redundancy. A customer will never know where his data is or how many instances of it exist outside of his walls. This ambiguity is no doubt part of why we kept hearing people ask whether Microsoft Online Services could be trusted with their data.
Microsoft keeps much of that information hidden away for security’s sake. The less nuts and bolts information about such matters is made public, the safer Microsoft’s systems will be.
Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite now for $10 per user per month (new pricing)
Wednesday, November 4th, 2009Small and medium enterprises can now subscribe to Microsoft’s e-mail and collaboration solutions online, for $10 per user per month.
All one needs to do is log on to the online services center, add the chosen services that could range from Exchange Online Standard, SharePoint Online Standard, Office Communication Online and Office Live Meeting Standard, to their shopping cart.
Microsoft has announced the commercial availability of the online services offering from prices starting at $2 per user per month for deskless workers. This is something really unique offering from Microsoft for users within the enterprise traditionally neglected by IT departments due to software licensing costs. Deskless workers include people in the shop floor, truck drivers, factory workers, etc. A smaller business can access the suite online and start using it for a monthly subscription whereas mid or large companies can migrate from their legacy systems with the help of partners like ISHIR.
While the standard BPOS suite will cost the $10 per user per month, they could choose individual offerings at the rate of $5 per user per month for Exchange Online, $5.25 per user per month for SharePoint. The subscription fee for Office Communication Online is $2 per month per user and for Office Live Meeting is $4.50 per user per month. Now there is a cost-effective way for your entire organization to communicate and collaborate. You can adjust the mix of Standard and Deskless offerings to suit your needs and budgets.
As part of Microsoft Software + Services offering the customers will have the option to use flexible models of accessing enterprise wide software, both on premise and off the internet or a combination of both, at low prices. ISHIR already has over 100 businesses on board in the 30 day trial period. Clients already in trial claim that their businesses can experience increased operational efficiency and the savings could be between 10 and 50 per cent of the information technology costs depending their existing IT costs.
The mid to larger enterprises will now be able to leverage a combination of on premise and on the cloud based solution to bring about efficiencies and cost cutting benefits, not to mention be able to re-purpose their IT resources to more strategic initiatives within the IT organization.
To sign up for a 30 day risk free trial please visit http://www.ishir.com/ishir-microsoft-online-services-bpos-request-free-trial-form.htm
To learn about the services please visit http://www.ishir.com/microsoft-business-productivity-online-suite.htm
Microsoft BPOS Targets Google Apps, Agressively Cuts Exchange Online and SharePoint Online Price
Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009Microsoft has agressively cut its per user per month list price for Exchange Online and SharePoint services and cut by 33 percent the price of its Business Productivity Online Services suite of online productivity applications.
The pricing of Microsoft Exchange Online from US $10 per user per month to US $5 for Exchange Online is significant because it brings Microsoft Exchange Online much closer to the price Google charges for its Google Apps Premier Edition (GAPE) suite that is anchored by Gmail product.
In addition to the price change, Microsoft said allowable mailbox sizes would go from 5GB to 25GB, a move that ups Microsoft’s stake “bottomless” inbox war with other online email providers.
The pricing for Microsoft Sharepoint Online will now cost US $5.25 per from US $7.25 per user per month.
Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) was previously priced at US $15 per user and will now be priced at US $10 per user. This is a very agressive move from Microsoft to further build on the momentum it has gotten from the launch of its Microsoft Online Services offering which entirely driven and demanded by Microsoft clients.
To sign up for a 30 day risk free trial please visit http://www.ishir.com/ishir-microsoft-online-services-bpos-request-free-trial-form.htm
To learn about the services please visit http://www.ishir.com/microsoft-business-productivity-online-suite.htm
What is Cloud Computing in Plain English
Tuesday, August 25th, 2009Sign up for a RISK FREE trial of Microsoft Online Services (no credit card required/no committment necessary) – Trial includes 20 user trial account of SharePoint Online, Exchange Online, Live Office Meeting and Office Communications Online