Tag Archive for 2013

Cloud Exit Plan

Cloud Exit PlanAnother cloud services provider seems to have closed up shop. NetworkWorld reports that MegaCloud.com, a consumer cloud storage provider has been inaccessible. Users started complaining on social media that they have not had access to their data since at least October 30th. (rb- there is likely lots of enterprise data as well. FierceMobileIT reports that 72 percent of workers are using free file-sharing services without authorization.)

Cloud computingMegaCloud had offered customers up to 8GB of free cloud storage, with another 8GB of free backup storage. That 16GB of free cloud storage was one of the largest giveaways of cloud storage from a consumer cloud provider. MegaCloud offered a desktop client, as well as mobile apps for Apple (AAPL) iOS, Google (GOOG) Android, and Microsoft (MSFT) Windows phones.

At the end of September, San José, CA-based Nirvanix cloud provider gave their mostly business customers 2-weeks notice to get their files back before they went dark, taking all the data with them. There are reports that Nirvanix hosted around 40 petabytes of data. Getting their data out in time must have challenged Nirvanix customers.

Moving data from cloud to cloudCharles Babcock at InformationWeek explained in an intriguing article that data movements in the cloud are dependent on the speed with which the service provider can write data to an external source and the amount of bandwidth made available to do so. He cited tests by Nirvanix competitor, Nasuni, which found that moving 12 TB of data from one Amazon (AMZN) S3 bucket to another took four hours. Moving the same amount from Amazon S3 to Microsoft Azure took 40 hours, and from S3 to Rackspace (RAX), just under one week. Moving data from Rackspace into Amazon took only five hours.

In a Data Center Knowledge article, Gartner (IT) analyst Kyle Hilgendorf reinforces my point that cloud meltdowns should prompt cloud users to get serious about contingency planning. Gartner’s Hilgendorf wrote in a blog post:

Exit plan“Cloud exits are not nearly as sexy as cloud deployments – they are an afterthought …  It’s analogous to disaster recovery and other mundane IT risk mitigation responsibilities. These functions rarely receive the attention they deserve in IT, except for immediately following major events like Hurricane Sandy or 9/11.”

“If you are a customer of any other cloud service (that is basically all of us) – take some time and build a cloud exit strategy/plan for every service you depend upon,” he added. “Cloud providers will continue to go out of business. It may not be a frequent occurrence, but it will happen. ”

Nicos Vekiarides, co-founder and CEO of Natick, MA-based cloud storage provider TwinStrata told NetWorkWorld that in the long-term, the economic draw of the cloud should overcome the fear and hesitancy of many businesses considering cloud storage solutions He predicts that the shut-downs will drive businesses toward larger, better-known cloud storage brands instead of to smaller, newer providers. He says:

Afraid of cloudsThe storage needs of businesses haven’t gone away. Organizations’ data storage requirements still are growing at 40 percent to 60 percent a year … What will change is how CIOs shop for and deploy cloud services, in that everyone still wants choice, but they’ll be much more wary. There’s always the need for choice among a number of vendors, and CIOs will want the best of breed. That might mean they will gravitate toward more established vendors.”

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These events may put a few firms off the cloud, but not all. These events should point out the need for due diligence when planning what to do with their data.

Barb Darrow at GigaOM said it most Data centerpoetically, “cloud storage offerings have multiplied like rabbits over the past year, and the notion that you could entrust business data to a company that appears to be well-funded only to see it shutting its doors could be more paranoia-inducing than the NSA spooks.”

IMHO, continuity plans need to account for data in the cloud. Cloud providers can offer better availability and redundancy, but still pose risks. But do they guarantee your data?  Continuity plans need to protect complete business services, including parts that may rely on a cloud piece.  Some of the questions I would ask:

  • Does it make sense to have all data in the cloud?
  • Is the firm’s data categorized so that when another cloud provider folds, IT can spend any time they have moving data to another provider? Mr. Babcock demonstrated that move would not be instantaneous.
  • Can the data even be brought back in-house? Did you throw out your old SAN when the data was moved to the cloud?
  • What format is the data in? You did check your contract right?
  • Will a firm going under even worry about contractual obligations?
  • Can IT and legal get together to make a deal with another cloud provider fast enough?

Does your Business Continuity Plan cover cloud melt-downs?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

 

How Tough is an iPhone 5s?

How Tough is an iPhone 5s?According to some reports, the Apple (AAPL) iPhone 5s is the greatest iPhone ever. But how tough is it? Apparently, the iPhone 5s does pretty well when dropped on the sidewalk and does not object to a quick dip into the water.

But can the iPhone 5s defeat a .50-Millimeter rifle?

RatedRR answers the question. Click below to see the results.

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I could go on a sociological rant about the modern-Americas need to put heroes (or their representation) on a pedestal only to gleefully knock them down later.

But – today seemed to be the day for some random destruction.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Veterans Day

Thank a Vet!

Veterans Day 2013

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Microsoft Develops Shortlist for New CEO

Microsoft Develops Shortlist for New CEOThe Grand Pooh-Bahs in Redmond have developed a shortlist of candidates to replace outgoing CEO Steve Ballmer. Reuters says the list includes internal candidates. Reported on the list is former Skype CEO Tony Bates, who is now in charge of business development at Microsoft (MSFT). Another internal candidate is Satya Nadella, the company’s cloud, and enterprise chief.

Sources told Reuters that Ford Motor Company (F) CEO Alan Mulally and former Nokia (NOK) CEO Stephen Elop are also contenders. While I am sure they are all worthy successors to Steve. I wonder if Mr. Mulally has his own rant ready for his interview Taurus’s … Taurus’s … Taurus’s (rb- do these jobs really have interviews?)

 

Here’s a remix from DevelopersDevelopers.com (Oldie but goodie)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

802.11ac Wi-Fi – Don’t Bother Yet

802.11ac Wi-Fi - Don't Bother YetThe new iPads are here! The new iPads are here! There’s no 802.11ac here! But that’s expected. Experienced Apple watchers know that Apple likes to let new radio technologies mature before they integrate them into their new idevices. So that means most enterprises can slow their plans to upgrade their Wi-Fi to the new standard according to Kevin Fitchard at GigaOM.

The new iPads are hereThe latest Apple (AAPL) tablet doesn’t sport the new soon-to-be-completed IEEE 802.11ac standard, even though Apple’s latest generation routers, PCs, and laptops all support it. GigaOM reports Apple is providing is a speed boost to the now thoroughly established 802.11n networking standard in the form of multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) smart antenna technology. Like many Wi-Fi routers on the market, the iPad Air has dual antennas, allowing it to wend two parallel paths over the unlicensed airwaves. The MIMO implementation will double the speeds at which the iPad can access Wi-Fi networks, according to Apple.

The Wi-Fi Alliance only began certifying commercial 802.11ac devices in June, and even those devices only incorporate partial versions of the full 802.11ac spec. The IEEE isn’t expected to fully complete the standard until 2014. Very few smartphones and tablets have ac embedded as of yet, though the technology is making its way into consumer and enterprise routers and PCs, including Apple’s newest MacBooks and iMacs.

iPad AirBut waiting another year for 802.11ac-enabled iPhones and iPads also means we’ll probably have to wait another year before we see wide-scale adoption of the standard in public hotspots and access points. Unlike in the home, most outdoor and public Wi-Fi connections are made over mobile devices, not PCs.

In an interview with GigaOM, Boingo VP of corporate communications Christian Gunning said it hasn’t turned up 802.11ac in any of its hundreds of thousands of owned and managed hotspots yet, simply because it’s seeing very few devices with ac radios trying to access its network.

higher-powered 802.3at Power over EthernetFierceCIO‘s Paul Mah offers more reasons to delay the roll-out of 802.11ac. The advanced 802.11ac radio is more power-hungry than earlier iterations of Wi-Fi. So it will more likely need the use of the higher-powered 802.3at Power over Ethernet (PoE) to run 802.11ac with all its bells and whistles. It is possible that businesses still on 802.3af PoE (rb- Majority) may well have to incur extra infrastructure costs to deploy 802.11ac today. Mr. Mah contends that it is yet to be seen if improved 802.11ac chipsets will allow firms to stick with legacy PoE. (rb- For a refresher on PoE, check out these posts 802.3af and 802.3at)

Another consideration according to FierceCIO is clients. The handful of business-grade 802.11ac wireless APs on the market today typically support three spatial streams, which allows for a (theoretical) maximum data rate of 1.3Gbps in the 5GHz band. Though this is a significant improvement over 450 Mbps 802.11n, the dearth of 802.11ac client devices renders this a moot point. Some will argue that Apple did incorporate 802.11ac into the new MacBook Air laptops.  However, they did not include it in the new iPads, or the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C smartphones. And with no smartphones or tablets equipped with 802.11ac capabilities today, this does make deploying it a rather pointless strategy for BYOD.

802.11ac "second wave"Finally, Mr. Mah points out that while 1.3Gbps is a good speed to have, we should keep in mind that 802.11ac does have a theoretical maximum speed of 7 Gbps. A “second wave” of 802.11ac that implements four or more data streams for much faster speeds should be arriving in the second half of 2014. He says current signs are that this second wave of 802.11ac devices might need new processor chips–which means you will have to buy new 802.11ac hardware to benefit.

GigaOM’s Fitchard stresses Apple’s influence when it comes to popularizing new technology, he says the iPhone and the iPad’s reach shouldn’t be underestimated. As an example, new Passpoint-certified phones have been out for more than a year, but it wasn’t until Apple started offering support for Passpoint’s automatic login technology in iOS7 that the wireless industry took notice. It was only after Apple made iOS7 publicly available, that Boingo started Passpoint trials.

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I’m not saying 802.11ac is a bad thing, but enterprises need to ignore the hype cycle and make decisions that are best for them and not the multi-billion dollar networking industry. IMHO 802.11ac is still immature, there are few devices out there that can fully take advantage, the full feature set is not fully implemented in silicon and you finished the upgrade to 802.11n yet?

What to do?

What does your wired network look like? Are you still connecting your AP’s at 100 Mbps? That is a bottleneck with 802.11n.

Do you have enough juice? What is your PoE status? Do you have enough PoE+ ports? Are they being used for just an access port – wasting the extra costs of a PoE port?

Both switches cost money, is there a budget available for these items or is IT going to spend an operational budget to address a structural issue?

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.