• RightScale Offers Gaming Edition

     

    Cloud Brokers are service providers who sit between the user and the cloud to offer additional value add on top of the cloud. The research firm Gartner lists

    • adding services like security and management on top of the cloud
    • aggregating the services of customers over many different cloud platforms
    • arbitrage between the cloud services making the marketplace competitive

    as three opportunities for Cloud Brokers. One such company is Rightscale, a California based company founded in 2006 and having launched close to 100K servers on the cloud. They are one of the largest Cloud Brokers helping companies of all size and shapes take advantage of the cloud. Rightscale already supports AWS, GoGrid, Flexiscale, Eucalyptus and Rackspace. They also support VMWare’s vCloud and announced plans to support Windows Azure. In my opinion, they are one of the most agile companies out there in the space and you can know this by just listening to their CEO, Michael Crandell, talk. His enthusiasm for Cloud Computing is truly infectious.

    Yesterday, they announced Rightscale Social Gaming Edition to support companies building games on top of the social networks like Facebook, Myspace, etc.. Three of the biggest social gaming companies, Zynga, Crowdstar and Playfish, use Rightscale to manage their infrastructure on Amazon EC2. As a result, eight of the 12 most popular games on the Web today, with a total of over 77 million daily active users, run on RightScale, including FarmVille, Café World, Mafia Wars, FishVille, Happy Aquarium, Pet Society, PetVille, and Restaurant City.

    Sensing an opportunity, Rightscale tweaked their management platform to support social gaming requirements and have announced the release of Rightscale Social Gaming Edition. This edition provides pre-configured gaming deployments with “Facebook-ready” services and, also, comes bundled with consulting services to help companies deploy and manage on the cloud with ease.

    The basic configuration comes with a 6-server infrastructure including load-balancing, application, and database tiers. Once the application is either ported over or developed, it is extremely easy to autoscale and, even, rearchitect the setup for the exploding traffic. Another important addition to this edition is a dashboard that provides critical insight into the cost of each game through powerful real-time metrics. The cost of the basic version of Rightscale Gaming Edition is $3500 that comes bundled with 30,000 server management hours.

    This release once again emphasizes how Cloud Brokers can add real value to the users and how important they are to the success of cloud computing. Rightscale, with their agile approach to the cloud business, are positioning themselves for the long grind.

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  • CloudCamp Australia/New Zealand – Taking it to the Next level

     

    logo_cloudcampI’m pretty excited to tell that I’ve been appointed as Australia/New Zealand organizer for CloudCamp.

    For those of you who don’t know, CloudCamps are events that allow:

    early adapters of Cloud Computing technologies [to] exchange ideas. With the rapid change occurring in the industry, we need a place we can meet to share our experiences, challenges and solutions. At CloudCamp, you are encouraged you to share your thoughts in several open discussions, as we strive for the advancement of Cloud Computing. End users, IT professionals and vendors are all encouraged to participate.

    CloudCamp was founded by an impressive line up of cloud computing aficionados and I’m stoked to be part of the next stage of CloudCamp development. See the video below that Dell Cloud Computing Evangelist, Barton George, made of CloudCamp founder Dave Nielsen:

    I attended the Auckland CloudCamp earlier this year and helped organize the Christchurch event. 2010 however should see CloudCamp broaden its base.

    I’m planning on there being 10 or so CloudCamps in my patch in 2010, and am keen to hear from people on the ground in different cities who would like to arrange an event. It’s a pretty easy thing to do – all you need is a venue, some refreshments, the odd sponsor keen to chip in to make it happen and, most importantly, some people who are interested and excited about what Cloud Computing means.

    Anyone with some ideas on potential locations, a willingness to pitch in, a desire to attend or any other interest in CloudCamp Australasia 2010, just flick me a line. Oh and any vendors who want to have a chat about sponsoring an individual event or, perhaps, the regional initiative – also feel free to get in touch! Already we have a tentative CloudCamp Canberra for the end of January, anyone who wants to be involved in that, or has any other suggestions, just flick me a line ben AT diversity DOT net DOT nz

    CloudAve is exclusively sponsored by

  • More Gilding the Lily? On SaaS and the Green Revolution

     

    I’m a bit of a curmudgeon – recently I was critical over lily-gilding in the cloud computing space – in that instance it was a case of someone holding out a cloud deployment as something way more than it…

  • Playing the contrarian

     

    I was a little surprised when I saw this post by Rodrigo over on the Zoho blog. The title struck me as a little strange coming from someone who works for a business that is pushing the SaaS boundaries…

  • Salesforce want to be a force in knowledge management too…

     

    Salesforce started off with CRM – a product that seeks to manage a companies sales processes. Sales processes are just one form of knowledge management so it’s not hard to see the fit with Salesforce’s latest acquisition, InStranet. Instranet…

  • Instant on as a special feature – but why not always?

     

    Apparently Dell has previewed a new feature on their top end notebooks that allows users to carry out basic tasks without booting the main OS. The feature, names Dell Latitude ON, allows users pretty much instantaneous access to a…

  • What do we really need in an Cloudbook?

     

      Om posted about his requirements for an UMPC, netbook, handheld or whatever else you want to call it. Me I’ll always call it a cloudbook for in my definition this is a device that is poised to leverage…

  • A plea to Andy Lark….

     

    Andy Lark is VP marketing at Dell and a Kiwi boy to boot. He’s also a nice guy and tends to listen to what people say. So here goes… We’re needing a new desktop for one of our CSRs…

  • XP till 2012?

     

    Not sure if this is legit or not (care to comment Andy Lark?) but reports say that Dell will continue offering Win XP way past Microsoft’s cut off date. Seems user demand will have XP offered on high end…

  • Can Telcos sell software (or anything other than POTS for that matter)?

     

    An interesting post over on Marc’s blog got me thinking. In his post Marc contends that; Telco’s online reach is smaller than they think. Sure Telco’s have large customer bases but the only time I have gone to my…

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