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Showing posts with label Cloud Drive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cloud Drive. Show all posts

News Update On Google Glass : How Google Glass v2 Could Change The Enterprise

This week a new device passed through the FCC—codenamed GG1—and many have speculated that it’s the next generation of the Google GOOGL +0.68% Glass hardware. While the Explorer Edition was anything but a runaway success, what some are calling the “Enterprise Edition” could very well be what Glass needs to take it mainstream into the office.

When Microsoft MSFT -0.18% launched their Surface Tables years ago I could see a lot more enterprise use from the device than simply moving photos around during the early days of the demos. Since then Surface adoption was a commercial disaster and are consigned to be little more than a gimmick than for day to day business use. With Hololens now in the frame, Microsoft are back in a big way, touting virtual and augmented reality as the next big thing in the office, and at home.

I’ve been writing about marrying up touch and virtual enabled devices with an enterprise productivity purpose for years and personally I still feel that losing the mouse and keyboard is somewhat inevitable, hands are infinitely more adept at manipulating an environment and objects and having a touchscreen/ gesture based version of enterprise tools would be a natural transition.

At the time in 2010 I also got in touch with Schematic (www.schematic.com), the firm behind the technology as seen in Minority Report because creating such a device for enterprises in a workshop environment would be an exciting prospect. If anything it would be a boon to lose the frankly archaic brown paper model. I even pointed towards John Underkoffler at TED demonstrating the very same thing, and in which towards the end he lists the kinds of end user industries he’d see this kind of technology implemented in (I urge you to watch the demo all the way through and try to imagine integrating this in an enterprise context. Great stuff. http://bit.ly/9lMx2G)

Anyway, I digress, back to Google Glass v2. Just how can Google Glass and Augmented Reality add value in the enterprise. If we look to an article which discusses how Glass can change advertising you can begin to see where this can lead.

    ….what if the ads you saw were different than the person next to you? What if, like the ads you see online, they are based on a composite sketch of you created by all the searches you’ve done and the websites you’ve visited? In other words, what if you looked up and instead of seeing an ad for something you would never buy — like women’s shoes — you saw an ad reminding you of that Amazon search you did a few days ago ?
So, what if you’re sitting in a call-center and instead of staring at a productivity pie-chart on a screen you pop your supervisory head above the parapet and with your Enterprise Edition Glasses can see each individuals performance figures ? By calling up the person in question using the interface you can see their stats in a heads-up (HUD) display. Plus with not being tied to your desk you can floor-walk at the same time or do this anywhere, anytime, without the need to carry a tablet or phone interface with you.

In an interview I took with Dr Ross Brown of QUT he stated that “Augmented reality system tools for Business Process Management would be nice as well.  Imagine six sigma data overlaid on the artifacts used in a process model…all on a heads up display as you walk around the company – a “BPM Tricorder”.

That was in 2011. Before Google Glass v1.

And similar to the article about advertising, every co-worker will have a different view based on their own work and position in the organisation, again able to call this up at any time, any where. Go deeper and you could have enterprise social integration, the obvious trick is to offer filters for the noise from the relevant and actionable information to present in front of the user.

It’s not just implications for workflow scenarios and businesses in customer service industries, healthcare is another example of where wearable technology like this could be a massive boost in real-time and mobile patient informatics. Or in education, no more ‘smart boards’ if the kids are wearing augmented reality sets and receiving tailored tutoring depending on their own individual needs. Indeed, BMW were experimenting with augmented reality in the workshop several years ago.

Google Glass v2 could very well be the catalyst for true mobilility and personalisation in many industry sectors.

Whether enterprise software vendors will make a serious investment in Glass v2 will remain to be seen but Glass “Enterprise Edition” will not be the only AR device on the market to develop for when it’s eventually released.

It’s interesting times as consumer devices lead the revolution in the workplace we’ve all been waiting for.

Update News On Data Cloud Storage : Where Does Your Cloud Data Reside?

An overview of data location regulations and which providers support user designation of data storage sites.

 2015 is going to be a major year for cloud computing. As the growth in cloud usage continues, governments are taking more and more interest in security of personal data.

Herein lies a problem. It has become almost impossible to stop data from crossing over the lines on maps that separate one political entity from another. However, politicians want to be seen as exerting their will over important issues, and data sovereignty has become one such issue.
The EU's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is due to roll out across member countries during 2015. The GDPR defines what is deemed to be personal data and sets fines for such data being compromised by any company with operations in the EU. The fines could reach up to 100 million Euros or 5% of worldwide revenues for the offending company. All data breaches will need to be fully documented and disclosed to the EU regulator, and a breach may include the transfer of such data outside of the EU.

In the US, data breach disclosure requirements are already in place. However, via the Patriot Act, FISA (and FISAAA) and the use of disclosure warrants, the US is attempting to extend its reach beyond its shores into other territories. Such actions would obviously break the EU's GDPR.

Although Asia operates essentially as a collection of separate countries, 2014 showed a marked move towards a more European style of data security. As the growing economies of China, South Korea, Malaysia and others drive existing economies of Singapore, Japan, and Australia to change how they operate, each country is adopting data protection laws that they believe will enable them to compete effectively on the global stage.

So, where does this leave data sovereignty? It still looks like the overriding concern should be to partner with a cloud provider that has demonstrable capabilities around data security. Once that decision has been made, the need to maintain data in a specific geographic location can follow on. It's important to find a provider that understands technologies like data caching and content delivery networks (CDNs), which may violate data sovereignty rules.

Overall, data protection laws are still some way behind the actuality of data processing needs. Expect more change, and choose a provider that is prepared to deal with such change.

Web News : New ​Linux Foundation's Guide To The Open-Source Cloud

Description :A little confused about what's what with Cloud Foundry, OpenStack and Mesos? Let the Linux Foundation help you with its new guide to open-source cloud technologies.

I make my living from riding technology's bleeding edge. In particular I keep an eye on what's what with Linux and open-source software, but even I have trouble keeping track of what's going on with the open-source cloud technologies. Which is why I'm happy to welcome The Linux Foundation's 2015 report: Guide to the Open Cloud: Open Cloud Projects Profiled, which will be released on January 20th.

According to the Foundation, "The purpose of this guide is to serve as a starting point for users considering which projects to use in building and deploying their own open clouds. Taking a deeper look into cloud infrastructure, the paper includes storage, provisioning and platform projects. New categories outline emerging cloud operating systems, Software-defined Networking (SDN), and Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) technologies"

In a statement, Amanda McPherson, The Linux Foundation's CMO said, "Our new 'Guide To the Open Cloud" is a helpful primer for any organization beginning a migration to the cloud or moving toward web-scale IT. Open source and collaboration are clearly advancing the cloud faster than ever before. Just consider the many OpenStack distributions and ecosystem emerging around Linux containers that didn't even exist a year ago. Yet, as the open-source cloud evolves so quickly, it can sometimes be difficult for enterprises to identify the technologies that best fit their needs."

This is a follow-up to the Foundation's October 2013 cloud guide. Much has changed since then. For example, Docker, the most popular open-source container technology, was barely known then.

This guide, according to its introduction, "is to serve as a starting point for users considering which projects to use in building and deploying their own open clouds." It is not a comprehensive overview of all cloud-related, open-source software. Instead, it's a curated listing of those open cloud projects that the Foundation believes "will continue to drive innovation in enterprise IT in the coming year."

The projects that made the cut have superior relevance to the open cloud, maturity and visibility. In particular, open-source programs that have a large number of contributors, code commits, and are already starting to be used in the enterprise were picked for this listing.

In short, if you're serious about using an open-source cloud, these are the programs that you should seriously consider using.


Windows 8 Cloud-Based Gaming Coming Via Agawi




We have seen cloud-based game playing systems take its share of mounds lately, thanks mostly to the recent reorientating of the OnLive assistance. This week, another organization called Agawi declared plans to provide loading PC games via a collaboration with Ms.

The organization's news launch declares that they will be using Windows Ms windows Pink cloud-based solutions to provide loading PC games to Ms windows 8 devices. The organization will provide activity designers and marketers a way to flow games to a Ms windows 8 "Modern" app. The kind of games that will support the assistance will range from small informal headings to more serious PC games.

TechCrunch mentioned with Agawi's CEO Chris Relan who said they plan to avoid some of the issues that OnLive experienced. For one thing, using Ms windows Pink as their hosting server coordinator means that they won't have to purchase and set up their own loading activity solutions, as OnLive did. Another difference is that Agawi won't straight provide loading PC games to Ms windows 8 users. Instead, they will simply provide their technology for other designers and marketers to use.

Agawi also seems to know the current restrictions of loading PC games. Relan says that they won't provide games that have high system specifications, such as the more complicated first person photographers, on their assistance.

Amazon Cloud Drive Now Available In The UK

Amazon has lastly brought access to its Reasoning Generate for UK customers.

The cloud storage space locker was launched in the US over a season ago but, as usual with Amazon, it has taken a while to ship it across the Atlantic.

Users will get 5GB of no cost storage space, while a registration to 20GB of data is £6 a season. Storage guzzlers can get 1TB a season for £320.

The company has also rolled-out the Reasoning Generate app for Mac and PC, which'll allow customers to control data files from their desktop. Media data files will be available online using the Reasoning Player.

Plenty of options :

The solution arrives on UK ground to deal with the likes of Apple's iCloud, Google Generate, Dropbox and Windows SkyDrive. With no cost storage space available through all platforms, there's a lot of alternatives available.

The moment of the release may be linked to the secret Amazon event declared for Sept 9. Speculation are are around every corner that Amazon will release a follow up to the Kindle Fire.

Could this mean Amazon will lastly release a version of its tablet on UK soil?

 
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