Enomaly Inc., the leading vendor of Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) cloud computing platform software, announced today that it has been selected by US Government under the first Government-wide contract for cloud computing. Under the GSA’s blanket purchase agreement (BPA # GS00Q11AEA003), Enomaly ECP High Assurance Edition (HAE) software will help power Autonomic Resources ARC-P Public Cloud (IaaS) services platform for U.S. Government customers.
Enomaly was chosen to be included in Autonomic Resources ARC-P Public cloud stack that will provide US Government customers the benefits of on-demand computing with no compromise in security. ARC-P integrates Enomaly with the ARC-P Dell hardware stack that will provide for trusted virtual machine assurance via Trusted Execution Technology. Additionally, Enomaly integration with Secured by SPYRUS technology for multi-factor authentication and sets a new “bar” for cloud security. ARC-P’s multi-factor solution utilizes the already approved US Cybercom USB flash drives, following Federal standards to levels not yet available on any commercial platform.
“We’re delighted to have been selected for this opportunity,” said Dr. Richard Reiner, CEO of Enomaly. “As the only third-generation IaaS platform in the industry, Enomaly ECP is ideally suited to meet the needs of the most demanding Government users for mature, massively scalable, highly reliable cloud services. The unique capabilities of our High Assurance Edition, delivered from FISMA certified data centers with standard multi-factor authentication access, will ensure that Government users can benefit from access to trusted and secure solutions for all their cloud computing needs.”
“Enomaly helped ARC-P address many of the IaaS demands of the Federal government. In developing ARC-P our focus was to differentiate our offering based on secure and flexible on-demand cloud” said John Keese, President of Autonomic Resources.
About Enomaly Inc.
Enomaly, based in Toronto, Canada, is the leader in empowering telecom and IDC operators to deliver the benefits of Cloud Computing to their customers. Enomaly’s Elastic Computing Platform (Enomaly ECP) has often been described as the world's first true IaaS platform.
Today, Enomaly ECP 3 benefits from our 6+ years of cloud computing leadership to empower telecom and IDC operators in North America, the UK, Europe, and Asia to deliver some of the world’s most advanced cloud computing services. Enomaly ECP 3 is available in the core Service Provider Edition as well as the security-enhanced High Assurance Edition, which offers a unique set of hardware-based security mechanisms to enable the application of cloud computing for higher-assurance environments.
About Autonomic Resources
Autonomic Resources ( www.autonomicresources.com ) is a service integration firm and cloud provider serving the U.S. federal government. Core capabilities include the implementation of strategic technologies related to long term IT services as well as strategic services like data center automation, cloud computing, open source adoption, IA, NextGen networking, BI and software development services. Headquartered in Cary, N.C., Autonomic is a certified 8(a) SDB - Search GSA Schedule #GS-35F-0587R on http://www.gsaadvantage.gov .
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
The Cloud Computing Opportunity by the Numbers -[update]-
How big is the opportunity for cloud computing? A question asked at pretty well every IT conference these days. Whatever the number, it's a big one. Let's break down the opportunity by the numbers available today.
By 2011 Merrill Lynch says the cloud computing market will reach $160 billion.
The number of physical servers in the World today: 50 million.
By 2013, approximately 60 percent of server workloads will be virtualized
By 2013 10 percent of the total number of physical servers sold will be virtualized with an average of 10 VM's per physical server sold.
At 10 VM's per physical host that means about 80-100 million virtual machines are being created per year or 273,972 per day or 11,375 per hour.
50 percent of the 8 million servers sold every year end up in data centers, according to a BusinessWeek report
The data centers of the dot-com era consumed 1 or 2 megawatts. Today data center facilities require 20 megawatts are common, - 10 times as much as a decade ago.
Google currently controls 2% of all servers or about 1 million servers with it saying it plans to have upwards of 10 million servers ( 107 machines) in the next 10 years.
98% of the market is controlled by everyone else.
Hosting / Data center providers by top 5 regions around the world: 33,157
Top 5 break down
USA: 23,656
Canada: 2,740
United Kingdom: 2,660
Germany: 2,371
Netherlands: 1,730.
According to IDC, the market for private enterprise "Cloud servers will grow from an $8.4 billion opportunity in 2010, representing over 600,000 units, to a $12.6 billion market in 2014, with over 1.3 million units.
Market opporunity based purly on server count. $160 billion dollars divided by 50 million servers = $3,200 per server.
The amount of digital information increased by 73 percent in 2008 to an estimated 487 billion gigabytes, according to IDC.
World Population 2009: 6,767,805,208
Internet Users 2000: 360,985,492
Internet Users 2009: 1,802,330,457
Overall Internet User Growth: 399.3%
Fastest Growth Markets (Last 10 years) - Africa +1,809.8%, Middle East, +1,675%, Latin America +934.5%, Asia +568.8%
Slowest Growth Markets - North America +140.1%
Cloud value by world population: $23.64 per person
Cloud value by Global Internet population: $88.77 per person
-- Update --
Netcraft Finds 365,000 Web Sites on EC2
June 4th 2010
IBM says The Cloud cuts IT labor costs by up to 50%, improves capital utilization by 75%
July 1st 2010
IDC estimates that sales of public cloud services will grow at a 25 percent annual clip. The annual growth rate for typical IT projects, conversely, is 5 percent.
July 26 - 2010
SaaS Revenue to Grow Five Times Faster Than Traditional Packaged Software Through 2014, IDC Finds
October 2010
Internet Keeps Growing! Traffic up 62% in 2010 (13.2 Tbps of new Internet capacity)
-- Conclusions --
Based on these numbers, a few things are clear. First server virtualization has lowered the capital expenditure required for deploying applications, but the operational costs have gone up significantly more than the capital cost savings making the operational long tail the costliest part of running servers.
Although Google controls 2 percent of the global supply of servers, the remaining 98 percent is where the real opportunities are both in private enterprise data centers as well as in 40,000+ public hosting companies.
This year 80-100 million virtual machine will be created, the traditional management approaches to infrastructure will break. Infrastructure automation is becoming a central part of any model data center. Providing infrastructure as a service will not be a nice to have but will be a requirement. Hosters, Enterprises and small business will need to start running existing servers in a cloud context or face in-efficiency which may limit potential growth.
Surging demand for data and information creation will force a migration to both public and private clouds specially in emerging markets such as Africa and Latin America.
Lastly, there is a tonne of money to be made.
By 2011 Merrill Lynch says the cloud computing market will reach $160 billion.
The number of physical servers in the World today: 50 million.
By 2013, approximately 60 percent of server workloads will be virtualized
By 2013 10 percent of the total number of physical servers sold will be virtualized with an average of 10 VM's per physical server sold.
At 10 VM's per physical host that means about 80-100 million virtual machines are being created per year or 273,972 per day or 11,375 per hour.
50 percent of the 8 million servers sold every year end up in data centers, according to a BusinessWeek report
The data centers of the dot-com era consumed 1 or 2 megawatts. Today data center facilities require 20 megawatts are common, - 10 times as much as a decade ago.
Google currently controls 2% of all servers or about 1 million servers with it saying it plans to have upwards of 10 million servers ( 107 machines) in the next 10 years.
98% of the market is controlled by everyone else.
Hosting / Data center providers by top 5 regions around the world: 33,157
Top 5 break down
USA: 23,656
Canada: 2,740
United Kingdom: 2,660
Germany: 2,371
Netherlands: 1,730.
According to IDC, the market for private enterprise "Cloud servers will grow from an $8.4 billion opportunity in 2010, representing over 600,000 units, to a $12.6 billion market in 2014, with over 1.3 million units.
Market opporunity based purly on server count. $160 billion dollars divided by 50 million servers = $3,200 per server.
The amount of digital information increased by 73 percent in 2008 to an estimated 487 billion gigabytes, according to IDC.
World Population 2009: 6,767,805,208
Internet Users 2000: 360,985,492
Internet Users 2009: 1,802,330,457
Overall Internet User Growth: 399.3%
Fastest Growth Markets (Last 10 years) - Africa +1,809.8%, Middle East, +1,675%, Latin America +934.5%, Asia +568.8%
Slowest Growth Markets - North America +140.1%
Cloud value by world population: $23.64 per person
Cloud value by Global Internet population: $88.77 per person
-- Update --
Netcraft Finds 365,000 Web Sites on EC2
June 4th 2010
IBM says The Cloud cuts IT labor costs by up to 50%, improves capital utilization by 75%
July 1st 2010
IDC estimates that sales of public cloud services will grow at a 25 percent annual clip. The annual growth rate for typical IT projects, conversely, is 5 percent.
July 26 - 2010
SaaS Revenue to Grow Five Times Faster Than Traditional Packaged Software Through 2014, IDC Finds
- By 2012, IDC expects that less than 15% of net-new software firms coming to market will ship a packaged product (on CD). By 2014, about 34% of all new business software purchases will be consumed via SaaS, and SaaS delivery will constitute about 14.5% of worldwide software spending across all primary markets.
- By 2012, nearly 85% of net-new software firms coming to market will be built around SaaS service composition and delivery; by 2014, about 65% of new products from established ISVs will be delivered as SaaS services.
- SaaS-derived revenue will account for nearly 26% of net new growth in the software market in 2014.
- Traditional packaged software and perpetual license revenue are in decline and IDC predicts that a software industry shift toward subscription models will result in a nearly $7 billion decline in worldwide license revenue in 2010. As a result, a permanent change in software licensing regime will occur.
- SaaS segment mix will shift toward infrastructure and application development and deployment/PaaS, and away from U.S. dominance. IDC expects that by 2014, applications will account for just over half of market revenue. This shift will happen in part as a result of increasing IT cloud spending by enterprise IT groups and commercial cloud services providers (cloud SPs) relative to end-user spending
October 2010
Internet Keeps Growing! Traffic up 62% in 2010 (13.2 Tbps of new Internet capacity)
-- Conclusions --
Based on these numbers, a few things are clear. First server virtualization has lowered the capital expenditure required for deploying applications, but the operational costs have gone up significantly more than the capital cost savings making the operational long tail the costliest part of running servers.
Although Google controls 2 percent of the global supply of servers, the remaining 98 percent is where the real opportunities are both in private enterprise data centers as well as in 40,000+ public hosting companies.
This year 80-100 million virtual machine will be created, the traditional management approaches to infrastructure will break. Infrastructure automation is becoming a central part of any model data center. Providing infrastructure as a service will not be a nice to have but will be a requirement. Hosters, Enterprises and small business will need to start running existing servers in a cloud context or face in-efficiency which may limit potential growth.
Surging demand for data and information creation will force a migration to both public and private clouds specially in emerging markets such as Africa and Latin America.
Lastly, there is a tonne of money to be made.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)