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Strong industry backing for Cloud Essentials training

Here are two brief videos shot at the recent CloudExpo. They demonstrate the strong industry backing for the Cloud Essentials training that ITpreneurs and I developed. These videos feature, amongst others, Cazzy Jordan and Allen Ureta, who were in my first Train the Trainer program in Baltimore last year. First video Here is the second video.

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CCSK training in Kuala Lumpur – trip report

Last week I delivered a two-day CCSK (certificate of cloud security knowledge) in Kuala Lumpur. The typical structure of this training, as suggested by the Cloud Security Alliance, calls for a day of lecture followed by a day of practical exercises.  However, I mixed lecture with case study and exercise, because I have experienced that […]

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How good is Google Sites?

How good is ‘Google Sites’ as a web hosting platform? For my contribution to the Computer Measurement Group’s (CMG) yearly conference (CMG Las Vegas 2012) I am reviewing a number of webhosting options. One of the basic options is ‘Google Sites’, which is a content management system (CMS) with hosting and a content distribution network, […]

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Which is faster: Cloudfront or S3?

Amazon Web Services’ S3 can be a pretty good and cheap approach to webhosting, serving files at a cost of  cents per 1000 hits. How much of an improvement would it be to serve these files out of Amazon’s Cloudfront, the content delivery service that caches content around the world? Here are the results of […]

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Bad neighbors in the cloud

What do you do when somebody comes to live next door and spoils the whole neighborhood? They leave, you leave or you learn to live with it?
What does that have to do with cloud computing? I will give you an example.

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Identity management with multiple cloud providers

With multiple cloud providers, possibly including private clouds and internal IT, how do you make this manageable for the user? How can you create a single user name that can be used across all these services? Ideally, the user needs to login only once. This is often called ‘Single sign on’ or SSO. The big […]

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Cloud security, the first questions

When I talk or write about cloud computing, the first questions that come to the minds of people are: How do I know my data is stored in a safe way? Think: crashes, outages, viruses, providers going bankrupt etc. How do I know other people don’t touch my data? Think: hackers, criminals, our government, another […]

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A brief case study in public and private clouds

One of my course participants came back to me after I wrote about “public and private cloud computing“. His company runs a service where his customers access their digitized paper files. The service runs on servers that they deploy from a hosting provider. Because of this, they can promise their customers that their data will […]

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The blurring line between public and private cloud

Right after the internet became popular, organizations had their reasons to want private versions of it. Remember the intranet? Looks like the internet, but totally controlled by the company. It is a bit like kindergarten: you can play, but you can’t get out over the fence. The same thing happens with cloud computing. Companies want […]

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Cloud Computing in Kuala Lumpur

Yep, I have been travelling like crazy recently. See my tweets at http://www.twitter.com/petersgriddle The newest destination was Kuala Lumpur, and it looks like I will be getting back real soon, as I have found some great partners in India and Malaysia. We are easily filling training sessions for cloud as well as virtualization (like private cloud). […]

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