Cloud Hosting Leaders – Strengths and Weaknesses

Cloud computing has been one of the biggest buzzwords in virtually every application of technology during 2011. No longer just IT jargon, cloud computing has evolved to become a staple in virtually every vertical of business. From test development sandboxes, web hosting, and fully managed:  email, contact management, invoicing, document collaboration, and more; cloud technology is has become a staple in every aspect of business.

When it comes to picking a cloud host for your company there is one key point to keep in mind before picking a provider. That point being cloud hosting differs from traditional hosting heavily due to maturity. Cloud hosting is still a rapidly developing field and therefore is an environment filled with vendor lock-in due to proprietary environments. While this is not a reason to avoid cloud technologies overall, it illustrates the importance of realizing the strengths and weaknesses of a host before placing your entire budget into one provider. Depending on your needs, a combination of vendors might prove best.

To help simplify picking a cloud vendor, below is a short piece of providing an overview of five cloud computing leaders outlining their key aspects and strengths along with weaknesses. ]

Amazon.com

Amazon.com has always been known for their innovations in ecommerce but recently Amazon’s Elastic Computing Cloud (EC2) has allowed them to deeply penetrate the high-performance computing vertical. Despite their notable data center fiascos during 2011, Amazon holds the position as the most innovative company in cloud computing.

Strengths:

  • Has the largest pool of computing capacity
  • Cost effective offerings
  • Strong partner ecosystem
  • Flexible API which is supported by many 3rd parties

Weaknesses:

  • No managed plans means that clients must have their own expertise on hand to handle the servers

Conclusion:

  • Overall, Amazon.com is ideal for projects with highly variable scaling and self-managed cloud hosting for testing and development

Softlayer

Softlayer is another industry leader which focuses on highly standardized infrastructure which can be provisioned very rapidly to meet the needs of even the most complex project. Unlike many other providers which commonly share hardware between cloud clients, Softlayer provides clients with dedicated hardware for their projects.

Strengths:

  • Standardized infrastructure which can be provisioned very rapidly
  • Emphasis on cloud flexibility and agility
  • Provide dedicated cloud hardware to clients

Weaknesses:

  • Rigid support policies mean customers are limited to standard configurations if they need managed hosting

Rackspace

For clients needing excellent customer service and a diverse set of solutions to meet their project needs, Rackspace is the vendor most likely to be a solid fit. Long known for their excellent traditional hosting services, Rackspace has been making the transition to the cloud without missing a beat in overall quality.

Strengths:

  • Industry leading customer service and support
  • Excellent managed plans
  • Below market pricing for complex managed packages
  • Helped greatly with unifying the cloud by open sourcing their cloud software stack (Open Stack)
  • Ability to use their software to roll a cloud system on your own hardware, and still receive expert support

Weaknesses:

  • Managed cloud packages are below enterprise level
  • As Open Stack has recently been released it does not yet have as much of a proven track record as other systems

Media Temple

A boutique web hosting company which specifically focuses much of its advertising on websites for content creators and creative professionals Media Temple provides an excellent array of affordable performance cloud solutions that won’t break the bank.

Strengths:

  • By focusing heavily on creative professionals and companies, Media Temple’s packages are commonly a good fit for A/B website testing where the costs of a full performance solution are not justified
  • A great provider for testing micro sites and landing pages and other short term projects due to the plans rarely requiring contracts
  • Media Temple’s pricing is much lower than the packages offered by the other industry leaders making them an ideal fit for companies just breaking into cloud hosting, or want a reputable budget friendly host

Weaknesses:

  • As Media Temple uses Parallels for virtualization, it is not an ideal platform for enterprise projects
  • Media Temple’s hosting is analogous to “a shared host on steroids” meaning that while you do have cloud hosting, support and performance are significantly lacking when compared to the industry leaders

SunGard

SunGard is best known as being one of the largest enterprise IT solutions providers in the industry. In particular SunGard focuses only on enterprise systems. This focus has made them a leader in the space for clients who have very complex custom systems.

Strengths:

  • By focusing heavily on enterprises, SunGard is able to handle complex projects much more easily than most other vendors which have a more general focus
  • By having a conservative approach to their infrastructure SunGard is able to handle long term and legacy projects easily
  • Pricing for their services is at market averages

Weaknesses:

  • Customer service at SunGard is below market average levels
  • By having a conservative approach to their infrastructure, SunGard does not offer as many features as other vendors
  • Additionally the conservative hardware approach limits agility which can be crucial for projects operating under a rapid development cycle

We are keep updating cloud computing technologies

Share on TwitterSubmit to StumbleUpon

First Class Security Without a Platinum Price Tag

When it comes to managing websites, most companies have more than enough on their plate trying to handle their website. Between customer service, security, training, optimization, and more, most companies already overloaded with tasks related to the administration of their websites.

Features Of CloudFlare

Fortunately, a service called CloudFlare provides reasonably priced packages to help website owners secure and optimize their websites. A few of the key features include:  CDN/Caching capabilities, code & script optimization, threat recognition via community intelligence (which helps protect against zero day exploits), streamlined and easy to understand analytics, and an easy to use app system to add additional functionality as needed.

CloudFlare comes in free and professional editions, with an enterprise edition currently in development. For this article, I did my testing using the free edition of CloudFlare, and despite not having the professional capabilities, the service performed very well and compared to many other vendors which nickel and dime clients, I did not feel constrained while using the free plan. Overall the service has an excellent interface which is powerful enough for an IT professional like myself, but it also has helpful tooltips next to virtually every setting so less technical users can have guidance while using the software.

In addition, CloudFlare receives extra praise from me for not plastering the user with ads and banners to upgrade to the professional edition. Unlike the Zynga model of freemium which involves constantly bombarding the user with ads for paid upgrades (I only mention Zynga here as they are known for their in-game ads. I do not mean to compare the services of each), in CloudFlare professional features simply have a “pro” icon next to them, with a upgrade page shown if the user clicks for more information.

Going back to my review, overall, CloudFlare passed my tests with flying colors despite my initial hesitance to use the service on my primary sites owing to my skepticism. The initial configuration simply involved updating my nameservers to the CloudFlare servers. From there, the service automatically recognized my domain settings and asked for confirmation. After that, I simply continued on with my work and checked the control panel 24 hours to see how the service worked.

While there are many features to mention, this review only covers the key features which are applicable to most users.

CloudFlare Analytics

Overall the analytics platform is as easy to use as Google Analytics. Listing key statistics such as threats, bandwidth saved, page requests, search engine crawl stats, and more all on one page, and it allows you to see which areas require the most attention when you first review the data. In addition, CloudFlare classifies the types of threats which were blocked, for example:  spammers, brute force attacks, injections, harvesters, and more all have their own categories so the user can easily differentiate between the severities of the threats.

CloudFlare Security

Moving on to the security capabilities,  CloudFlare acts as a firewall between general traffic and your server via a crowd sourced threat database to help detect traditional threats and zero-day exploits which have not been addressed by traditional security patches. The service also provides website owners an option to inform visitors that their computers are infected, by displaying an error page with a CAPTCHA to access the website as usual and also general information about the situation. In my initial testing on my sites, CloudFlare effectively replaced my usual spam filters with 99.9% accuracy and it also blocked a few suspicious crawlers from indexing parts of my site.

In addition to the added security, CloudFlare also improves site performance through caching and script/code optimization. Essentially “the poor man’s Akami,” CloudFlare markets itself as an alternative to traditional CDNs by caching your publicly available websites across their 13 data centers serving your content from the data center closest to your visitors. In addition, when using the service, your HTML and scripts are compressed using aggressive GZIP compression to improve load times.

As far as scalability goes, while I was skeptical of a free or $20/month service handling high amounts of traffic, a recent case study from CloudFlare discusses how website 2011BlackFridayAds successfully used CloudFlare since September 2011 through the November Black Friday rush by cutting the number of server requests by half a billion, and  saving about 29.3TB of bandwidth. While the study is worth a read, one key point to note is that as CloudFlare currently handles five times the amounts of traffic as Amazon.com, you can be fairly sure that scalability is likely not an issue with CloudFlare.

 

We at DCT would love to hear from you. Do let us know what you think.

Share on TwitterSubmit to StumbleUpon

List of Cloud Computing Backup Services for Successful Business

Cloud computing backup or cloud online storage comes with different services provider to suit various group of users with their different needs and requirements. Users select online backup services based on different options such as transfer speeds, pricing, size of storage provided, size of Megabytes or Gigabytes for number of files storing.

Business users would select based on data security and compliance, data resiliency (ability to come to original state after being bent, configured or other) and availability of remote located data.

A large corporation would select a backup service based on server performance and effective transfer of entire server and data protection with controls and lock-on to online spaces.

  • Group of businesses and large corporations would want entire server of hundreds of computers to be backed up.
  • Individual user would want to store and save their irreplaceable photographs, videos; years of working documents, projects; and download applications like blogs, chat and emails.
  • Mobile users would to keep online storage of musics, albums, videos; use gaming, eBooks application online within mobile computing.

List of Cloud Computing Backup Product with Different Plans:

  1. BackupMyInfo

    (www.backupmyinfo.com) – their primary concern is protecting the business and client’s important corporate data. A premium managed service provider that focuses on online data backup, recovery and nightly backup too. It has features to backup various databases, several servers and email message backup. Offers free trial at this moment without any obligations.

  2. Carbonite 4.0

    (www.carbonite.com) – is a mature online backup service. Though it seems to lack some desirable features for requirement such as not backing up external or network drives, it still offers unlimited backup storage. Back up open files and IPhone applications. Pricing per pc: $59/year.

  3. CrashPlan 3.0

    (www.crashplan.com) – This version offers multiple backup sets such as yours and friends’ computers backup; unlimited storage; ability to backup attached devices and compatible with multiple platforms of Macs, Linux and Windows. It seems to lack features for file sharing and mobile users. Pricing per PC: $50/year/unlimited GB.

  4. DataBarracks

    (www.databarracks.com) – business backup services with support for different operating systems. Backup from single application to full infrastructure from public or private clouds. It has features such as data encryption, resilient storage systems and secure UK-based data centers. Clients include defence sector, government agencies and financial institutions. Approximately pricing per PC: £3.95/2 month free.

  5. DSCorp.net

    (www.dscorp.netwww.datastoragecorp.com) – offsite data is completely protected. Features include high availability replication services, email compliance, data de-duplication and telecom recovery services. Offers solutions and services to government, financial institution, education and healthcare industries by leveraging virtualization, cloud computing and cloud storage.

  6. GlobalDataVault

    (www.globaldatavault.com) – has advanced full featured backup service provider. Offers free 30 day trial. It seems to protect business by eliminating risk with redundant systems and data replication to secure data center. Pricing per PC: $125/month/50 GB.

  7. IDrive

    (www.idrive.com) – gives unlimited storage and at affordable price. Basic plan is free with 5GB free. Suitable for online backup for PCs, Macs, Smart Phones such as iPhones, Blackberries, Android based mobiles. It seems to lack features such as you can not mix Macs and PCs in one account alone. Pricing per PC: $59.40/year/150GB.

  8. KineticD

    (www.kineticd.com) – has a remote control capability to IPhones and PCs so users can keep applications backup running on their device. Mainly online backup storage for business probably due to constant monitoring of updated files and multiple PCs support. Users can only pay for their space they use. Approximately pricing per PC: $20/month/10GB.

  9. MiMedia

    (www.mimedia.com) – offers folders syncing that designate folders to pair with online storage. Its beta service offers hands-off, automated backup and the ability to play media files online and cloud-based disk drives. Pricing per PC: $100/year/100GB.

  10. MozyHome 2.0

    (www.mozy.com) – no unlimited storage plans; backup only one computer per account. It is probably easily to use and setup but does not seem to backup removable drives and network. Pricings per PC: $5.99/month/PC.

  11. Nomadesk 4.0

    (www.nomadesk.com) – seems compatible for servers of Windows, Mac, Internet browser, mobile web; for application of mobiles and PCs. Secure, sync file transfer and allow file sharing with no limits, whether you are online or offline. Offers secure backup without limits for 30 days free trial.

  12. Storagepipe

    (www.storagepipe.com) –Canada online cloud backup services of industry’s data protection and archiving. Backup server, software and email archiving; provide solutions for disaster recovery, regulatory compliance and business continuity.

  13. SOS Online Backup

    (www.sosonlinebackup.com) – Backup PC, Mac, iPhone / iPad contacts, videos and photos including Facebook and Android backups. Sharing of data with your friends from any place. Offers some free storage account. Pricing per PC: $63.96/year/50GB (upto 5 PCs).

Source to date: November 2011

These are few of the products reviewed out of hundreds available online.

The preferred option would be to choose the plan that comes with free trial to use their online storage services for limited time. This is one way of testing their good functionality, server performance and whether it suits personal needs and requirements.

Our writers strive to keep you informed about the latest software and products. Browse through other reviews and articles at Data Center Talk.

Share on TwitterSubmit to StumbleUpon