Webinar Jan 18th: Are you ready for the cloud?

In conjunction with the good folks over at MSPtv and Redmond Channel Partner magazine, I am hosting this event at noon ET on 1/18:

Are You Ready for the Cloud? How MSPs Can Dominate New Management Models.

Managed Service Providers (MSPs) need to assess how ready they are to provide complete managed cloud services for their clients. While Microsoft and other larger vendors offer a mixed message in terms of hosted vs. on-premises solutions, MSPs through the right partner such as Zenith Infotech can provide a complete range of cloud computing services. But you need to take the right steps and in this webinar, we will show you how. Register here

Baseline: 8 Ways to ensure outsourcing success

Outsourcing isn’t new, but, by now, many IT shops have accumulated enough experience to use this service more effectively. We spoke with several managers who have used outsourcers to build and augment their systems, and we came away with eight suggestions to help ensure that your next outsourcing contact—and contract—will be successful.

You can read my article that was published in this month’s Baseline magazine here.

 

Tom’s Hardware: Pros and Cons of Hybrid Public/Private Clouds

The notion of a hybrid cloud is gaining traction. These are virtual services that run in various locations to deliver applications that can make use of a combination of public clouds and private hosted servers, as well as machines inside the data center.  While the concept isn’t all that new, many vendors are looking for ways to help IT managers more effectively migrate and manage these mixed environments.

You can read the entire article published this week at Tom’s Hardware here.

Getting started with Verizon’s CaaS SMB services

Verizon’s CaaS SMB service is one of many different computing in the cloud providers that anyone can easily set up a variety of Windows and Linux servers in a few minutes. This screencast video was done for Tom’s Hardware and shows how to get started and what some of the choices are in hosting and billing. Note that unlike some other CaaS providers, Verizon will bill you for a server whether it is running or not.

For For further information, go to http://caassmb.verizon.com/

Tom’s Hardware: Getting Started with Verizon CaaS SMB Services

Verizon’s computing in the cloud services, which uses the Terremark/VMware hosted services, allows you to create a variety of Windows and Linux servers in the cloud. Unlike Amazon and some other CaaS providers, you pay for provisioned machines whether they are running or not. You can see my three minute screencast tour at Tom’s Hardware here.

 

Tom’s Hardware: Getting started with Verizon’s Cloud Services

Verizon has myriad small, medium and enterprise business-related cloud services, everything from the mundane process of making backups to more sophisticated collections of virtual and even physical servers. In this introduction, we’ll show you what the landscape offers and provide some guidance on where to get started using some of these services.

To read more about the three cloud services that Verizon provides, read the rest of our article in Tom’s Hardware here.

Tom’s Hardware: Verizon Cloud-Based Online Backup and Sharing

Online backup is a booming industry, with dozens of vendors providing storage in the cloud. The idea is a compelling one: for a few dollars a year, you have immediate and automatic offsite storage of your most critical files. No messing with tapes, making DVDs, or worrying if you have the most current files backed up.

 These products all work in similar fashion and to help you evaluate backup vendors, we have put together a short checklist (see sidebar).Verizon is one of the key players in this space, and sells its Online Backup and Sharing service as one of a series of SMB-oriented offerings. You can read the rest of the article, which was posted on Tom’s Hardware this week, here.

The new way to donate money via CrowdFunding

By now most of you have heard of crowdsourcing, the ability to get masses of people to do work for you, oftentimes menial tasks for low pay. An extension of this concept is crowdfunding, whereby masses of people fund your project. Think of virtual microlending combined with Internet philanthropy.

There are more than a dozen Web sites that facilitate crowdfunding that range from art projects to new entrepreneurial ventures (look at growvc.com) to magazines and more. They all operate more or less the same way: the sites contain lists of projects that you pick to fund. In some cases, the sites have professionals who vet the projects and make sure that they are legit and not just someone looking for a scam.

The project owner can post a short video, some text and pictures, and links to other work that they have done. Some of the videos are quite earnest, some are funny, and some are boring.

Once you select your favorite project, you decide how much you want to give. In some cases, such as with United States Artists, your donation is tax deductable. With some projects, you get a premium for your donation; such as that tote bag that you might if you gave money to your local NPR or PBS station. Some projects have very involved premium structures to convince you to up your ante.

Once you have picked the amount, you are taken to a payments processing page where your credit card information is recorded. The sites use Amazon Payments or Paypal to make things easier, so if you already have accounts on either service you don’t have much more work to do.

With some of the sites, there is a minimum funding level that must be reached by a certain time period. If this threshold isn’t reached, the project is cancelled and no money changes hands. With others, there is no minimum; just a suggested funding level, and the project owner gets to keep all donations. There are processing fees involved with most of the sites, and in some cases these fees can reach close to ten percent of the take.

Crowdfunding isn’t really new, but it has certainly taken off in the past few months. For more than two years, I have been a supporter of Kiva.org, which funds third-world new micro-business owners. Over the course of 16 loans for $25 or $50, I have been paid back on 11 of them in full, with two delinquents and three loans that are still in the pay back process. That is a pretty good record, and you can read my comments on Kiva here.

What is significant is how quickly the concept of crowdfunding has caught on, and you can find a list of numerous crowdfunding sites here:
• Greg Scott is a Vancouver developer who has a blog devoted to the topic and has invested in several crowd funding operations at crowdfunder.org.
• Christine Egger’s open source collaboration technology design firm Social Actions has a list of primarily donation-related sites here.
Paul Anthony, an Irish Web developer, reviews nine sites back in July 2010.

One project on Kickstarter.com raised more than $600k for a simple plastic watch band for iPod Nanos with more than 9,500 funders. They started out to raise $15,000, so they have succeeded beyond their wildest imagination.

Certainly, crowdfunding is going to play a more important role as a source of capital in the coming years. I would be interested in your own experiences, feel free to post here.