How to size up a new cloud service like low-priced Wasabi

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Network World Cloud Computing Alert

May 04, 2017
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Wasabi serves up some spicy AWS-killer claims

Wasabi says it is disrupting the cloud storage market, claiming its cloud storage is six times faster than Amazon S3 and cheaper than AWS Glacier. Read More

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Your Must-Read Stories

How to size up a new cloud service like low-priced Wasabi
Verizon sells its cloud and managed hosting services to IBM
Cloud vs. on-premises: Finding the right balance
Public clouds are calling to IT engineers -- and their wallets
Cloudflare wins managed DNS shootout
Nyansa introduces private cloud option for its network analytics platform
Containers and virtual machines: Which is best for you?
Google echoes Amazon's assurance on EU data protection compliance
Migrating to the cloud: You want me to lift and shift what?

Video/Webcast: EMA Analyst Research

Tunnel Vision Is Hurting Your Security: Time to See the Forest for the Trees

When data that is critical to cybersecurity tools remains in silos, everyone loses. This siloed approach diminishes the value of the data and leaves organizations with incomplete visibility, significant management overhead, and uncertainty about which security tools are actually necessary to ingest and analyze the data to protect the business. Join EMA, live on May 25th @ 10AM PDT/ 1PM EDT to discover a better solution. Read More

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How to size up a new cloud service like low-priced Wasabi

Saving money may be a good enough reason to try a brand-new cloud storage service -- if it can deliver on its promises. That's the equation some enterprises may use when they look at Wasabi Technologies, an object storage startup that says it offers six times the performance of Amazon's S3 service at one-fifth the price. Read More

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Verizon sells its cloud and managed hosting services to IBM

Verizon shut down its public cloud service in early 2016, and now it's unloading its virtual private cloud and managed hosting services to IBM. Read More

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Cloud vs. on-premises: Finding the right balance

For some IT shops, security is the gating factor for which apps go into the cloud. Others are all-in for the cloud, and still others don't want much to do with it at all. Read More

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Public clouds are calling to IT engineers -- and their wallets

Less than one-fifth of enterprise IT assets are in the cloud, but it looks like more are on their way. One-third of data-center professionals and IT practitioners plan to deploy workloads in the cloud in the next year, according to a survey by the Uptime Institute, an advisory group focused on improving critical infrastructure. Read More

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INSIDER

Cloudflare wins managed DNS shootout

For many enterprises, deploying a fully built-out DNS network may not be feasible. Thus, many have turned to third-party DNS providers. In this review, we look at four major managed DNS providers: Dyn, Amazon Web Services Route 53, Cloudflare and DNS Made Easy. Read More

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Nyansa introduces private cloud option for its network analytics platform

The private cloud version of Nyansa’s Voyance network analytics platform is excellent for companies in heavily regulated industries or that want control over data and security. Read More

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Containers and virtual machines: Which is best for you?

Containers and virtual machines make installing and configuring cloud applications easier. The challenge is deciding which is best for you. Read More

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Google echoes Amazon's assurance on EU data protection compliance

Google has joined Amazon Web Services in promising customers of its cloud services that it will be compliant with new European Union data protection rules due to take effect next year. Read More

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Migrating to the cloud: You want me to lift and shift what?

Understand the benefits to deploying to the cloud, the challenges of performing a lift and shift, and the types of applications that can be easily moved to the cloud. Read More

White Paper: AppNeta

3 Challenges of Moving to a Cloud-Based Infrastructure

Moving applications and services to the cloud means you'll be offloading some daily tasks and maintenance, and ideally saving time, space and money. But remember that those SaaS or hybrid cloud apps still belong to your organization and are still part of IT. When there's downtime or slowdowns, users will still be coming to IT's door to get help. Read More

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