Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Boom Boom: Dell buys Boomi

For those of us who have spent years integrating heterogeneous systems know it very well that integrating the systems is a daunting task. Some of the challenges like interoperability, versioning, security, user experience issues, performance and scalability issues make it hard to pull off really robust integration .

In recent years though a number of cloud providers have been able to expose a lot of capabilities via APIs making it easy for integrators to integrate third party applications with them. Enterprises who are using these cloud providers are increasing depending on the integrations to implement their mission critical business process. For example.. your company might be using SAP/Oracle for CRM needs and then buys another company that is using cloud based CRM like salesforce.com/NetSuite. Considering the amount of data that resides inside these apps and business processes that are built around it, it is never easy to come up with a solution that could be readily agreed upon. Your company can decide to dump one of the systems in favor of other. However that is not an obvious choice in the short term. Better approach would to keep using both the systems with right bridge between them that would take care of combining the data in a meaningful fashion.

The Cloud Integration companies promise to address that very need to integrate the on-premises application and/or cloud apps. The promise with the integration connector comes with the claim that there is no coding, software or appliance is involved. Boomi touts itself as #1 Integration Cloud. It is not clear to me in what sense they are #1. But just going by the number of partners they have in this space, it is clear that they have very thriving echosystem of partners.




The biggest news in cloud computing last week is got to be Dell buying Boomi ! I must agree that somebody buying Boomi is of no surprise to me. But Dell buying Boomi comes as a surprise. I have not been following what Dell portfolio looks like for Cloud Computing. I presume they have some good assets in infrastructure space but not anything in pure software as prominent as Boomi. So Boomi acquisition is very interesting. I would guess that rather than augmenting they have, Boomi will prove as a catalyst to buy few more. We will have to wait and watch !

Friday, October 29, 2010

Do you know the value of mathematical constant π (pi) ?

We all know that π (pi) is a mathematical constant whose value is the ratio of circle's circumference to the diameter. For many of us, it simply means 3.14 which happens to be an approximate value of pi. I am sure few enthusiasts among us know more accurate value as 3.1415..... However that is still the approximate value.

Going by the history, numerous attempts were made to arrive at the exact value. But nobody could arrive at a number with nth bit as zero meaning the value was still not accurate. So, the question remains- what is the "real" value of pi and whether it is possible to get the exact value?

One Yahoo! cloud computing engineer has claimed that he is able to compute specific bits to an extent that nobody in the world has been able to do that. The result- The two quadrillionth bit of π is 0!

This is one heck of a remarkable achievement. So how he did it? He used hadoop technology that Yahoo has championed for years now. The computing needed amazing computing power. In fact, the computation took 23 full days and required 1000 different machines using Hadoop.

This should be celebrated as a great cloud computing milestone!

Read more at BBC website

Friday, October 15, 2010

Mobile Patents: Who is suing whom anyway?

Well...This is not exactly around cloud computing. It is all about mobile computing. But none the less... it is hard to ignore these news coming about the squabbles among the companies in mobile space.

As mobile computing gets pervasive, companies are vying to stay at the top of the top of increasingly competitive mobile market. Recently Microsoft sued Motorola over its line of Android-based smart phones. The popularity of Android software is also at the heart of a legal battle between Oracle and Google.

Guardian published an interesting chart around who is suing who in mobile business.



A long battle looms before it is clear which companies would be the winners. However one thing is clear ultimately it is the attorneys who would make quick bucks on this !!!