Emerging Technology
Xcerion’s iCloud Begins Open Beta PDF 
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Linköping, Sweden - April 7th, 2009 - Xcerion today announce the launch of icloud, the world’s first free online computer, giving everybody in the world their own online computer packed with free storage, applications, virtual desktop and backup accessible from any computer connected to the Internet. Starting today the icloud service is available in English, Chinese, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Swedish and Filipino languages.
The public launch of icloud builds on a closed beta testing program and the incorporation of user feedback from iclouder’s worldwide. icloud is proud to announce free icloud accounts for everyone at http://icloud.com.

Daniel Arthursson, the founder of icloud say, “With icloud, we put a virtual computer together with free storage and free applications in the hands of everybody in the world, it’s the PC for everyone without a PC. Everybody can now access and share documents, photos, music and their complete digital life from any computer“.

The public version includes:

  • Access to your friends, files and digital life on any computer
  • 3 GB free storage space to safely store documents, photos and music online
  • 30 free applications such as Office, Mail, Music, Video, IM, Sharing, Games, Collaboration and Development tools
  • 20 free widgets
  • Free backup to provide secure storage, including WedDav
  • Zero installation, icloud runs in your Internet Explorer or Firefox browser
About icloud

Founded in 2001 by Daniel Arthursson, Xcerion provides icloud (icloud.com), the worlds leading “Cloud OS” based on proprietary groundbreaking technology with 22 pending patents.

icloud is a complete platform for sharing experiences with friends. It is secure, social and always accessible from any computer or device. Applications on icloud include office productivity, development tools, media and widgets. Over time, a wide range of applications will be available through an easy to use marketplace and application development toolbox

Xcerion AB is based in Linkoping, Sweden, privately held and funded by Northzone Ventures

 

I for one have signed up,not because it's our neighbors here up north, but because it looks promising. Will post some pictures and an article about my experience with the iCloud later on.

 

 
Cloudkick PDF 
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What's missing? Let's start with traditional vendors thinking they can retool their products and strategies to become cloud friendly. Cisco is the most recent example of a company that is going to try to assemble an old gang of EMC, Accenture, BMC and Intel into a pack that can first help you turn your aging IT infrastructure into Amazon and then tie your cloud friendly internals into a sky full of outside clouds. Maybe.I needed a break from hearing about how the old is suddenly the new.

Cloudkick, a Y Combinator startup, offers a free, easy server management system to businesses whose web infrastructure is maintained by Amazon’s EC2 or Slicehost cloud-based servers. Built off of Amazon Web Services’ API, Cloudkick gives users a single control panel where you can manage all of your servers (or instances) through various platforms.

Cloudkick’s dashboard allows you to easily add or remove EC2 or Slicehost servers with a click and then monitor an unlimited amount of instances. You can see all the servers in one place, and color-code and label each server. Cloudkick will check whether servers are alive and functioning and then alert you, via email or voice mail, if servers go down. Cloudkick also provides data on bandwith and other metrics on servers in easy to use graphs and tables, allowing you a visual snapshot of server activity. You can also access servers straight from web and can run commands through your web browser remotely, which is handy when you are trying to manage servers from another computer.

So far, Cloudkick’s virtual control center is integrated with Amazon and Slicehost only but plans to add more cloud computing platforms in the future. Currently, the startup is managing about 350 servers of 40 Y Combinator startups.

Amazon offers a web-console along with their product but you cannot add servers from other cloud platform, you can’t tag or label servers, you can’t run commands on servers from the web and EC2 doesn’t offer graphing or monitoring features. There are other cloud management services out there, like Rightscale, that offer similar services to Cloudkick. In fact, Rightscale offers a few more features in a easy to see dashboard, but the kicker is that Cloudkick is free. Rightscale’s plans run into the thousands.

Cloudkick is part of the dawn of cross-cloud applications and management tools. The application seems like a useful tool for businesses looking for an easy-to-use dashboard to control cloud-based servers. And it helps that its free. As technology companies roll out their cloud platforms, like Microsoft will be doing soon with its platform, Azure, and businesses begin to become increasingly reliant on the cloud, these management tools will become even more useful. And Cloudkick could gain good traction in this space if they integrate their application with more than just two types of platforms.