GigaomIBM beefs up its federal cloud effort with new data centers
Two new IBM SoftLayer cloud data centers, one in Dallas, one in Ashburn, Virg., will be added to IBM’s roster later this year. Read more »
{"source":"http:\/\/search.gigaom.com\/person\/lance-crosby\/wijax\/383af13036138b805db0da550b1f5914","varname":"wijax_97f7157d08fbc0a57b3ea1b1b74ae649","title_element":"h2","title_class":"widget-title","title_before":"%3Ch2%20class%3D%22widget-title%22%3E","title_after":"%3C%2Fh2%3E"}
Two new IBM SoftLayer cloud data centers, one in Dallas, one in Ashburn, Virg., will be added to IBM’s roster later this year. Read more »
The week in cloud: Feds tell insurers it’s okay to use Amazon Web Services for their Obamacare workloads; and it’s time to gear up for Structure! Read more »
Common sense: IBM’s cloud chief Lance Crosby thinks companies should focus on securing their data from everyone, not just nosy intelligence agencies. Read more »
On this week’s Structure Show, the exec in charge of IBM’s massive cloud effort updates us on how that’s going and why you’d be silly to underestimate Big Blue when it… Read more »
The machinations in cloud have reached a fever pitch with public cloud giant Amazon pushing into the enterprise and enterprise IT giants attacking public cloud. Should make for some good conversation… Read more »
The week in cloud: Microsoft Azure makes big strides in cloud and AWS gets more aggressive in the enterprise with new portal for VMware admins. Read more »
HP CEO Meg Whitman and her counterpart at IBM Ginni Rometty both took over huge companies at the crossroads but under drastically different circumstances. So who has it worse? Read more »
Even the giant IT vendors themselves admit we’re in for a huge shakeout. The question is which of them will be left standing — or independent — in two to three… Read more »
If you had Amazon’s Werner Vogels, Google’s Urs Hölzle, IBM/SoftLayer’s Lance Crosby, Microsoft’s Scott Guthrie, Rackspace’s Taylor Rhodes in one room, what would you ask? Read more »
IBM is hell-bent on achieving its promised earnings per share goal by next year. Analysts aren’t sure why it bothers. Read more »