Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Think Beyond: HP's cloud expertise coming to the consumer in webOS?

WorldWideTech & Science. Francisco De Jesús.

Hewlett-Packard rounds out its cloud software and consulting with a new cloud service

Rounding out its portfolio of cloud-related offerings, Hewlett-Packard will launch a cloud compute service next month aimed at enterprises.
The company will also start offering computing systems for internal use that will interoperate with the cloud offering, as well as a set of workshops to aid organizations in developing cloud strategies, said Bill Veghte, HP executive vice president overseeing software and solutions.
"HP has the enterprise experience, breadth of portfolio and global service delivery organization to lead our clients through this transformation" to cloud computing, said Ann Livermore, executive vice president, HP Enterprise Business, in a statement.
The service, called HP Enterprise Cloud Services-Compute, will offer organizations computational services from two HP data centers, one located in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the other in Wynyard, U.K. Customers are free to choose their own specific cloud platform, be it Windows Azure or a virtual machine-based program.
Veghte did not unveil pricing, other than to say it will be based on how many MIPS (million instructions per second) are consumed, in combination of length of contract and amount of services used.
HP will promise a 99.9 percent uptime for servers. The service will also guarantee that, for unplanned outages, virtual machines will be running again within an hour and physical servers will be running again within seven hours.
In conjunction with the debut of this service, the company plans to offer an integrated package of hardware, software and service for building internal clouds, called CloudService. CloudService systems can easily be integrated with HP Enterprise Cloud Services-Compute, allowing users to switch workloads between an internal cloud and HP's, Veghte said.
These new offerings also tie in with other HP cloud software and services already available, Veghte said. They dovetail with HP Cloud Maps, a set of configuration settings for operating HP blade servers. They will also work with HP's just-released Cloud Service Automation software. This software will allow organizations to move their workloads back and forth between an in-house cloud system and HP's cloud offering.
This is not HP's first cloud-related enterprise offering: Last August, HP launched its CloudStart program, which offered customers the software, hardware and consulting service to build their own internal clouds. HP also works with Microsoft to offer an Azure-based cloud appliance.

This announcement comes ahead of an HP press conference “ March Summit Meeting “ link scheduled in March in which HP CEO Léo Apotheker is expected to unveil the company's new strategy. Analysts predict that Apotheker will shift more corporate focus to enterprise software and cloud computing.

To this end, the Wall Street Journal has reported that Livermore might become vice chairman and join the board of directors, reflecting the greater role that enterprise software and services will play in the company.

It only stands to reason that HP will leverage its cloud computing expertise and capabilities for webOS users. With a platform designed to function across a range of device types (smartphones, tablets,netbooks, printers), it only makes sense for HP to offer a consistent cloud-based solution for integrating all those devices (not to mention PCs).

I can't help but assume that this is what the "think beyond" teaser in HP's webOS even invitation refers to.

While I can assume HP is planning cloud services around webOS (an OS built for web and cloud services), I can't be sure what those services might entail. That said, I'm willing to speculate that they'll be pretty broad. In addition to the typical contact, calendar, notes syncing, I wouldn't be surprised to see HP add a Dropbox-like storage locker, web-based access, and cloud/Internet-based printing (after all, that was one reason HP gave for buying Palm in the first place). The company could go even further by offering its own online office solution and providing a rich data/document sharing mechanism.

Another service already leaked   for the Topaz webOS tablet is the HP cloud-canvas service that could bring art ,graphic and  fashion designers to webOS.

HP cloud-canvas 

In short, I could see the company planning something akin to a webOS-specific version of the majority of Google's cloud offerings but, perhaps, with deeper device integration and deeper integration between services.

Sources: IT world.


No comments:

Post a Comment

[Invitation] Galaxy Unpacked 2024, Jan 17: Opening a New Era of Mobile AI.

A revolutionary mobile experience is coming. Get ready to discover a new era full of possibilities with the latest Galaxy innovations, desig...

Popular Posts