SM: And how far along is that? RT: Well, the skeleton is there for approval. The workflow engine is integrated inside the private cloud infrastructure. Now, on the public cloud side, the overriding request is clients want to have variability in their billing. That’s what is different about the cloud compared to a traditional hosting
SM: What is Fotopedia’s business model? JH: The first step is to build significant traffic. We are not there at this point. We have been operating for one year, and we have learned how to get the community contributing content. Until recently, we did not spend enough energy on learning how to allow people to
By guest author Irina Patterson This is the eighteenth interview in our series on financing for entrepreneurs. I am talking to Eric Paley, managing partner of Founders Collective, a $50 million fund dedicated to investing in seed-stage deals. The fund has offices in New York City and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Irina: Hi, Eric. Let’s start with
By guest authors Irina Patterson and Ravi Bulusu Irina: And what character traits in a founder would clinch the deal for you? Manu: I will probably answer that in the negative, meaning I can definitely identify the traits of people who I would not invest in. The number one thing there would be integrity.
By guest author Shaloo Shalini This part of the discussion centers around the impact of clouds on the evolution of IT in a large organization such as Novell, the need to upgrade IT skills to make services more valuable to business, private clouds and data security in the cloud.
By Sramana Mitra, Pablo Chacin and Saurabh Mallik SM: What is your sense of the integration issue? Is that a barrier to adoption? Is it something people are worried about? Can the integration costs and risks surpass the advantages of cloud computing? RT: It all depends on the scenario. At least in the work we
SM: Did you spend very much time learning how Flickr operated? JH: I never spent very much time focusing on one specific project except when I was younger and I was programming. I had a lot of questions in my mind, and I am not a very organized person, so I spent time sorting things
By guest author Tony Scott The Cloud-Enabled, Flattening World Tony: So, let’s talk about this whole movement to the cloud. How does that impact you and enable you to provide services or technology in a different way from competitors, and what kind of people do you need to be effective in doing that?