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How the President Used the Cloud to Beat Romney (Part 2)

Posted on Monday, Mar 4th 2013

Gathering Clouds: Obviously, the groundswell during the last campaign was a very palpable cultural moment, and a lot of the technologies that you were using this time around weren’t as widely available last time. How did these technologies change? What was ultimately the benefit for you guys? >>>

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How the President Used the Cloud to Beat Romney (Part 1)

Posted on Sunday, Mar 3rd 2013

Cloud Player: Interview with Obama for America’s Engineering Director, Dylan Richard: How the President Used the Cloud to Beat Romney, by Gathering Clouds

[Editor’s note: We hope you enjoy this special guest interview from Gathering Clouds.]

In honor of President Obama’s second inauguration, we had the great pleasure to sit down for an extended conversation with Dylan Richard, Director of Engineering at Obama for America. Our conversation explored:

  • How the Obama campaign brought together such a talented staff 
  • What technologies created the foundation for the campaign’s success 
  • How Amazon Web Services suited the requirements of the Obama tech organization
  • How the Romney campaign chose a different IT path to a different end result

Dylan Richard, Obama for America

Dylan Richard, Director of Engineering at Obama for America

Gathering Clouds: What are your feelings on how the presidential election went? What was the experience like?

Dylan Richard: The campaign was the most amazing experience that I could possibly imagine. There was just a staggering amount of work. I was there for 18 months and towards the end, it was 16- to 20-hour days, seven days a week for the final couple of months. >>>

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1Mby1M Incubation Radar 2012: InSync, Kolkata, India

Posted on Monday, Jan 7th 2013

In 2006, 1M/1M premium member InSync was established as an IT company to provide software solutions to Indian small and medium businesses (SMBs) from their location in Kolkata. Over the next three years, InSync would acquire more than 500 domestic customers, and make an important discovery. They noted that at a certain volume, it was impossible for customers to manage their e-commerce businesses without an integrated enterprise resource planning (ERP) system. Leveraging this knowledge, InSync shifted focus from services to product and released their flagship integration solution, SBOeConnect. Today, the company specializes in solutions that complement enterprise solution products, as well as business intelligence services, including reporting and data warehousing. >>>

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Thought Leaders in Big Data: Franz Aman, Chief Marketing Officer, Silicon Graphics (Part 5)

Posted on Friday, Jan 4th 2013

Sramana Mitra: Based on where you sit and what you look at on a regular basis, what are some of the open problems from your point of view?

Franz Aman: In the big data space in particular, everyone has jumped on the analysis and understanding of big data, which is entirely understandable. But I think the next trend we are going to see and the next big wave is going to be all about applications and transactions on big data. I think it is an under-served space and opportunity right now. Before we know it, we are going to see the venture capitalists not so much in just the analysis [of] technology [used in] managing big data, but more about transacting on that data and having the same fidelity in transactions that you have with relational databases. Then what is required to bring big data applications to a mobile environment as well. >>>

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Oracle Continues to Build Cloud Portfolio

Posted on Thursday, Jan 3rd 2013

According to recent analyst reports, cloud computing will be a strong area of growth for technological investments. Gartner projects that software as a service (SaaS) and cloud-based business application services will grow at a compounded rate of 19% over the five-year period between 2011 to 2016 to $32.2 billion. IDC expects enterprise cloud application revenues to grow at a more aggressive pace of 24% annually to $67.3 billion by 2016 from $22.9 billion in 2011. Technology giant Oracle (Nasdaq:ORCL) is counting on such market growth to accelerate its own performance.

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Thought Leaders in Big Data: Franz Aman, Chief Marketing Officer, Silicon Graphics (Part 4)

Posted on Thursday, Jan 3rd 2013

Sramana Mitra: So, you are avoiding that problem by blowing out the main memory available and then doing the in-memory computing on top of that?

Franz Aman: Correct. Then it is native. It is just available, and your application will just run. We recently did a project with a researcher from the University of Illinois about a Twitter analysis. That was one of these big brain systems where we needed one big, continuous memory space to do some of the analysis in real-time at the rate at which we did it. That is the only way you can do something like that. A lot of times I talk with people about 64 terabytes of space, and they think I have the sizes wrong. They ask if I meant gigabytes and not terabytes, or they think it is disk space and not main memory, but it actually is main memory. >>>

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Thought Leaders in Big Data: Franz Aman, Chief Marketing Officer, Silicon Graphics (Part 3)

Posted on Wednesday, Jan 2nd 2013

Sramana Mitra: You talked about in-memory databases and said you were using Oracle’s in-memory database technology. Could you talk a bit about trends in in-memory databases, because it looks like SAP is setting its entire company on HANA? >>>

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ServiceNow Gaining Ground on BMC, HP, CA

Posted on Wednesday, Jan 2nd 2013

According to market reports, the IT service management (ITSM) market is expected to be worth $1.5 billion. Market reports for 2011 saw the market being led by BMC, with a 38.6% market share. HP’s Service Manager came in a distant second, with a little over 20%. CA’s Service Desk Manager was ranked the third, with a 7.2% market share. Last year, ServiceNow accounted for a mere 3% of the market share. But the company’s market share has since grown. Analysts believe that the company now accounts for 10%-15% of the market.

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