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Thought Leaders in Mobile and Social: Yaacov Cohen, Co-Founder and CEO of Harmon.ie (Part 1)

Posted on Saturday, Mar 1st 2014

This interview explores how enterprises are using composite mobile apps that bring various cloud and mobile services together on a device.

Sramana Mitra: Yaacov, let’s introduce our audience to yourself as well as to Harmon.ie.

Yaacov Cohen: Thank you for having me, Sramana. My name is Yaacov Cohen and I’m the co-founder and CEO of Harmon.ie. I am a global entrepreneur. I grew up in France but I lived 25 years in Israel and 5 years in Silicon Valley. Harmon.ie is an enterprise mobile vendor and our mission is to define the business consumer experience in the mobile enterprise. >>>

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Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Bradley Kolb, CEO of nScaled (Part 4)

Posted on Friday, Feb 28th 2014

Sramana Mitra: This is something that customers are asking for?

Ilya Beyer: No, they’re not asking from us. I have personally observed while talking to customers that they often have no idea what the data is – what kind of data they keep and where.

Sramana Mitra: What you’re alluding to is that they’re basically wasting a lot of storage space that could be easily freed up by doing better analytics?
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Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Momchil Michailov, CEO of Sanbolic (Part 7)

Posted on Thursday, Feb 27th 2014

Sramana Mitra: How big is the company now, revenue wise?

Momchil Michailov: We’re at $8 million right now. We’ve been selling the product commercially for just over three years at this point. This quarter we’re moving the product into additional markets. We’re very excited about some product releases that are coming up at the end of the quarter. We have about 15 people here in Boston and about 35 in Sofia, Bulgaria strictly in R&D.

Sramana Mitra: You self-financed the company?

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Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Bradley Kolb, CEO of nScaled (Part 3)

Posted on Thursday, Feb 27th 2014

Sramana Mitra: The other trend that I have picked up over several conversations is on security. For a while, cloud security was becoming less and less of a concern, which actually increased the adoption of the cloud. We started doing this series called Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing series back in 2008. We saw clear disappearance of cloud security from the conversations over that period of time. The numbers really spoke for themselves. Now, we’re seeing a projection of a trillion dollars in cloud IT solutions budget this year. This year, cloud security concerns have started coming back into the conversations again. In particular, the whole Snowden thing and the government snooping has activated that concern. What is your observation on that?

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Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Momchil Michailov, CEO of Sanbolic (Part 6)

Posted on Wednesday, Feb 26th 2014

Momchil Michailov: To the earlier discussion around big data and analytics, it would be awesome to be able to run the on-premise big data applications and then move that data into the public cloud. Then, rent cheap analytics and cheap compute from the public cloud vendors to do the analytics tasks that are CPU-intensive. They are not as storage-intensive. There are some very compelling arguments around doing that and being able to create a hybrid. Our focus right now is running platform on premise. Our platform does run both on premise and at the public cloud. We can certainly span that. We are very much looking forward to getting the infrastructure in place to be able to deliver these types of architectures to customers.

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Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Bradley Kolb, CEO of nScaled (Part 2)

Posted on Wednesday, Feb 26th 2014

Ilya Beyer: We’ve seen that when some of our existing customers acquire fully-automated disaster recovery solutions with nScaled, they not only protect all their mission-critical systems but were also able to save on cost. Those are the trends that we’re seeing there. Historically, disaster recovery was a luxury that was available only to large enterprise customers that had a lot of CapEx budget. nScaled, with their disruptive technology, was able to deliver that at a fraction of the cost to small to mid sized companies.

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Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Momchil Michailov, CEO of Sanbolic (Part 5)

Posted on Tuesday, Feb 25th 2014

Sramana Mitra: I’m also hearing from everywhere that hybrid cloud is a big trend. Are you suggesting that hybrid cloud transition is not well managed and there’s not a lot of infrastructure supporting that right now?

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Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Bradley Kolb, CEO of nScaled (Part 1)

Posted on Tuesday, Feb 25th 2014

Disaster recovery is moving to the cloud at a fast pace. This interview takes a look at the trend.

Sramana Mitra: Brad, take the lead on introducing nScaled as well as yourself and colleagues on the call.

Bradley Kolb: I’m Bradley Kolb and I’m the CEO of nScaled. Joining me is Ilya Beyer. He’s our CTO. Scott Reynolds is our Director of Marketing. I’m hoping that Mark Jameson, our VP of Sales, will be joining us momentarily. As a brief overview, nScaled is focused on delivering disaster recovery as a service. We deliver that with a fully automated solution. The company was started in 2009 and has built a hub-and-spoke platform that allows customers to perform complex automation workflows with a single click.

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