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The third annual OnDemand 100 private company competition has begun! Nominate your favorite on-demand technology companies and check out the list of companies that have already been nominated.

AlwaysOn has officially kicked off its third annual OnDemand Top 100 Private Companies Competition. We're looking for the top emerging on-demand and SaaS companies that are creating new business opportunities in high-growth markets. This includes private companies that are demonstrating significant market traction and pursuing game-changing technology in the following sectors:

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The second annual OnMobile 100 private company competition has begun! Nominate your favorite mobile technology companies and check out the list of companies that have already been nominated.

AlwaysOn has officially kicked off its second annual OnMobile Top 100 Private Companies Competition. We're looking for the top emerging mobile companies that are creating new business opportunities in the high-growth mobile markets. This includes private companies that are demonstrating significant market traction and pursuing game-changing technology in the following sectors:

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THINKstrategies Jeff Kaplan addresses the increasingly common challenge of integrating the cloud services into legacy operations and managing these hybrid systems.

I had an opportunity to speak to the Mid-Atlantic CIO Forum at Towson University last week about new strategies and tactics for fully capitalizing on today’s Cloud alternatives. Because the group is composed of CIOs primarily from mid-size and large-scale enterprises with a lot of custom built applications and systems already in place, their biggest challenge is determining how to integrate the latest Cloud services into their legacy operations. Managing ‘hybrid’ Clouds is becoming a common challenge.

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Managing Hybrid Clouds

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THINKstrategies Jeff Kaplan addresses the increasingly common challenge of integrating cloud services into legacy operations and managing hybrid systems.

Vantage Data Center's Greg Ness takes a closer look at the impending colocation crunch that's due to hit as growth continues for larger, newer data centers, and traditional, less efficient centers shrink.

For a fresh perspective on data center obsolescence check out The Coming Colocation Crunch by Nemertes Principal Analyst Ted Ritter writing for Data Center Knowledge this week (Jan 18, 2012):

“Nemertes Research predicts a shortage of colocation space in the U.S. beginning this year, growing to a $1.9 billion facilities gap by 2015.”

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THINKstrategies Jeff Kaplan believes that today's generation of cloud services is finally expanding the meaning of shared services and bringing tangible benefits to organizations of all sizes.

The concept of “shared services” has been bandied about the IT industry for over 50 years. Yet, past iterations of this concept have often failed to meet the needs of corporate executives and end-users from a functional and economic standpoint.

This is because previous generations of shared services were too often built upon cumbersome and costly systems and software which could not scale to give corporate customers greater cost advantages or added features than they could gain from optimized inhouse resources. As a result, only highly specialized shared services, such as payroll processing and basic hosting, prospered in the past.

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THINKstrategies Jeff Kaplan outlines how cloud-based analytic tools can quickly generate tangible benefits to organizations of all sizes, especially mid-market companies.

Despite some skepticism from industry analysts about the ability of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) vendors to deliver viable business intelligence (BI) solutions a few years ago, today’s Cloud-based analytic tools are increasingly demonstrating that they can quickly generate tangible benefits to organizations of all sizes, especially mid-market companies.

The growing interest in Cloud-based analytics is easy to understand given the escalating pressures facing businesses contending with rising customer expectations and intensifying competitive. Businesses not only have to synthesize a widening array of internal and external data sources, they must also make timely and useful analysis available to an increasingly dispersed workforce so they can make better day-to-day business decisions.

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Vantage Data Center's Greg Ness examines the pressure CIOs face as the tension grows between evolution in demands on IT and an extended period of economic doldrums.

In the same way that the rise of the Internet led to the enterprise web (web-enabled enterprise applications) the public and private cloud is driving IT to new modes of operation, most of which demand more agility, more capacity and an even keener focus on operating and capital expenses. This profound tension -between a substantial evolution in demands on IT and an extended period of economic doldrums- has placed CIOs in the crossfire.

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THINKstrategies Jeff Kaplan reviews the ten predictions he made at the end of 2010 and sees how many of them came to fruition.

A year ago, I published a series of 10 predictions regarding how the Cloud Computing marketplace would evolve in 2011 in E-Commerce Times. Here’s a recap and assessment of my predictions:

  1. The Cloud Computing market will grow more rapidly than analyst firms forecast as organizations move from asking “what is Cloud and why is it important” to “where and how can I capitalize on the Cloud today.”
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Vantage Data Center's Greg Ness is intrigued by the idea of enterprises increasingly embracing virtualization for agility instead of looking at the cloud as a tool to increase efficiency and save money.

Earlier this month I attended the Gartner Data Center Summit, and sat in on several presentations, including David Cappuccio’s intro keynote on data center trends and Neal MacDonald’s session on virtualization security. I apologize in advance for the breadth of my rambling and speculation, but I think the IT revolution playing itself out will mark the evolution of virtualization into the network and into private clouds built within a new type of elastic data center. While I cite two excellent Gartner presos the following thoughts are my own extrapolations.

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