Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
Software

IBM Enlarges Sphere of Influence in the Cloud

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
IBM Enlarges Sphere of Influence in the Cloud

IBM is moving deeper into the cloud, and its relentless march could make it difficult for any competitor to gain purchase, despite the newness of the space. On Monday, Big Blue debuted a new cloud service dubbed "Bluehouse," which facilitates social networking and collaboration among different organizations.


eMarketer Whitepaper: Optimizing the E-Commerce Experience
From the Web to the Contact Center, are you prepared to proactively engage and keep your savvy customers? Read how e-commerce leaders are optimizing their sites with ratings, reviews, live help, Web analytics, mobile and more.

IBM's (NYSE: IBM) considerable footprint in the cloud computing space is growing larger. The company has announced an expansion of its ISV (independent software vendor) partner network; it has also launched a beta version of Bluehouse -- a social networking and collaboration cloud service designed to connect people from different businesses.

Big Blue took the opportunity of these two developments to define its rapidly growing cloud computing offerings to the market, which has watched almost in awe as the company has introduced initiative after initiative over the past several months.

IBM breaks its extensive offerings into four categories: 1) its own cloud services portfolio; 2) services to help ISVs design, build, deliver and market their own cloud services; 3) integration services for companies that wish to weave these technologies into their existing IT infrastructure; and 4) providing cloud computing environments to businesses.

It is an ambitious undertaking, acknowledged Dave Mitchell, director of strategy Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales for IBM developer relations. "There are many linkages among these four areas," he told the E-Commerce Times -- "linkages that will only continue to develop and expand as the market itself grows."

New Line-Up

Bluehouse is one of several new technologies that IBM is deploying to improve the delivery of cloud services, said Mitchell. To be sure, the company's cloud-building portfolio touches on many areas of the enterprise, including offerings in server, storage and network virtualization; service management applications to automate workload management; usage-tracking and billing; and a range of security and resiliency offerings.

The latest cloud service areas fall under the company's Tivoli portfolio. These include Bluehouse, which combines social networking and online collaboration tools that are unhampered by firewalls or organizational boundaries. A suite of hosted online technologies, Bluehouse allows users to share documents and contacts; engage in joint project activities; host online meetings; and build social networking communities.

Another new offering, Lotus Sametime Unyte, arranges Web conferences that allow the sharing of documents, presentations or applications through any Web connection. Enhancements to Sametime Unyte include multilanguage support and faster network performance. It also offers a "waiting room" for meeting participants to gather and provides specialized alerts and prompts for meeting hosts.

IBM plans to integrate Sametime Unyte with Lotus Notes and Lotus Sametime, so people working in e-mail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse or instant messaging can join the Web conferences.

Yet another new application is Telelogic Focal Point, which centralizes the product information shared by product management, engineering, marketing and other stakeholders.

IBM is also introducing a number of new security-related plays, including Remote Data Protection; IBM Rational Policy Tester OnDemand, which automates Web-content scanning to isolate privacy, quality and accessibility compliance issues; and IBM Rational AppScan OnDemand, which scans Web applications for bugs.

Too Ambitious?

IBM's burgeoning ISV partner program is another key piece to this strategy, Mitchell said. "We have added 100 partners and are on track to double the number this year."

Perhaps more telling is that most of the company's new partners focus on middleware and hardware rather than hosting, he said.

That shift is attributable to IBM's emphasis on technical blueprints, said Mitchell, among other factors.

Given the nascence of the cloud computing market -- at least compared to the solidly established enterprise software space -- IBM entrenchment could be viewed as game-over to any competing interests. However, it's questionable whether Big Blue cannot handle -- or handle well, at least -- every aspect of the market.

"IBM is adopting a broader strategy than most of the providers right now, including Amazon and Google," Shane Aubel, cofounder and partner in Accent Global System Architects, told the E-Commerce Times.

"Right now, everybody is trying to define what the space is and its boundaries -- but my gut reaction is that IBM is going to have to scale back at some point," remarked Aubel.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


Related News Alerts

IBM Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by Erika Morphy

Ballmer Gives Shareholders - and Dell - Cause for Optimism
November 20, 2009
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was all smiles at the company's shareholders meeting, as he touted the early success of Windows 7. Ballmer's cheer may have been contagious; after posting a massive earnings decline for the third quarter, Dell needed some good news to latch onto, and the prospect of broad enterprise adoption of Windows 7 could spur PC sales.
AA.com Sucks the Fun Out of Trip-Planning
November 20, 2009
Using AA.com to book a flight was a painful experience. Densely packed, disorganized information was displayed in an unattractive format. On the plus side, it did seem as though the deals American Airlines advertised were real and not mere bait-and-switch lures. For anyone who wants a travel-planning Web site to inject a little pleasure into the experience, though, I say look elsewhere.
Salesforce.com Pumps Up Volume of Workplace Chatter
November 19, 2009
Salesforce.com has developed a collaboration platform that puts social networking to work. Salesforce Chatter facilitates employee collaboration on projects through Facebook-like profiles, status updates, feeds and groups. The question remains whether employees will be as open to social networking in the workplace as they are in their personal lives.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network