cloud computing
This white paper discusses security requirements of large IT environments, including data center and cloud interoperability, mobile device access, virtualization and open collaboration.
Huawei has joined the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) as a corporate member to help promote the use of best practices for providing security assurance within cloud computing.
As in year's past, 2011 was filled with stories of innovations, perhaps made more robust and upbeat by the frenzy in the consumer tech sector and the equally bullish enterprise sector. Here are some:
Chief Information Officers (CIOs) in Singapore believe cloud computing empowers them to make a greater strategic contribution to business.
The march to the cloud seems unstoppable. The one big barrier that is standing in the way is the collective fear for data security, which in recent months have been fueled by high-profile breaches involving big name providers.
Cloud computing is set to become mainstream in Asia-Pacific in 2012. By then, approximately 30 percent of APAC organizations will have adopted some form of cloud computing, according to Frost & Sullivan.
In the IT landscape of 2011, talk of the 'cloud' is in every horizon -- in government, in education and healthcare, in large enterprises and SMBs. It's the year for the great vendor push for the new platform. But what do early adopters have to say about the new IT service delivery model?
Governments stand to benefit most from the cloud because of the recent strides in e-government across the region and the pressure to cut down corruption.
Disruptive technologies like cloud computing, mobility and social media will drive IT services adoption in Hong Kong in 2012, according to research firm Gartner.
Establishing the right partner relationships is crucial for Huawei’s bid to expand its cloud business outside of China, said Huawei executives at ITU Telecom World 2011 in Geneva, Switzerland.












