Profile of Charles Babcock
Editor at Large, Cloud
Member Since: 11/15/2013
Author
News & Commentary Posts: 3430
Comments: 1573
Charles Babcock is an editor-at-large for InformationWeek and author of Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution, a McGraw-Hill book. He is the former editor-in-chief of Digital News, former software editor of Computerworld and former technology editor of Interactive Week. He is a graduate of Syracuse University where he obtained a bachelor's degree in journalism. He joined the publication in 2003.
Articles by Charles Babcock
posted in December 2012
12/20/2012
Red Hat will pay $104 million to fill out self-provisioning and performance management for its virtualization environment, get multi-hypervisor capability.
12/19/2012
Startup maps out applications, creates clones and moves them to cloud data center.
12/17/2012
What were the key developments for enterprise cloud computing this year? Let's look at four big wins -- and three setbacks.
12/14/2012
AWS uses operational data to deposit hourly usage information in a customer's S3 storage account. Customers can request alerts when thresholds are crossed.
12/13/2012
Michael Gregoire expected to set a more entrepreneurial style as CA continues transition from mainframe products to cloud and virtual systems.
12/11/2012
Intel offers 6-watt chip for data centers to beat back Calxeda, other ARM designers using mobile chips to build servers.
12/10/2012
KVM-based Enterprise Virtualization 3.1 enables extra-large virtual machines and better live migration across more storage systems than before.
12/9/2012
Savvis Symphony Cloud Storage marries data center management expertise with CenturyLink's networking savvy to simplify data replication and increase disaster recovery reliability.
12/6/2012
Amazon Web Services is cheap upfront, and Amazon only gets paid if people keep using it, CEO Bezos says.
12/4/2012
Can Pivotal Initiative partnership successfully merge scattered open source code with proprietary code for next-gen cloud apps?
12/3/2012
Salesforce.com's Heroku unit is making it easier for Salesforce app developers to become SaaS vendors on their own.