Search

Bookmark and Share

Nik's Twitterings

 

Recent Tracks Played

 

www.getdesign.in - Exploring the world of business and experience design and interaction, with a smattering of gadgetry and social media. A world where business, people and technology meet.

Let's Fix Things: For over two decades I've been consulting in my specialist area of Communications Design: Everything from business strategy and processes, through to technology, interaction and customer experience. The thoughts here are my own, not necessarily that of my employer. Feel free to contact me about industry news, swap opinions or discuss consultancy services and customer service strategy.

Even outside of the confines of my day job, I have a passion for spotting patterns and fixing broken user and customer experiences. Even my Bumblebee project hasn't escaped - I've been using Six Sigma techniques to study and predict their behaviour patterns. ☺

Entries in cloud-computing (2)

Tuesday
Mar102009

Voxeo CEO Unveils Tropo, a New Kind of Cloud-Based Telephony Platform

This may sound like a strange task for the world’s largest provider of hostedVoiceXML services: create something for developers who want to write voice applications in different languages.

But that’s exactly what Orlando-based Voxeo Corporation is targeting with Tropo, a high-performance, cloud-based telephony platform that allows developers – in fact, already has seen developers – create and deploy applications in Groovy, JavaScript, PHP, Python and Ruby.

Wednesday
Nov262008

It's cloudy; and so the future's bright

[nik's note: Alongside speech techology I have a strong interest in cloud computing - particular its disruptive force in the industry and how it is changing the landscape. I've been a cloud user since we began to think of the concept, having used amazon's infrastructure to build my own webstores and the like. It's something we now must take very seriously in the speech industry, as it lowers barriers to entry and as several players are showing, networked speech engines allow modest devices to perform like high-end desktops. Here's a little something I picked up from the powered-by-cloud blog]

Five reasons the cloud is for real.

The technology behind cloud computing is not brand new. If that is so, why the hype about cloud computing?

Look at the five reasons Alistair Croll of Gigaom cites.

Power and cooling are expensive. It costs far more to run computers than it does to buy them.To save on power, we’re building data centers near dams; for cooling, we’re considering using decommissioned ships. This is about economics and engineering.
Demand is global. Storage itself may be cheap, but data processing at scale is hard to do. With millions of consumers using a service, putting data next to computing is the only way to satisfy them.
Computing is ubiquitous. Keeping applications and content on a desktop isn’t just old-fashioned — it’s inconvenient.
Applications are built from massive, smart parts. Clouds give developers building blocks they couldn’t build themselves, from storage to authentication to friend feeds to CRM interfaces, letting coders stand on the shoulders of giants.
Clouds let us experiment. By removing the cost of staging an environment, a cloud lets a company try new things faster. Billing on demand the cloud means anyone can experiment.

[click heading for more]