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Friday, February 10th, 2017

    Time Event
    5:52p
    Politics-Entangled Wind Farm for Amazon Data Centers Comes Online

    The renewable energy developer that built a 104-turbine wind farm in North Carolina to power Amazon data centers in Virginia has launched the plant, despite multiple attempts to halt the project by Republican legislators from the state.

    Ten legislators have been campaigning against the $400 million wind farm, claiming it would interfere with operation of a nearby Navy radar, Associated Press reported. But the developer, Avangrid Renewables, and the military have been able to collaborate and design the project in a way that would avoid such interference. Despite the Navy’s conclusion that “the project is not likely to affect the mission,” the lawmakers sent a letter to the Department of Homeland Security urging the pro-fossil fuel administration of President Donald Trump to halt the project.

    The Pentagon did not interfere with the wind farm, the letter claimed, because of the previous administration of Barack Obama’s “political correctness,” according to the AP. The news report quoted a Republican legislator from the district where the wind farm is located who said some of his colleagues who signed an earlier letter in opposition to the wind farm were “hard-core, fossil fuel, ‘let’s keep doing it the way we’ve been doing it’ sort of folks.”

    More details here.

    See alsoSwitch Gets All A’s, Four Providers Fail Green Data Center Test by Greenpeace

    6:10p
    Oracle Settlement Puts Focus on Cloud Revenue Claims

    Brought to you by MSPmentor

    After making the initial decision to introduce cloud-related service offerings, the very next question an MSP often has to answer is which vendor to partner with.

    To make that decision, an MSP might reasonably compare the respective products, consider relationships with current partners and review the cloud provider’s financial health to ensure they’re not mastering technologies of a vendor that might not be around for the long haul.

    But the settlement today of a closely watched court case is renewing old questions about the veracity of revenue claims made by major vendors, and whether they actively gin up results amid pressure to show momentum in cloud computing divisions.

    “Assessing vendor cloud revenue claims has become more challenging, with many vendors’ IT-related businesses being complicated and nuanced,” analysts David Mitchell Smith and Ed Anderson wrote in Gartner’s December 2015 report Vendor Cloud Revenue Claims – Should Enterprises Care.

    See alsoOracle’s Cloud, Built by Former AWS, Microsoft Engineers, Comes Online

    The report found that cloud vendors overstate revenues from the emerging technology, making it difficult to assess financial health or make comparisons between vendors.

    Lawsuit Sheds No Light

    Many cloud vendors have for years aggregated or disaggregated cloud business lines with other technologies, fueling assertions of deliberate efforts to make such accounting opaque.

    But a federal lawsuit filed last year by a senior finance manager at Oracle’s cloud division threatened to lay bare one tech giant’s alleged blatant misrepresentation of cloud services results.

    Staff accountant Svetlana Blackburn said she was fired after repeatedly refusing orders “to add millions of dollars in accruals to financial reports, with no concrete or foreseeable billing to support the numbers,” according to a report on the filing by Computerworld.com.

    Blackburn was fired in October of 2015, two months after receiving a positive performance review.

    In the meantime, she alleged, her bosses at Oracle proceeded to add the accruals on their own, ignoring her objections

    Oracle attorneys argued that Blackburn’s termination stemmed from forecasting errors for the quarter ended Aug. 31, 2015.

    “She refused to accept responsibility for them,” Computerworld reported of Oracle’s filings. “The company’s managers lost confidence in her ability to ‘effectively perform her job as a manager and generate accurate forecasts.’”

    Blackburn claimed whistleblower protections under the Dodd-Frank and Consumer Protection acts.

    During a regularly scheduled hearing today, attorneys for both sides informed the judge they had reached a settlement and asked for a 30-day continuance to hammer out details, and request a dismissal.

    Terms were not disclosed.

    Opaque Cloud Accounting

    The challenges of evaluating revenues from emerging technologies is an old problem that is even more difficult in the cloud age, senior editor Brandon Butler wrote in an article for Network World.

    A common “trick” involves using non-cloud technology to beef up cloud earnings.

    Some vendors include sales of cloud-enabling technologies, like servers, virtualization software or management tools. Others lump in hosted or managed hosting revenues.

    In some cases, consulting and professional services revenues are included to increase the figure.

    “Technology transformations like the emergence of cloud computing can be tumultuous times for vendors who have made a living selling hardware, software and services to large businesses,” Butler wrote. “Legacy IT vendors want to show Wall Street investors that they’re rapidly making the shift to sell new cloud technologies while hoping it does not cannibalize their existing revenue streams.”

    While anyone would be hard-pressed to argue that large cloud vendors are not raking in huge sums of money, Gartner’s Smith and Anderson suggest looking beyond the financials when making important decisions.

    “We recommend CIOs direct their organizations to never take vendor cloud revenue at face value, and evaluate vendors on their strategy and service mix,” the report states.

    This article originally appeared on MSPmentor.

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