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Companies trusting confidential

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Survey: Companies trusting confidential data to cloud. Half the 4,000 IT professionals surveyed world-wide on encryption practices by the Ponemon Institute said they store confidential data on cloud-based services, reports InfoWorld’s Ellen Mesmer. Most respondents said they encrypt data before or while it is in transit to the cloud, but 11% said they assigned the cloud provider the task of encrypting data. The survey also found that companies demonstrating a strong overall security posture were more likely to transfer confidential information to the cloud. “This finding appears to be at odds with the common suggestion that more security-aware organizations are the more skeptical of cloud security,” the researchers wrote in their report.

Google: Cloud makes sense for CFOs too. Don’t look now with battery such as IBM ThinkPad T42 Battery , IBM ThinkPad R40 Battery , IBM ThinkPad R32 Battery , IBM 02K6928 Battery , IBM 02K7054 Battery , IBM ThinkPad A20 Battery , IBM ThinkPad A20M Battery , IBM ThinkPad A21M Battery , IBM ThinkPad 240 battery , IBM ThinkPad 240Z battery , IBM ThinkPad A30 battery , but the search giant is making a play for your C-suite buddies. In a post on its enterprise blog, Google says 800 CFOs surveyed in the United States and Europe had an overwhelmingly positive response to the idea of moving to the cloud. Over 80% of the CFOs said cloud implementation would improve employee productivity. But you knew that already.

Other costs besides energy bills are relevant. Intel’s top-shelf Xeon lists for $4,616, for example, quite a lot for one piece of silicon. But Intel contends pricing for servers and some software licensing is much lower on Xeon-powered machines than Big Blue’s (IBM only sells chips as part of systems, so doesn’t price them separately).

The companies make conflicting claims about other topics, including the relative reliability of their chips. For now, however, their franchises are pretty secure in two largely separate businesses: Intel in the high-volume market for servers with one to eight chips, and IBM in “scale-up” systems, where as many as 32 chips at a time are used for chores like running huge databases.

“That is our principal value proposition,” says Satya Sharma, a fellow and chief technology officer for the Power line.

App store model poses challenges for vendors. Business software vendors are creating app stores for their software as well as software from partners and resellers. But stores such as SAP Store face a number of challenges not found in consumer facing stores such as Apple‘s App Store, says InfoWorld’s Tom Kaneshige. Issues include vendor neutrality, certification, and software reviews.