Logo
    Search

    Interview, Steve Lipner, Microsoft

    en-gbJune 02, 2010

    About this Episode

    Microsoft is among the emerging suppliers of cloud computing services that are seeking to win the confidence of enterprises. In this podcast interview, Steve Lipner, senior director of security engineering strategy at Microsoft, speaks to Computer Weekly about what it is doing to allay business concerns. Lipner describes how Microsoft’s Security Development Lifecycle (SDL), Global Foundation Services, certifications and transparency combine to provide the necessary assurances. He also lists the things that organisations looking to benefit from cloud computing should look at to ensure their data is adequately protected.

    Recent Episodes from podcasts @ComputerWeekly

    Using Big data alongside OLTP and data warehouses for real time fleet management

    Using Big data alongside OLTP and data warehouses for real time fleet management
    US Xpress has implemented a single data analytics user interface that pools in information from multiple sources. The logists firm collects 900 data elements from tens of thousands of trucking systems— sensor data for tyre and petrol usage, engine operation, geospatial data for fleet tracking, as well as driver feedback from social media sites. All of this data is stream both in real time and collected for historical analysis. Information fed to appropriate online transaction processing systems, Hadoop and data warehouses, In this podcast, Tim Leonard, CTO and vice president at US Xpress, explains how the company processes and analyses Big Data to optimise fleet usage, reduce idle time and fuel consumption and save millions a year as a result.

    BAe Systems: Office365 misfires

    BAe Systems: Office365 misfires
    Defence contractor BAe Systems ditched plans to adopt Microsoft Office365, the online version of the Microsoft Suite. Speaking at the Business Cloud Summit 2011, Charles Newhouse, head of strategy and design at BAe Systems said, "We were going to adopt Office365 and the lawyers said we could not do it."