Android and WordPress recruiting – is it you?

WordPress logoWordPress Recruiting

We’re looking for a WordPress specialist – is that you? We’re looking for someone to work on internal projects (you may have noticed our website got left behind in the noughties but hey, we’re tecchies, not designers) but most excitingly to help us bring to fruition projects we’ve got in the pipeline. We’re going to run out of tea and biscuits if we have too many new people so if you can combine your extensive WordPress coding skills with a good know-how of how different online technologies hang together, we’ll be really happy.

Android logoAndroid Recruiting

Those projects we mentioned? Each of them’s going to need an app. Our new site (that the new person above is going to build) will need an app too. Can you develop Android apps? Got a few to show us? Excellent. Please get in touch and show us what you’re made of.

A few words about OpenSure: we do open source, it’s our thang. We specialise in managed hosting, especially WordPress and Zimbra, and we’re completely on top of that. We’re always having bright ideas, and that’s where we need the help – turning our stream of genius notions into things that help our clients, and help us do even better what we already do very well.

We love working with individuals and don’t/won’t expect you to work exclusively for us – we’re all grown-ups here. We’re imaginative, flexible and open-minded, focussing on results and what you can bring us, rather than whether you’re there from 9-5. If you want smoked glass offices and biros with the corporate logo then we’re not for you, but if you’re looking for that break, looking for projects with with huge potential or even looking for open source heroes, then get in touch at support@opensure.net.

We look forward to hearing from you.

Cloud Security and the Devil You Know

Cloud security – big insecure bogeyman and really risky move, right? Well, that depends where you start from.

It seems to us so often the case that when people not so familiar with technology weigh up the benefits of something new, they are starting from a position that what they have at the moment, ie what they know, is intrinsically better. Usually there’s no basis for that belief other than that we tend to prefer the devil we know. Cloud security is a perfect case in point, as covered in this Mashable article, Can You Trust the Cloud?.

We hear a great deal about the insecurity of the net and the risks we take every time we venture into cyberspace. It would be irresponsible of us to poo-poo these risks, but they should be viewed rationally, especially when considering changing some aspect of your company’s online set up. As always, make the decision you feel is best for you, but make it from an informed position.

Cloud security and the server under the desk

‘Security’ means different things to different people. In the context of public cloud services, ie your data and/or services hosted on a server run by a third party provider, you’re worried about people you haven’t authorized gaining access to your data, whether hackers or government intelligence agencies, whose laws permit them access to data held on their soil.

However, real though those concerns are and rigorously as they should be addressed by anyone proposing to hold your data or run your services, contrast the reality of that ‘threat’ with the security of data that’s held on a server that sits under Marjory’s desk. We love the Marjories of this world, but don’t for one moment go imagining that data held on the server under her desk is really particularly secure. Apart from the very real possibility of physical damage to the drive from inevitable deterioration over time, you must consider the consequences of fire, flood, electrical surges, theft, structural problems and so on. These sorts of things really do happen, and the figures for businesses coming back sucessfully from the levels of concomitant data loss are shockingly low.

In order for data held on-site to be genuinely secure, the systems involved (including your data connections) must be robust, proactively maintained and routinely backed-up and tested, for starters. Then extreme levels of physical security must be in place 24 hours a day and full daily back ups held in ideally at least two separate locations well off-site. Thirdly, in the event of data failure, the person responsible (and there must always be someone responsible) must know exactly what to do to get the data flowing again with minimum down-time and disruption. As the article says:

Moreover, in most cases, a major cloud storage company is going to have better security for its setups than a locally managed server you maintain yourself.

Cloud security – Fort Knox in comparison

In the light of that, look again at the risks of cloud security. Does data held on well-maintained, physically secure and strongly protected servers look like it’s really, genuinely, at more risk than data held on the server under Marjory’s desk? Consider your responsibilities to people whose data you hold – names, addresses, bank information etc – and view the issues objectively.

Any company you approach about providing cloud services (such as ourselves – Amazon, Google and Rackspace are not the only fruit) should take your concerns seriously and explain how they handle those risks. We’re always happy to chat about how we approach cloud security, look after data and protect your online services.

Whatever choices you make, make them from a position of knowledge.

Abandoning the cloud

Just who is abandoning the cloud, and why?

We’ve just read this Wired article on tech start-ups abandoning public cloud and finding it vastly more cost-effective to go in-house. Reading the article you can see precisely why the companies featured made the decision, not only on financial grounds but also because of their sector. Abandoning the cloud becomes a very different equation when you don’t have expertise on tap and have to buy in the help you need.

And what is this cloud they’re abandoning, anyway?

But before looking at those differences, let’s look at precisely what is meant by ‘the cloud’. There is no one definition. To bring it down to its barest principles, let’s say it refers to a repository of information held in a location other than your own machine and accessed via the internet. There’s quibble room there but for most purposes that definition is a good starting point.

Amazon or bust?

Reading the article, it’s easy to gain the impression that the only cloud option is a) Amazon, and b) costs thousands of pounds or dollars a year. The cloud is many things to many people. There is no need to go to a third-party provider if you’re confident about running your own server; on the other hand, well-run cloud provision can provide headache-free business-boosting services to a company with no interest in maintaining their own services.

Business Decisions

This article isn’t intended to be a minute run-down of the pros and cons of cloud services but to provide a balance to the Wired article and suggesting why abandoning the cloud might not be a smart move for everyone. Yes, if you’re a company oozing technical knowledge, and with the cashflow to buy and maintain all the kit you need, using public cloud services is by no means a foregone conclusion. But for many, many small companies that want the power of cloud provision together with the peace of mind that their services are being properly looked after on top-spec kit by people who know their onions, then it’s definitely worth looking into the specifics.

The OpenSure cloud

I wouldn’t be doing my job properly if I didn’t mention that we offer cloud services. Please get in touch if you’d like to discuss tranferring some or all of your services to our servers. They’re wholly owned by us (no reselling here), in a London data centre and 100% run on renewable energy. We won’t be abandoning the cloud any time soon.