Maria Deutscher

Maria Deutscher is a staff writer for SiliconANGLE covering all things enterprise and fresh. Her work takes her from the bowels of the corporate network up to the great free ranges of the open-source ecosystem and back on a daily basis, with the occasional pit stop in the world of end-users. She is especially passionate about cloud computing and data analytics, although she also has a soft spot for stories that diverge from the beaten track to provide a more unique perspective on the complexities of the industry.

Latest from Maria Deutscher

VMware virtualization exec hops over to OpenDaylight

Software-defined networking is picking up considerable steam as open source technologies take hold in the enterprise, but fragmentation is proving to be a stumbling block for vendors seeking to catch up on the market. Not to be left in the dust, the network industry’s largest vendors have put their weight behind the Linux Foundation’s OpenDaylight ...

IBM teams with NVIDIA to bring enterprise data centers up to par with supercomputers

IBM and chipmaker NVIDIA have joined forces to push the data center envelope with “supercharged” servers that feature the secret sauce behind how Watson processes information faster than any human. The pair plans to integrate NVIDIA’s Tesla GPUs with the chips powering IBM’s Power line of enterprise servers to accelerate data-intensive workloads such as business ...

IBM doubles down security with Fiberlink acquisition, aggressive academic partnering

IBM is continuing its acquisition streak with the purchase of Fiberlink Communications, a Philadelphia-based software company that develops mobile device management and security solutions. No financial terms were disclosed. Fiberlink is best known for its MaaS360 platform, a cloud-based service that is used by banks, healthcare providers, and manufacturers worldwide to safely connect employee-owned devices ...

Syncsort CEO on making the jump from the mainframe to Hadoop | #re:Invent2013

Hadoop presents an attractive value proposition for storing and processing large volumes of unstructured information, but it lacks certain enterprise features and requires specialized talent that is inaccessible to all but the wealthiest organizations. Companies that do not fall under this category face the added challenge of making their siloed data available to HDFS, a ...

Amazon’s Terry Hanold on buying and selling software in the cloud | #re:Invent2013

Amazon maintains a dominant position in both online retail and cloud computing, opposite ends of the e-commerce spectrum that have very little in common besides the delicate balance between buyers and sellers. Terry Hanold, the vice president of cloud commerce for AWS, dropped by theCUBE at re:Invent 2013 to walk us through the ins and ...

Cloudera partners with Udacity for online Big Data classes

Cloudera is seeking to bridge the Big Data knowledge gap – and ensure that the market sustains its momentum for years to come – through education. The Hadoop distributor has joined forces with Udacity, a Mountain View, California-based provider of massive open online courses (MOOCs,) to equip tech-savvy students with the know-how to uncover patterns ...

AWS head of business development on driving value in the ecosystem | #re:Invent2013

The ecosystem is becoming an increasingly valuable source of growth for Amazon, with thousands of companies offering a wide range of products and services atop AWS. Terry Wise, the director of business development for the retail giant’s cloud business, boasts of signing up 4,000 partners in the past year alone, nearly doubling the number of ...

AWS Big Data chief talks real time analytics | #re:Invent2013

It was an action packed week at re:Invent 2013. From making the cloud more transparent to challenging VMware to introducing a stream processing service for the masses, Amazon didn’t stop for a breather – and neither did we. The man behind it all, AWS data science GM Dr. Matt Wood, hopped into theCUBE on Day ...

Chromebook 11 no longer available due to customer safety concerns

Hewlett Packard and Google have stopped selling the HP Chromebook 11 after receiving a “small number” of complaints that the power supply provided with the machine overheats, the pair announced in a statement this week. Citing anonymous sources with inside knowledge of the matter, Bloomberg reported that the decision to halt shipments came after no ...

Splunk and Ford collaborate on smart car analytics

Futurist, filmmaker and theCUBE alumnus Jason Silva predicts that sensory data will help reshape our individual and collective destinies, improving our lives in “ways we could never have conceived before.” But while Silva’s Human 2.0 revolution will likely remain in science fiction for the foreseeable future, self-tuning cars that can achieve better performance by tapping ...