Ryan Cox

Ryan is a Features Editor here at SiliconANGLE.

Latest from Ryan Cox

ServiceMesh Proves Its Worth in Dollars and Cents : Treat Code as First Class #emcworld

Host John Furrier had the pleasure of having Eric Pulier (Chairman & CEO) of ServiceMesh stop by theCUBE on day one of EMC World 2013 to chat about enterprise cloud, the focus of applications to ServiceMesh’s success, and the importance of software-led infrastructure (SLI) to its goals. ServiceMesh is positioned squarely in the Cloud IT ...

LIVE: Bitcoin Expert on Security, Taxes and Exchange Rates

On today’s SiliconANGLE’s Live NewsDesk Show, (see embed feed below or visit youtube.com/siliconangle to watch on-demand), we’ll discuss how Bitcoin has come under scrutiny over it’s plausibility as a currency, and the fact Canada now wants to deploy taxes on Bitcoin transactions. Joining us now to tell us more about all of the recent Bitcoin ...

LIVE: How Low Can Price go On Windows Tablets? Amazon Leak Gives First Hint

On today’s SiliconANGLE’s Live NewsDesk Show, (see embed feed below or visit youtube.com/siliconangle to watch on-demand), we learn about the world’s first small-screen Windows 8 tablet that was leaked by Amazon. Joining us now to tell us more about the first 8.1 inch Microsoft tablet from Acer is SiliconANGLE Contributing Editor John Casaretto. (See the ...

Defining Software-Led Storage in a Software-Led Infrastructure World

We are breaking out a new ‘ANGLE’ here at SiliconANGLE. Apply named StorageANGLE, the section will cover any and all things storage. The goal of the new ‘ANGLE’, as with all of our channels, is to give you the most in-depth coverage of storage analysis there is available on the web. Between the writers at ...

LIVE: Chinese Cyber-Spies Out-Spy The Real Life Q’s From James Bond

On today’s SiliconANGLE’s Live NewsDesk Show, (see embed feed below or visit youtube.com/siliconangle to watch on demand), we learn about a real-life James Bond weapons laboratory has suffered a recent attack from Chinese Cyber-spies in connection with a slew of other hacking operations on defense contractors. Joining us now to tell us more about the ...

LIVE: Dish to Softbank: My Wallet is Bigger than Yours – Sprint is Mine!

Sprint is the third-largest wireless carrier in the U.S. The bidding war for control of Sprint is turning into a ego-driven and heated duel between Dish Network and SoftBank. In an interview with USA Today yesterday, Dish Network Chairman Charlie Ergen called his shot pointing to left-field and swung back at Japan’s SoftBank. The gist? ...

LIVE: Facebook Leans-In with Mobile Ads, but User’s Data has a Target on its Back

Updated with full video – see below. Facebook released its Q1 financials yesterday and there were two very clear takeaways: (1) Facebook is heavily investing in mobile and mobile advertising (2) mobile app install ads are a risky proposition but are the main culprit to Facebook’s successful quarter with mobile advertising. Facebook said revenue rose ...

Cloudera Banks on Internet of Things, Hopes to Keep its Lead in Big Data

Yesterday at the Accel Partners Symposium, theCUBE co-hosts John Furrier (Founder, SiliconANGLE) and Jeff Kelly (Principle Research Contributor, Wikibon) engaged in a very good conversation with Mike Olson CEO, Cloudera. As one of the first companies to dive into Big Data, Cloudera made big news yesterday announcing the general availability of Impala 1.0, the first ...

LIVE: Are You as Confident in EMC as Joe Tucci? Q1 Breakdown Ahead of EMC World

Last Wednesday EMC Corp. reported first-quarter revenue of $5.39 billion, a 6 percent increase compared to the same period last year, but a figure that still fell below analyst expectations. Analysts estimated the data storage company’s average revenue to reach $5.42 billion in the first quarter of 2013. EMC’s net income fell slightly more than ...

LIVE: Digg Says Thank You to Google, Releasing a Paid Reader

Much of the bleeding 1 percent of social media (read: marketers and techies) were up in arms that Google Reader was going to be sunset. Digg quickly started collecting email addresses of people who were interested in a Google Reader replacement. It found that over 40 percent of respondents are willing to pay for a ...