Riverbed Technology is doing their part to increase the productivity of cloud computing services. CIO.com reported on the company’s development of more IT services to reduce a lag in sending information to the cloud. Check out the article below about the new cloud computing services.

Riverbed Technology today released three new gateway appliances that use WAN acceleration algorithms in order to reduce the bandwidth required to send data to public or private cloud infrastructures.
Prior to the release of its new Whitewater-510, Whitewater-710 and Whitewater-2010 appliances , Riverbed’s Steelhead acceleration technology required two appliances on either end of a WAN connection to replicate data. Now, the company said, one box can replicate data across a WAN to a private data center cloud or storage service provider.
Previously, Riverbed had also called all of its products WAN accelerators. Now it prefers the term “cloud storage gateway.”
“It means so much more,” said Eric Thacker, Riverbed’s director of product marketing.
The Whitewater 510 and 710 appliances are aimed at small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs); the Whitewater 2010, a refresh of the Steelhead 2000 WAN acceleration appliance, is aimed at mid-sized enterprise-class users.
Thacker said he believes the SMB market is primed to adopt cloud services and will need greater bandwidth for migrating data offsite for disaster recovery and business continuity. But, there are a few stumbling blocks to adoption of cloud services, such as data security and data restore.
“Cloud storage is cheap and it can be remotely managed, but you have to guarantee the performance is there for data restores,” Thacker said.
Riverbed’s Whitewater-510 cloud storage gateway appliance
Riverbed claims its Whitewater appliances deduplicate data at a 12:1 ratio. They also use a AES 256-bit encryption algorithm to secure data at rest, and, unlike their Steelhead predecessors, use secure socket layer (SSL v3) to encrypt data sent over networks.
The Whitewater appliances install in less than an hour, according to Thacker, and only need a simple change of the existing backup application disk storage target to the cloud storage gateway to work. The new appliances support Symantec NetBackup and Backup Exec, IBM Tivoli, Quest vRanger, EMC NetWorker and CA ARCserve.
The Whitewater cloud storage gateway will then manage the network and storage deduplication, compression, encryption and the transmission of the data stream to local disk cache and the cloud. It also provides data to the backup application when a restore is required, without the need for user intervention.
The boxes can then provide WAN optimized access to public cloud storage services like Amazon S3, AT&T Synaptic Storage as a Service (based on EMC Atmos), and Nirvanix, with backup and restore performance similar to that of local disk, according to Thacker.

If you are becoming more interested in IT cloud computing services, do you think that this would help your business be more productive and reduce down time?