10 cloud startups to watch in 2012
Updated: The past few years have been nothing if not a boon for entrepreneurs looking to cash in on venture capitalists’ lust for all things cloud. All the activity has been great, and we’ve seen some exciting new companies emerge and prosper — companies such as Heroku, RightScale and New Relic — but it also means there’s precious little room on the playing field for newcomers. Startups that want to get noticed, get funded, and ultimately have a winning exit must either find their own unique niche or stake out ground on a different field altogether.
Here are 10 cloud computing startups that launched in 2011 and that have a chance to make it big in 2012.
1. AppFog
AppFog is one of a handful of Platform-as-a-Service startups to launch in 2011, but AppFog is unique because it leverages the open-source Cloud Foundry code as its core. The switch to a Cloud Foundry foundation over the summer resulted in a name change from PHP Fog, as the company was immediately able to support numerous new programming languages. Going forward, AppFog can ride Cloud Foundry’s development wave, while focusing its own efforts on building the best user experience.
2. Bromium
Little is known about Bromium other than that is plans to use virtualization technology as a tool for securing the myriad endpoints (e.g., desktops, mobile phones and tablets) that connect to enterprise networks. While securing cloud servers, as other startups such as CloudPassage attempt to do, is important, the advent of consumerization means endpoints need security. Among Bromium’s founders is Simon Crosby, who co-founded XenSource and served as virtualization CTO at Citrix Systems.
3. Cloudability
Cloudability provides a simple service with a lot of value: it monitors customers’ spending on cloud computing resources. It might uncover something as commonplace as cloud-server sprawl because so many employees are spinning up instances, or it might find something nefarious such as hackers using a company’s instances serve boatloads of network traffic. As use of cloud services proliferates, companies will need an easy tool to help them keep track of what they’re spending and where.
4. CloudSigma
The Infrastructure-as-a-Service space is a tough racket to enter because it means competing with the likes of Amazon Web Services and Rackspace, but CloudSigma has a plan. The company is all about giving customers high performance and lots of control. CloudSigma sits in the impressive SuperNAP data center and offers 10 GbE interconnects as well as solid-state drives, and developers can buy and manage resources with the granular control normally found in co-location.
Kaggle, a crowdsourcing platform for solving big data challenges, is about the hottest thing going in big data right now. The idea behind the service is simple: although not everyone has data scientists in-house, there are plenty of them floating around the world perfectly happy to put their skills to work on a problem for cash prizes and a little bit of credit. It takes a lot of computing power to host hundreds of teams on any given competition, as well as the data sets, which is why Kaggle utilizes
Nebula isn’t the only company pushing a commercial version of the open-source OpenStack cloud computing software — it isn’t even the only one founded by a former NASA employee — but it does have a unique approach and an impeccable pedigree. Nebula ties OpenStack to an optimized hardware platform designed to make building public clouds a plug-and-play experience. Among its founders are former NASA CTO Chris Kemp, and investors include Andy Bechtolsheim, David Cheriton and Ram Shriram.
7. Parse
Parse is trying to become a PaaS specialist for mobile apps, a laudable ambition given how many people now rely on their mobile devices just about everything. It will be difficult to distinguish itself from competitors such as Stackmob, as well as from web-app PaaS offerings such as Heroku and AppFog, but Parse seems to have the right ideas in mind. It has a backend focused on the needs of mobile apps, and a frontend designed for mobile developers that might not have extensive programming chops.
8. ScaleXtreme
What ScaleXtreme lacks in sexiness it makes up for in functionality. Everyone needs server-management software, but not everyone needs the big, expensive software offered from traditional software vendors, or even wants to manage software at all. ScaleXtreme gives users a cloud-based service to manage both physical and cloud-based servers, and, it says, has also garnered a lot of interest from cloud providers thinking it might be a good value-added service to their users who want more control.
9. SolidFire
SolidFire wants nothing less than to revolutionize cloud computing by making it palatable to large enterprises wanting to run mission-critical applications. The company targets cloud providers with SSD-based storage systems that make it possible to store virtual machine images in the cloud and still deliver high performance. Cloud providers utilizing SolidFire gear could find themselves hosting far more relational databases and other applications that presently remain in house.
10. Zillabyte
Zillabyte, still operating in private beta mode, wants to provide users with both data sets and the algorithms needed to process them. Data sets aren’t uncommon on the web, but they usually don’t come with algorithms and a processing backend. The service will initially focus on web data and text-based algorithms, but there’s plenty of room for growth into new types of data and algorithms as the service matures. Zillabyte was co-founded by two former Google software engineers and a former Intel engineer.
Image courtesy of Flickr user JamesWoolley5.
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DataSift is a good one, 2012 will see social and big data strive and they’re in a pretty good position.
Disclaimer: I work there.
I have already come.
As I promised that I would come again, I have already come. Now all the people around the world must listen to this message,
“I have already come”
Great list Derrick! Thanks for including a link to our, Piston Cloud Computing’s, funding. I’m particularly excited to see what Simon Crosby and Bromium bring to the space.
AzureWatch seems to be missing from this list…
I would add Unrabble to that list (http://www.unrabble.com). Unrabble is a cloud-computing hiring software solution that helps SMBs save time and money to find their top candidates in minutes.
If they just use a loadbalancer, it is sure not an cloud startup
Let’s make sure the record and facts are straight here. Pitson’s founder (Josh McKenty) was not a NASA employee, he was a contractor to Anso Labs, itself a contractor engineering team to Chris Kemp (NASA’s former CTO). McKenty was dismissed by NASA. Piston’s messaging – and even this article – depicts a misleading pedigree of the team and of the founder.
Please check out http://www.pixfizz.com – cloud to print.
Great list. Would consider adding roozz.com to the list also – even though it may not be 100% cloud but more of a hybrid….converting standard software applications to web based versions.
Pretty good list. Would consider adding roozz.com to the list – desktop software converted to a web solution and hosted on cloud servers.
You should add Kinvey to the list too.
Don’t forget about ClearDB – the only regionally distributed MySQL database-as-a-service that ensures your data is online and available, even when Clouds (e.g., Amazon’s EC2) fails.
Disclaimer: I founded the company.
http://www.cleardb.com
MongoHQ. http://docs.mongohq.com/api I may never write an app server again.
Caspio is a good one. It also offers a framework that enables your to quick build apps. http://blog.caspio.com/web-database/comparing-cloud-database-services/
Mashery (http://mashery.com) – world’s leading API management solution provider. SaaS multi-tenant cloud-based API mgt solution, serving companies like: Klout, Best Buy, USA TODAY, NY Times, Associated Press, Rdio, Edmunds, D&B, Hoovers, and 100+ other companies around the world.
I think you choices are pretty weak… Check out BION http://www.bioncorp.com … Mit’s people’s choice award winner in Atlanta this year
Metaconomy takes identity and access data from on-premise deployments and converts it to security intelligence for business managers to reduce risk and strengthen compliance. Look out for SCIM support in 2012.
Disclaimer: I am the CEO.
I was expecting to see dotCloud in this list, I remember they won the Launchpad competition at the GigaOM Structure.
DotCloud did win the Launchpad, beating out PHP Fog (now AppFog), in fact. It’s still a fine PaaS option, but I thought AppFog’s Cloud-Foundry-based approach was worth highlighting. This isn’t a Top 10 list, just 10 companies that stood out to me for doing unique things, so it doesn’t necessarily mean one is better than the other.
Aryaka should be on the list
Thanks for all the suggestions. It’s hard to choose just 10 considering how many cloud-based startups I come across in a year. These stood out to me, but there certainly are plenty of other great companies out there.
Good list. But where is Jelastic(http://jelastic.com)? I think it really deserves to be in top 10.
The list is looking good. But if you are talking about cloud brokerage, Gravitant (http://www.gravitant.com/) should definitely be a part of the list. Gravitant is recognized as a cloud broker company by Gartner. As a side note, I work as an Operations Research Scientist of Advanced Analytics at Gravitant.
Congrats on your recognition! That is big!
Thanks.
I would add AzureWatch to the list as well.
World’s cheapest, greenest cloud computing platform (10x cheaper than even Amazon EC2), now taking customers: charityengine.com
Should be the first exascale machine within 12-18 months, too. (Yes, I work there.)
The following sentence made me stop reading the article.
“Little is known about Bromium other than that is plans to use virtualization technology as a tool for securing the myriad endpoints (e.g., desktops, mobile phones and tablets) that connect to enterprise networks.”
If all you know about the company is a general idea of what area they will be focusing on (and even press releases are more detailed than that), how can you possibly put them on the top 10 of companies to watch in 2012??
Makes me question the research done on the other 9 listed companies …
What about stratusbase.com ???
Hi Derrick- Great list! do you know of any cloud start ups in Utah or Ohio?
You should add Orangescape from India to the list too.
Guess no one heard of Grid++, which has grown 1200% in 2011, my money is on them :)
Is it me, or are you missing every third word in this piece? I guess your editor is on Holidays. Anyway here’s a $10 bet, 1 out of your 10 will be viable in 2013. Any takers? Bonus round- pick the 1 that will still be there.
Check out Phixios.com. We provide agentless IT Monitoring from the cloud.
nice list but I think many still missing
Tiggr (http://gotiggr.com) – cloud service for building HTML5 mobile apps.
I’m looking for anyone interested in cloud/ipad and electronic health/medical record systems.
Linda, our cloud platform is currently tracking about nine thousands HIV patients across 50 hospitals across Italy. We are also running a clinical trial on HIV-related drugs across other 20 hospitals. Feel free to contact me at fhoster.com, if you like, we would be glad to help. Antonio.
you missed http://www.proteussoftware.net full service business ERP that ties in social media/SEO and mailer technology all based on cloud formations.
Trully I don’t believe in Zillabytes. Heard a lot of them. I must also agree with Cloudability. Love them.
Nice projects.
I also love another cloud project that is very powerful: Eyeos.org
Take a hype word, do a search on Google, add some gut feelings and you get such an article… Nothing new, just more “clouds” – smoke without fire…
QLOUD from I THINK SECURITY is a secure cloud. With a huge concern over the safety of the data we place in the cloud, I Think Security’s QLOUD is one candidate to watch in 2012.
http://ithinksecurity.com/qloud_corporate.php
Falta o Cloud Computing da Microsoft, o Office365
O SmartCloud da PT-Prime (www.smartcloufpt.pt)
Um Abraço, Jorge Leitao.
who designed these logos! LOL
I would respectfully suggest Buddy.com as well. Buddy is a platform as a service (PaaS) for mobile app developers. It differs from say, Parse, in that it offers developers fully baked, tested, scaled and hosted APIs that work cross-OS platform and is fully live today.
It’s also completely free to signup and start developing.
Disclosure: I’m a co-founder of Buddy.
Please check out http://www.profitbricks.com – The IaaS company.
What do you think about Radix ? They are based on AppLogic platform.
My clients are pushing me to use them for hosting their ERP and mail systems and I’m trying to collect as much information as possible.
Thanks for the sharing about the health & safety..
http://www.utntraining.co.uk/
If you are looking for a secure european cloud solution you should check out Fabasoft Folio Cloud. It really is a fast FTP alternative solution and a secure online storage. Also interesting for business purposes. http://www.foliocloud.com/en/folio-cloud-ftp-alternative.html